Monday, November 29, 2010

England break records in draw with Australia

 



Alastair Cook and Jonathan Trott set a series of records as England hit an extraordinary 517-1 on the final day of the first Ashes Test before declaring.

The match finished in an expected draw, Australia replying with 107-1 having been set 297 to win from 41 overs.

Cook's 235 not out was the sixth best Ashes score by an Englishman and he also surpassed Sir Don Bradman for the highest Test score at the Gabba.

Cook and Trott (135no) put on 329, the ninth highest England stand in history.

Australia ended a tough last couple of days on a positive note with Ricky Ponting hitting 51 not out and Shane Watson unbeaten on 41, but England will hope to take more confidence with them to the second Test at Adelaide.




US condemns Wikileaks diplomatic cables release

Christopher Hill said US diplomats would be more careful about their cables
The US has strongly criticised the release by the website Wikileaks of thousands of extracts from US diplomatic messages.

Among the revelations is a report Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah urged the US to destroy Iran's nuclear facilities.

The founder of Wikileaks, Julian Assange, said the US authorities were afraid of being held to account.

But the White House said the release was "reckless" and put the lives of diplomats and others at risk.

One Republican congressman called for Wikileaks to be designated a terrorist organisation.

Peter King, a member of the House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee, said the latest release "manifests Mr Assange's purposeful intent to damage not only our national interests in fighting the war on terror, but also undermines the very safety of coalition forces in Iraq and Afghanistan".

Meanwhile, Pakistan's foreign ministry condemned what it called "the irresponsible disclosure of sensitive official documents".

The US Department of Defence says it is making its computer systems more secure to prevent future leaks.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Indonesian volcano forces flight cancellations

Search and rescue team members from Yogyakarta head to villages to recover casualties from Merapi volcano's …
JAKARTA, Indonesia – An Indonesian volcano has forced President Barack Obama to cut short his visit to the country, and some international airlines are again canceling flights over concerns about air safety.

Mount Merapi, hundreds of miles (kilometers) east of Jakarta, has been spewing massive clouds of ash and gas high into the air for more than two weeks, killing at least 153 people and causing travel chaos and at times forcing two nearby airports to shut down.

Obama sliced several hours off his whirlwind 24-hour tour Wednesday.

Syaiful Bahri, who oversees operations at Jakarta's international airport, says that concerns about the ash also forced several international carriers to again cancel flights into and out of the capital. Among them were Cathay Pacific, Value Air, Qantas and Malaysia Air.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — An Indonesian volcano has forced President Barack Obama to cut short his visit to the country, and some international airlines are canceling flights over concerns about air safety.

Mount Merapi, hundreds of miles (kilometers) east of Jakarta, has been spewing massive clouds of ash and gas high into the air for more than two weeks, killing at least 153 people and causing travel chaos and at times forcing two nearby airports to shut down.

Obama sliced several hours off his whirlwind 24-hour tour Wednesday.

Syaiful Bahri, who oversees operations at Jakarta's international airport, says that concerns about the ash also forced several international carriers to again cancel flights into and out of the capital. Among them were Cathay Pacific, Value Air, Qantas and Malaysia Air.

Ted Danson testifies in Alaska on Arctic drilling

Actor Ted Danson, left, testifies at a public hearing regarding offshore drilling in Alaska's Chukchi …
ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Actor Ted Danson told federal regulators Tuesday night that far more research is needed before drilling is allowed in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska's northern shores.

The longtime environmental activist and ocean advocate testified before the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, which is reviewing a lease sale in the Chukchi Sea, the body of water shared with Russia off Alaska's northwest shore.

After the BP deep-water oil well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar imposed a drilling "suspension" in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas.

Environmental and Alaska Native groups bitterly oppose drilling in Arctic waters, which lack a deep-water port and other infrastructure that could be useful for cleanup of a major spill, especially with the region's notoriously bad weather, winter darkness and threat of ice much of the year.

Drilling critics say that not enough is known about ocean currents, navigation hazards and habits of marine wildlife including endangered bowhead whales, walrus, polar bears and the prey of bears, ice seals.

Danson, who is in Alaska filming the movie "Everybody Loves Whales" with actress Drew Barrymore, told regulators that scientific studies should be done before any development or exploratory drilling.

"If you had done the science to begin with, maybe you would have said, 'You know what? Don't drill here, drill there. It has less impact on the environment, and you can still get your oil,'" he said.

Danson spoke five days after a trip to the Inupiat Eskimo community of Barrow, America's northernmost city, where he had a discussion with Edward Itta, mayor of the North Slope Borough.

"The people he represents have been lifted up economically from oil money into a place where they can live in a much more sustainable way," he said. "And at the same time, their spiritual and cultural life depends on whaling, bowhead whale, and they feel that may or may not be in jeopardy from this drilling."

Danson is a board member of Oceana, which advocates spending $20 million annually over five years for scientific research ahead of exploratory drilling.

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management held the hearing as it conducts a court-ordered environmental review for a 2008 lease sale in the Chukchi Sea.

The federal agency that preceded the bureau, the Minerals Management Service, issued 487 leases after receiving high bids totaling $2.7 billion. A subsidiary of Shell Oil accounted for most of the bidding.

Environmental and Alaska Native and environmental groups sued, saying required environmental work hadn't been done. A federal judge agreed in part and said regulators hadn't properly considered the effects of natural gas development in the Chukchi Sea.

At least 78 people signed up to testify at Tuesday's hearing. Those representing Alaska businesses dependent on the oil industry said millions of dollars have been spent on studies in support of offshore Arctic drilling. Both Alaska and the country need additional supplies of domestic oil, they said.

Shell, a major leaseholder in Arctic waters, has said drilling can be done safely in relatively shallow Arctic waters. They also have said that a spill could be contained and cleaned up by response vessels the company would stage with a drilling rig.

Chelsea look to steady ship as United scent blood

Liverpool's Slovakian defender Martin Skrtel (C) tackles Chelsea's Ivorian forward Didier Drogba …
LONDON (AFP) – A Premier League season that threatened to see Chelsea run away with the defence of their title moves into high gear Wednesday with teams at both ends of the table having plenty to play for.

Chelsea's 2-0 loss to Liverpool revived the title race and cut the Blues lead at the top of the table to two points over Manchester United, the only unbeaten side in the top flight.

Only five points now separate big-spenders Manchester City, currently fourth, from Chelsea while, further down the table Liverpool may now be ninth but a tally of 15 points leaves them just five clear of relegation-threatened Wigan Athletic, their opponents on Wednesday.

Chelsea will look to return to winning ways in a west London derby at home to Fulham on Wednesday with Blues captain John Terry insisting some good could come from their Liverpool loss.

"I don't think we ever take things for granted at this club but maybe this is the kick up the backside we all needed," said the England defender.

"We have another gear to find and we're still at the top of the Premier League, so we have to be encouraged by that, but we can't forget what has got us there in the first place," the centre-half added.

You have to go back to the late 1960s to find the last time a Manchester derby saw both City and United vying for the title but that's the situation the clubs find themselves in ahead of Wednesday's clash at Eastlands.

City will be without suspended striker Mario Balotelli for the derby clash and United manager Sir Alex Ferguson did his best to add to the pressure on his cross-town rivals by insisting the Blues had to win something this season given the millions of pounds lavished on players by the club's Abu Dhabi owners.

"We know the kind of money they're spending -- they?ve bought another five or six players in the summer -- and they'll keep doing that until they win something," Ferguson said.

"They're up there (challenging for the title), and you can't wait until tomorrow when there's something there today. I'm sure they?re thinking that way themselves."

Arsenal meanwhile will look to bounce back from their 1-0 loss away to Newcastle against a Wolves side still smarting from conceding a late winner from Manchester United's Park Ji-Sung.

"We have to pick ourselves up," Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said. "We are ambitious, and that is why we have to get our spirit on this (Wolves) game, focus again and come back with points."

Newcastle striker Andy Carroll, who scored the winner against the Gunners, will look to be on the scoresheet again against Blackburn.

Carroll has found his private life making as many headlines as his performances on the field and Magpies manager Chris Hughton is concerned the forward does not get distracted from his day job.

"With Andy, it's about making sure that all the headlines he is making are on the back pages," Hughton said.

"He is a young man, he has made mistakes, but he has got to make sure he learns from those mistakes, and I am quite sure he will."

Aston Villa play surprise package Blackpool on Wednesday when Bolton make the short trip to Everton and basement club West Ham face West Brom.

Fixtures (1945GMT unless stated)

Wednesday: Aston Villa v Blackpool, Chelsea v Fulham, Everton v Bolton (2000GMT), Manchester City v Manchester United (2000GMT), Newcastle v Blackburn, West Ham v West Brom, Wigan v Liverpool, Wolves v Arsenal (2000GMT)

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Gulf oil spill: President's panel says firms complacent

Fred Bartlit said he saw no evidence BP had cut corners to save money 
Three major companies involved in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill lacked a safety culture and made serious mistakes ahead of the catastrophe, the key inquiry into the disaster has said.

The White House oil spill commission said there was a culture of complacency at BP, Transocean and Halliburton.

"There was not a culture of safety on that rig," co-chair Bill Reilly said.

The explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig killed 11 workers and polluted hundreds of miles of coast.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Obama backs India on permanent UN Security Council seat

US President Barack Obama has backed India's ambition for permanent membership of the UN Security Council.

In an address to India's parliament at the end of a three-day visit, Mr Obama lavishly praised India's development.

His remarks will delight India, which has been lobbying for a seat at the UN's top table for years.

Analysts say it does not mean India will get a permanent seat immediately; the unspecified UN reforms Mr Obama mentioned could take years.

India's long-term rival Pakistan issued a quick response opposing the move, saying the US should not be swayed by "power politics".


The US president is next due to visit Indonesia, South Korea and Japan on a 10-day Asian tour designed to boost US exports.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Oscar-nominated actress Jill Clayburgh dead at-66

Jill Clayburgh, the sophisticated Hollywood and Broadway actress known for portrayals of empowered women in a career spanning five decades, highlighted by her Oscar-nominated role of a divorcee exploring life after marriage in the 1978 film "An Unmarried Woman," has died. She was 66.


Her husband, Tony Award-winning playwright David Rabe, said Clayburgh died Friday surrounded by her family at her home in Lakeville, Conn., after a 21-year battle with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. He said she dealt with the disease courageously, quietly and privately, "and made it into an opportunity for her children to grow and be human."


Clayburgh, alongside such peers as Anne Bancroft, Shirley MacLaine and Jane Fonda, helped to usher in a new era for actresses in Hollywood by playing women who were confident and capable yet not completely flawless. Her dramatic turn as a divorcee exploring her sexuality after 16 years of marriage in "An Unmarried Woman" earned Clayburgh her first Oscar nod.


"There was practically nothing for women to do on the screen in the 1950s and 1960s," Clayburgh said in an interview with The Associated Press while promoting "An Unmarried Woman" in 1978. "Sure, Marilyn Monroe was great, but she had to play a one-sided character, a vulnerable sex object. It was a real fantasy."


The next year, Clayburgh was again nominated for an Academy Award for "Starting Over," a comedy about a divorced man, played by Burt Reynolds, who falls in love but can't get over his ex-wife. For the next 30 years, Clayburgh steadily appeared in films and on stage and television, often effortlessly moving between comedic and dramatic roles.


Besides appearing in such movies as "I'm Dancing As Fast As I Can," "Silver Streak" and "Running With Scissors," Clayburgh's Broadway credits included Noel Coward's "Design for Living," the original production of Tom Stoppard's "Jumpers," and the Tony Award-winning musicals "Pippin" and "The Rothschilds."


Clayburgh's work also stretched across TV. She had a recurring role on Fox's "Ally McBeal" as McBeal's mother and most recently played the matriarch of the spoiled Darling family on ABC's "Dirty Sexy Money." She earned two Emmy nods: for best actress in 1975 for portraying a tell-it-like-it-is prostitute in the ABC TV film "Hustling" and for her guest turn in 2005 as a vengeful plastic surgery patient on FX's "Nip/Tuck."


Clayburgh came from a privileged New York family. Her father was vice president of two large companies, and her mother was a secretary for Broadway producer David Merrick. Her grandmother, Alma Clayburgh, was an opera singer and New York socialite.


Growing up in a such a rich cultural mix, she could easily have been overwhelmed. Instead, as she said in interviews, she asserted herself with willful and destructive behavior — so much so that her parents took her to a psychiatrist when she was 9.


She escaped into a fantasy world of her own devising. She was entranced by seeing Jean Arthur play "Peter Pan" on Broadway, and she and a school chum concocted their own dramatics every day at home. She became serious-minded at Sarah Lawrence College, concentrating on religion, philosophy and literature.


Clayburgh also took drama classes at Sarah Lawrence. She and her friend Robert De Niro acted in a film, "The Wedding Party," directed by a Sarah Lawrence graduate, Brian DePalma. After graduating with a bachelor of arts degree, she began performing in repertory and in Broadway musicals such as "The Rothschilds" and "Pippin."


Alongside Richard Thomas, she headed the 2005 Broadway cast of "A Naked Girl on the Appian Way," Richard Greenberg's comedy about one family's unusual domestic tribulations.


Director Doug Hughes, who directed her in a production of Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" at the Westport Country Playhouse in 2003, called her for "Naked Girl."


"That she has the time to do a run of a play is just an extraordinary boon because I've had the pleasure of seeing her play a bona fide tragic American role beautifully, and I have had the pleasure of directing her in a very, very smart light comedy and be utterly brilliant in that," he said in 2005.


During an interview that year, Clayburgh explained the unglamorous side of acting.


"One of the funny things about actors is that people look at their careers in retrospect, as if they have a plan," she said.


"Mostly, you just get a call. You're just sitting there going, 'Oh, my God. I'm never going to work again. Oh, God. I'm too old. Maybe I should go and work for Howard Dean.' And then it changes."


Clayburgh will next be seen playing the mother of Jake Gyllenhaal's character in the upcoming film "Love and Other Drugs."


She is survived by three children, including actress Lily Rabe, Michael Rabe and stepson Jason Rabe.


There will be no funeral, Rabe said. The family will have a memorial in about six months, though plans have not been finalized.


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Saturday, November 6, 2010

Obama calls India creator, not poacher, of US jobs

U.S. President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama make a statement after their visit the memorial …
MUMBAI, India – Searching for help half a world away, President Barack Obama on Saturday embraced India as the next jobs-creating giant for hurting Americans, not a cheap-labor rival that outsources opportunity from the United States.

Fresh off a political trouncing at home, Obama was determined to show tangible, economic results on his long Asia trip, and that was apparent from almost the moment he set foot on a steamy afternoon in the world's largest democracy. By the end of the first of his three days in India, he was promoting $10 billion in trade deals — completed in time for his visit — that the White House says will create about 54,000 jobs at home.

That's a modest gain compared with the extent of the enduring jobless crisis in the United States. Economists say it would require on the level of 300,000 new jobs a month to put a real dent in an unemployment rate stuck near 10 percent.

Yet to Obama, the bigger picture was the lucrative potential of an unleashed trading relationship between India and the United States. He seemed comfortable and energized away from Washington, days removed from the GOP's election thumping.

"For America, this is a jobs strategy," Obama said of his emphasis on trade, although it could stand as a motto for his 10-day trip. He is spending Sunday with young people in Mumbai and then heading onto meetings in New Delhi, the capital, before shifting later in the week ahead to Indonesia and economic talks in South Korea and Japan,

In India for the first time, Obama quickly got a sense of riches and poverty, history and tragedy.

His helicopter ride into this bustling financial center took in some of the country's slums. His luxury accommodation for the night, the Taj Mahal hotel, was one of the sites of a terrorist rampage in Mumbai that killed 166 people. Obama and his wife, Michelle, paid quiet tribute to the 31 people slain at the hotel, looking over their names inscribed in a memorial before meeting with victims' families and survivors of the shootings.

"We visit here to send a very clear message that in our determination to give our people a future of security and prosperity, the United States and India stand united," Obama said from an outdoor plaza, the soaring Gateway of India and the Arabian Sea behind him. "We'll never forget."

Indian commentators seized on the president's failure to mention Pakistan, India's neighbor and bitter rival. Pakistan was home to the 10 assailants.

The president also celebrated the life of a personal hero, Mohandas K. Gandhi, a father of Indian independence and model of peaceful activism. The Obamas spent time at the home-turned-museum where Gandhi once lived. They signed personal messages into the guest book and pledged to bring their daughters, Sasha and Malia, back one day.

Obama directly addressed the belief in the U.S. that India is robbing Americans of jobs. He acknowledged that many Americans only know trade and global commerce as the source of a job shipped overseas.

"There still exists a caricature of India as a land of call centers and back offices that cost American jobs. That's a real perception," Obama said. He noted the real concern in India that American corporate giants, if welcomed, would run mom-and-pop stories out of business and upend Indian culture.

Seeking to dismiss all "old stereotypes," Obama said the relationship between the countries is "creating jobs, growth, and higher living standards in both our countries. And that is the truth."

In the fallout of the U.S. elections, in which Democrats lost control of the House and Obama's ability to connect with his country was called into doubt, the president said one lesson learned was the need to set a better tone with business leaders. He was effusive on that front in Mumbai, gathering with top U.S. executives and studying up on their commerce with India.

"Just around this table you're seeing billions of dollars in orders from U.S. companies, tens of thousands of jobs being supported," he said. "We're a potential that has barely been scratched."

The White House arranged for four American chief executives who are in India for the occasion to brief reporters traveling with the president. They played up the importance of India as a trading partner and praised Obama's decision to come to the country to underscore that point in person.

Progress will take much more than public understanding. India's infrastructure remains an impediment to progress. And Obama's challenged India on the sore spot of shrinking its own barriers to trade and foreign investment. But his larger message was one of the united values and missions of the two largest democracies in the world.

Making that point, Obama even generated some laughter at his own expense, offering a reminder of the troubles at home.

"Our countries are blessed with the most effective form of government the world has ever known: democracy," he said. "Even if it can be slow at times. Even if it can be messy. Even if, sometimes, the election doesn't turn out as you'd like."

Onkar Kanwar, chairman of India's largest tire manufacturer, Apollo Tyres, said he appreciated the symbolism of Obama's coming to India during his first term and choosing to visit Mumbai first.

"Ties are getting closer and closer, which needs to be done. ... This demonstrates his commitment to another large democracy where he sees a lot of synergies," Tyres said. "He's done all right."

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'Super-30' head wants to reciprocate concept

After achieving 100 per cent success for two consecutive years, the founder of the revolutionary 'Super-30' concept for training poor students to crack the IIT selection process, wants his model to be replicated in other streams of education.
      
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Started seven years back, Bihar's Super-30 group, wherein 30 potential students from economically weaker backgrounds are chosen and trained for the IIT selection process, has produced over 100 IITians so far.
      
Mathematics scholar Anand Kumar, the brain behind the concept, now wants his highly successful experiment to be replicated in other streams of education and says he is ready to help interested people in bringing this about.
      
'I believe such a model should be extended to prepare poor children for entering administrative services and for cracking the mathematics and physics Olympiads and even for journalism,' Kumar told PTI.
      
'I am ready to offer my expertise to help people who are interested in taking the model to other areas,' he said. The last two years have produced 100 per cent results, with all 30 of its students drawn from the remote areas of Bihar and Jharkhand, making it to the coveted Indian Institutes of Technology.

 Kumar is also expanding the net of reach of his group to other states like Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan and will triple the intake for his programme to induct 90 students for the batch that starts this year.

'We have ventured out of Bihar and Jharkhand this year to pick brilliant but underprivileged children from other states of the Hindi-speaking belt,' Kumar said.

The Super-30 programme based in Patan, runs under the banner of Ramanujam School of Mathematics and provides free coaching and lodging to students.

'We have picked up students who do not have the wherewithal to support their education, set apart additional coaching, and I am happy that we have sent to the IITs children of farmers, auto-rickshaw drivers, vendors and the likes,' Kumar said.

Kumar, who has published several research papers in mathematics, had failed to make it to the Cambridge University due to financial constraints.
     
'Despite an offer for a course in mathematics, I could not take admission in the Cambridge University due to financial constraints. I am happy I have enabled people from backgrounds similar to mine to reach India's most coveted programme,' he said.

Temple with monolith statue of Sri Karimari

Set in over 50 acres of lush green surroundings, the temple for Sri Karimari Amman at Thiruvadisoolam in Kovilanthangal Village in Chengelpet will house the world’s largest monolith statue of the Goddess measuring nearly 51 feet.

Under the guidance of Sri Mathurai Muthu Swamigal, work is on to  ensure completion of the statue by June 2013. ‘Thiruvadisoolam’ means ‘lotus feet - trident’ and ‘Kovilanthangal’ means ‘temple support.’
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It is said that  Goddess Karimari’s gracious blessings can protect mankind from the perils of Kaliyuga. Over 200 years ago, she manifested as a black cobra and subsequently as a child, in the land of Thondai Nadu which is now part of Chennai.

She made it her mission to bless and protect 21 generations of her devotees by ridding them of ignorance and instilling faith.

Through her staunch devotee Sri Thambu Swamigal, the Goddess established a shrine in the village of Thiruverkadu, where thousands throng Her feet year after year.

For generations now, the family and descendents of Sri Thambu Swamigal have dedicated themselves in the service of Goddess Karimari.

Sri Mathurai Muthu Swamigal, the sixth generation descendent of Sri Thambu Swamigal, was blessed with a vision of the goddess as a monolithic figure.

This inspired him to build her temple depicting her in the very form and stature as manifested in his vision.

The statue of Goddess Karimari has been sculpted out of a single stone of 51 feet. The site for the stone was deified and the stone excavated from a depth of eight feet in Siradamur, Tamilnadu.

The 400-tonne stone was chiseled and sculpted to its present height of 51 feet. It has taken a team of 51 sculptors and two years of concerted efforts to bring the statue ot its present shape.

Under the auspices of Sri Punyakoti Swamigal who was instrumental in coming out with a plan for the temple and with the divine blessings of Goddess Karimari Amman, the trust has set up a kitchen and dining area for annadhanam. Everyday the kitchen feeds over 200 people, including the artisans, purohits and devotees.

Tight security in Delhi for Obama visit

An unprecedented ground-to-air security apparatus has been put in place in the capital which prepares to host US President Barack Obama tomorrow. Authorities here have held consultations with their American counterparts on the security aspects of the visit.
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Obama, who reaches the capital tomorrow afternoon from Mumbai, will have a busy schedule -- visiting the Humayun's Tomb and Rajghat, meeting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and addressing Parliament before he leaves on Tuesday.

Hundreds of snipers will keep a watch from rooftops on the routes the President will be taking while aerial surveillance will also be maintained, officials said. The ITC Maurya Sheraton where Obama is staying has been made out of bounds for the public with Indian and US security
agencies taking over the building, a senior official said.

'We have sanitised the hotel. Snipers will be deployed on rooftops on Obama's route. We have a foolproof arrangement for the US President,' he said. Around 2,000 police and paramilitary personnel will be deployed in and around the hotel which had earlier hosted US Presidents Bill Clinton in 2000 and George W Bush in 2006 besides US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last year.

Proximity security to Obama will be given by his guards while the other cordons will be manned by personnel from Delhi Police and paramilitary forces as also the elite National Security Guards (NSG).
   
As part of the security measures, the official said, the Ridge area opposite the hotel has been lit up while personnel from Indian and US agencies have checked the manholes on the routes Obama is taking.
   
US security agencies have already reviewed the security arrangements in Parliament -- where Obama will deliver an address on Monday -- with other agencies in the country. Security concerns have forced authorities to disable the' virtual tour' ,of Hotel Maurya Sheraton.

Box Office Preview: 'Megamind' to make mega bucks

In this film publicity image released by Paramount and DreamWorks Animation, Roxanne Ritchi, voiced by …
LOS ANGELES – Family-friendly "Megamind," Dreamworks' animated 3-D film featuring the voices of Will Ferrell, Brad Pitt and Tina Fey, is set to upend recent R-rated dominance at the box office with an otherworldly high-$40 million opening this weekend.

Released by Paramount, the PG-rated, action-adventure with shades of "Superman" is debuting at around 3,500 theaters and 195 IMAX screens as the critical holiday movie season officially gets rolling.

"Megamind" is widely anticipated to follow the success earlier this year of Dreamworks' 3D/IMAX release of "How to Train Your Dragon," which performed well in its offseason timeframe with an opening weekend gross of $43.7 million. "Megamind," with its good vs. evil premise, sci-fi feel and considerable star power, should be able to exceed "Dragon's" performance.

Warner Bros.' "Due Date" offers the unlikely comedic pairing of Zach Galifianakis and Robert Downey, Jr. — a match made in box office heaven — in a buddy road trip movie from "The Hangover" director Todd Phillips. "The Hangover's" $45 million opening weekend surprised analysts and the film went on to become the highest grossing R-rated comedy of all time.

Phillips' average opening weekend is around $20 million, yet a much better than average debut in the mid-$30 million range is likely for his latest comedy, which also stars Jamie Foxx and Michelle Monaghan.

The third newcomer to the weekend's festivities is Tyler Perry's "For Colored Girls" from Lionsgate. Perry is a true movie mogul, having created an incredibly lucrative film-making empire in just five years. The stats tell the tale: Nine movies totaling nearly $500 million in domestic box office, an average opening weekend gross of $24 million and an average total domestic gross per film of $53.5 million make Perry one of the most consistently successful filmmakers of all-time.

With "For Colored Girls," his 10th film, Perry makes his way into dramatic territory, and with Lionsgate making this an event movie for African-American women, a gross in the mid-$20 millions or even higher is in the cards.

Fourth and fifth places will see a battle between three veterans of the marketplace: Halloween weekend's No. 1 film, Lionsgate's "Saw 3D"; the consistently-performing, word-of-mouth action movie "RED" from Summit; and Paramount's horror juggernaut "Paranormal Activity 2" are all vying for grosses in the $6 million to $8 million range.

Also opening in just four theaters nationwide is Fox Searchlight's hotly-anticipated critic's favorite "127 hours," starring James Franco as real-life mountain climber Aron Ralston and directed by "Slumdog Millionaire's" Danny Boyle.

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Beware of another Facebook spam !

Facebook
Have you been hit like millions of Facebook users by a new phishing scam that can result in crashing your computers or mobile phones and steal your passwords? If not, beware, do not open the files ending with '.at' or '.be.'
    
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The phishing scam is being run through the spam messages which steals the sensitive information of the Facebook users. In the attack, the messages are circulated with a subject line of 'Hello' and a prompt to check out areps.at or other URLs ending in '.at.'
    
The mails with the subject line Look at This and links like -- goldbase.be, greenbuddy.be, silvertag.be, picoband.be -- leads to some malicious Web sites, which if visited, could secretly download malware onto computers through a drive-by download application.
    
The URL connectivity, before being blocked directs the visitor to a fake Facebook page and the mail ID and password are stolen as soon as it is logged-in again.

According to the All Facebook blog.Facebook, the password in such cases should be changed immediately and the same message should be sent across to one's Facebook acquaintance.
    
'Whoever is behind the scam has been steadily amassing a large number of e-mail addresses and passwords over the past few weeks,' the blog says.Though, Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt said: 'The impact of this attack or the previous ones are not widespread and only impacted a tiny fraction of a per cent of users.

'We've been updating our monitoring systems with information gleaned from the previous attacks so that each new attack is detected more quickly,' he said.
    
The site has blocked links to the new phishing sites from being shared on Facebook and has added them to the block lists of the major browsers.
    
The social networking site is working with partners to have the sites taken down completely, he said adding Facebook is also cleaning up phony messages and wall posts and resetting the passwords of affected users.
    
'We believe the bad guys here are phishing an account and then trying those credentials on webmail providers,' Schnitt said.
     
So, for example, if a user is compromised on Facebook and has the same login and ID password for their Gmail, the attacker may be able to intercept the Facebook password reset and compromise the account again in the future, he added.

Christina Ricci, Kanye West Among Honorees at 2010 ACE Awards

Fashion Wire Daily – FWD101 Maria Sharapova attends the 2010 ACE Awards hosted by the Accessories Council in New York on …


New York – The Accessories Council celebrated the winners of the 2010 Accessories Council Excellence (ACE) Awards at their annual gala Monday night, Nov. 1, in New York, honoring the year's top contributors to the accessories industry, from brands to individual style makers.

Celebrities like Christina Ricci, wearing a glam leopard print strapless dress, her hair sleek and glossy, and the ever-dapper Kanye West, accepted awards for their iconic style. Ricci took home the "Style Evolution" award, while West won the "Verage Stylemaker of the Year" award.

Lauren Bush was given the "Humanitarian" award for her FEED Project tote bag, which to date has provided close to 55 million meals for children through the United Nations World Food Programme through sales of over 530,000 bags.

The big brand winners of the evening included Maria Sharapova and Cole Haan, for "Brand Collaboration," RACHEL Rachel Roy for "Brand Launch of the Year" and Tiffany & Co., winner of the "Hall of Fame" award.

Lanvin creative director Alber Elbaz, whose highly anticipated collaboration with H&M goes on sale Nov. 23, was voted "Designer of the Year."

On the retail side, Ed Bucciarelli accepted the award for Henri Bendel, "Retailer of the Year," and Mike George of QVC stepped in to receive the "E-tailer of the Year" award.

Other individuals honored by the Accessories Council included editor-in-chief of Paper magazine, Kim Hastreiter, who received the "Marylou Luther Award for Fashion Journalism" and Al Berg of Marchon Eyewear, winner of the "Business Visionary Award."

The ACE awards were founded in 1995 as a way of recognizing those who have made significant contributions in spotlighting the accessories industry, and winners are nominated and voted on by members of the accessory industry, retailers, the fashion press and the Accessories Council Board of Directors.

Village ravaged by cancer in Turkey's Cappadocia

In this photo taken Friday, Oct. 15, 2010, Turkish farmer Muharrem Sevim, center, is helped by his wife …
TUZKOY, Turkey – The caves, rock houses and fantastical stone formations in Turkey's Cappadocia draw tourists from around the world. Nestled among the natural wonders, however, lies a village where the earth is believed to deliver death rather than rewards.

Nearly half the deaths in this impoverished village and two others nearby are from a rare cancer known as mesothelioma — which can be caused by a mineral that's found in abundance in the area. Local authorities are so alarmed that a relocation of all residents is under way.

"The plan is to demolish the old village, bury it in 1 1/2 meters (yards) of earth and plant over it," Mayor Umit Balak said.

The Turkish government, however, hasn't made a final decision on whether to bury Tuzkoy under dirt, pave over it with asphalt, or just try to keep people away.

Dubbed "cancer village" in the media, Tuzkoy was declared a hazardous zone in 2004 and about 250 families have moved to new housing one mile (1.6 kilometers) away. The rest of the population of 2,350 is expected to move when additional homes are ready. The move is subsidized by the state.

Mesothelioma — cancer of the lining of the chest or abdomen — has also been the scourge of the nearby villages of Sarihidir and Karain.

"The number of cases of mesothelioma in Tuzkoy has been about 600 to 800 times higher than world standards," said Murat Tuncer, who heads the Health Ministry department to fight cancer.

About 48 percent of all deaths in the three villages are from mesothelioma; the area accounts for about a quarter of the 40 to 60 new cases of mesothelioma in Turkey every year, Tuncer said. Official figures on the total number of mesothelioma deaths were unavailable, but several hundred villagers are believed to have died from the cancer since the 1980s, when authorities began to notice the problem.

Tuzkoy's inhabitants are believed to have inhaled fibers of the mineral erionite in stones and paints they used to build homes as well as in roads and fields. Moving them just a short walk away should eliminate the risk, said Tuncer.

Erionite, found in volcanic rock, is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen by the International Agency on Cancer Research, the cancer arm of the World Health Organization. That means it's a substance that definitely cause cancer; other carcinogens in that group include asbestos, arsenic and tobacco.

Izzettin Baris, a retired professor who has researched mesothelioma in the area, said erionite is found in various parts of the world, including in the U.S. state of Nevada.

"In most of those countries the cancerous material is generally found far deep underground. In Turkey, however, it is very close to the surface," Baris said. "And people take the rocks which have erionite and build houses with them."

Some experts cite other possible factors for the high cancer rates, including the genetic disposition of some villagers.

A few residents also blamed lifestyle: "The people ... spend all day in smoke-filled coffeehouses," said farmer Muharrem Sevim, a 44-year-old father of three.

There is only one doctor, one nurse and one midwife at Tuzkoy. There are two cemeteries in the village and both are full. They are now opening a third cemetery.

"We are lost in different rumors and darkness," said Ismet Bilgen, a mother of six and grandmother of five. "I don't know what we should trust. May God help us!"

The government considered knocking down the village and burying it after relocating all of its residents as far back as 1999. Financial constraints, bureaucratic hurdles and a string of unstable governments have slowed down efforts to address the problem over the years.

Tuncer said the government was still considering the best option to rehabilitate Tuzkoy and minimize the risk of cancer. Parliament has also set up a committee to look into ways to deal with the problem.

Authorities hope that "New Tuzkoy" will be completed by the end of 2011. Villagers make a living mainly from agriculture, livestock, and from a nearby salt mine.

Tuzkoy is 22 miles (35 kilometers) from the nearest sites where tourists marvel at natural stone formations, and 30 miles (50 kilometers) from Urgup, Goreme and other towns where the local tourist industry is concentrated.

There is no indication of similar health threats at these popular sites, which were formed by volcanic deposits millions of years ago and later sculpted into underground cities and other dwellings by early civilizations.

Tuzkoy has about 1,000 houses, and some areas feel like a ghost town. Many houses are used to keep only animals. Some are locked or just abandoned.

"It's true, people die of cancer here. There's nothing shameful in admitting it," said Ahmet Balta, a 51-year-businessman who said many of his own relatives had died of cancer at a young age. "Academics, the government and the media have to take the problem seriously."

___

Molinari stays in front of Westwood at HSBC

AP – Francesco Molinari of Italy lines up his putt on the third hole during the third round of Shanghai HSBC …
SHANGHAI – Francesco Molinari holed out for eagle from the 13th fairway, matched the lowest score of the third round and still had to make a 10-foot birdie putt on the last hole to keep the lead over Lee Westwood in the HSBC Champions on Saturday.

Westwood looked like he might finally catch up when he chipped from just off the green on the par-5 18th to tap-in range for birdie and a 5-under 67. Molinari, who had to lay up on the hole, knocked in his putt from the back of the green for a 67.

They have been separated by one shot after every round, and the duel figures to be settled Sunday at Sheshan International.

Molinari was at 14-under 202.

"It was a really eventful round, and it was a bit of a roller coaster, because I hit some great shots and some not-so-great shots," Molinari said. "All in all, I'm obviously very happy. To still be one in front of Lee going into Sunday, it's a really good position."

Luke Donald of England was about the only player keeping this from being a two-man race. He had a 68 and was four shots behind.

Westwood at least was assured of keeping his No. 1 ranking for another week as the other three players with a chance to overtake him faltered on a breezy afternoon.

Tiger Woods hooked his tee shot into the water on the par-5 second hole for the second straight day, and his back-to-back bogeys early in the round stalled him. He shot a 73 and was 11 shots out of the lead.

Barring a most improbable comeback, Woods will end his PGA Tour season without a victory for the first time in his career. He will have had 14 years with at least one victory, three years short of the record held by Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus. And approaching his 35th birthday, this is not a streak he can start over.

"Not a very good day," Woods said. "I missed a lot of makable putts, didn't hit the ball very well and just never got anything going."

Defending champion Phil Mickelson also took bogey on the second hole, his from the trees, and shot a 76 to fall back to even-par 216. PGA champion Martin Kaymer had a 74 and was at 1-under 215.

This World Golf Championship event sure had a European feel to it in Shanghai.

The top six players are European Tour members. Ross Fisher rallied for a 69 and was in the group at 8-under 208 that included Ernie Els (71) and Richie Ramsay (71).

Padraig Harrington was in the group at 6 under thanks to the shot of the tournament — he holed a fairway metal for an albatross on the par-5 14th hole, although he dropped two shots after that in his round of 70.

Els overcame a 38 on the front nine to at least give himself a chance of joining Woods and Mickelson as the only players to win two World Golf Championships in the same year.

Westwood had a chance to take the lead on the 16th with a chip into 4 feet for a great look at birdie. Molinari hit a poor wedge, then ran his birdie putt some 10 feet by the hole. But the Italian saved his par, and Westwood missed his birdie.

Molinari and Westwood were tied early in the round, but Molinari kept his nose in front, then built a cushion with his soft 7-iron into the breeze from 160 yards on the 13th that cleared a ridge and rolled into the cup. He never saw it go in, tamping down his divot when he the roar from the gallery got his attention.

Westwood followed with a 9-iron to 6 feet for birdie, which at least kept him close.

For Molinari, it's another shot at No. 1.

He faced Woods in singles at the Ryder Cup, only to watch the former No. 1 put on a dazzling display of shotmaking. Woods was 9 under through 15 holes when he won the match.

Now he gets the new No. 1, and Molinari doesn't see much difference.

"It's quite similar," Molinari said. "They are both exceptional players. Tiger played really well at the Ryder Cup against me, and Lee is playing very well this week."

Westwood was thrilled to reach No. 1 in the world for the first time in his career, and he has quickly put that behind him. He said his only goal this week was to win a World Golf Championship, which he emphasized after having already answered the question.

Taking back the microphone in his news conference, Westwood added, "I see my name and the scores. And right now, I'm one behind."

He was most happy with keeping bogeys off his card, and with the fact his right ankle has felt as good as it has since he took his long breaks from tour the first week in August.

Friday, November 5, 2010

New series shows family hurting financially

AP – In this undated publicity image released by WeTV, Laura Bruce, right, gets a haircut from her daughter …
NEW YORK – Pawnbrokers, hoarders and cake bakers are unlikely subjects for popular reality series. Could families hit hard by the recession be next?

The WE television network on Saturday premieres "Downsized," an eight-episode series about the blended family of Laura and Todd Bruce who are struggling financially following the collapse of Todd's construction business.

Bruce used to take in $1.5 million a year. But in the first episode, he's shown emptying a bottle of change and his kids are shown dumpster-diving and selling a favorite baseball mitt to pay the month's rent.

"It's the face of the economic issue of our times," said John Miller, chief programming executive at the women-centered WE network.

One of WE's competitors, Lifetime, last week began airing "The Fairy Jobmother," about a supernanny-like consultant who tries to shape up jobless families.

Recession TV is a trend that can cut both ways. People with their own financial troubles may appreciate seeing others go through the same things, making them feel less alone or stigmatized. Yet it can be excruciating to watch the wounded pride on Bruce's face as he tells his wife not to borrow money from her father, or the shame of his 17-year-old daughter who tries to buy groceries and is told at the checkout that the family's public benefits had run out.

The Bruces have been married five years and have seven children from previous marriages. They live outside Phoenix. They lived well when construction was booming, frequently eating out, and didn't react quickly when tougher times came. Bruce racked up credit card debt trying to keep up and pay employees when the work went away. Laura Bruce is a schoolteacher, waitressing on the side and about to teach fitness.

They answered an ad from a television show looking for families who wanted to save money.

For the series, Miller said producers wanted a family "that felt like people next door that you would love to hang out with.

"They are a family that is facing a terrifying part of their lives and are united, instead of lashing out at each other," he said. "Instead of saying, `We're doomed,' they say, `We're a family and we're going to make it.'"

The Bruces haven't seen the first episode. They say the cameras weren't intrusive since they're used to having a lot of people around their house. Laura Bruce said she isn't ashamed by any of it, even though she has to make a painful call seeking money from her stepfather.

The frustration of not being a provider is evident on Todd's face. Cameras show him asking for quick payment for work he's done, and being refused.

They said they had a family meeting to decide whether to participate in the show and the children, who range in age from 10 to 17, all gave the go-ahead. The "nominal" payment for being in the series enabled the couple to pay back their children for money borrowed to make the rent, Laura Bruce said.

"It's about giving parents the ability to say that it's OK to talk to your kids about money because it is so taboo," Todd Bruce said. "They say never talk about money, religion or politics at the dinner table. I think the kids feel less pressure when they know what's going on."

The parents say they feel their children are grounded enough to deal with the attention that will come their way.

WE hopes the Bruce's story will strike a chord with other struggling families.

"People are tired of reality characters that are fun to watch because they are proud of being despicable," he said.

Shuttle launch off until end of month to fix leak

Space shuttle Discovery is seen on launch pad 39A after todays launch was scrubbed because of hydrogen …
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Space shuttle Discovery's final voyage is off until at least the end of the month because of a large hydrogen gas leak that forced yet another launch delay.

It's the fourth postponement in a week for Discovery's mission to the International Space Station with six veteran astronauts and the first humanoid robot bound for orbit.

NASA tried to launch Discovery on Friday, but a potentially dangerous hydrogen gas leak cropped up midway through the fueling process and the countdown was halted.

The launch was initially put off until at least Monday. But by early afternoon, it was clear that more time was needed to fix the problem on the fuel tank.

"It's a machine and, every now and then, machines break," said launch director Mike Leinbach. "We're not jinxed at all. We're just dealing with one problem after another. Does it get frustrating? It gets frustrating because we'd rather be launching."

NASA is now targeting Nov. 30 — at the earliest — for Discovery's final liftoff. The space agency has to wait until then because of unacceptable solar angles for most of November. Those sun angles would cause the shuttle to overheat while docked to the station.

But the launch window in December lasts just one week and will jeopardize the amount of science that can be conducted. Only three astronauts will be aboard the space station then, rather than the usual six.

When it does launch, it will be the 39th and final flight of Discovery, NASA's oldest and most traveled shuttle. The shuttle first flew in 1984. NASA is retiring the fleet and closing out its shuttle program next year after three decades.

Friday's fuel leak occurred where a vent line attaches to the external fuel tank. It's the same type of problem that forced delays for two shuttle missions last year, and had not reoccurred since then.

Last year, a minimum of four days was needed to replace the leaky parts. Escaping hydrogen gas is considered serious because of its flammability. Friday's fuel leak was the biggest one yet.

"We thought we had it licked, so we're going to take our time to make sure we do have it licked," said Mike Moses, head of the prelaunch mission management team.

Another potentially big problem was discovered after the countdown was halted: a 7-inch crack in the insulating foam on Discovery's fuel tank. Moses said the damage itself could have resulted in a postponement. NASA has been extra cautious with the foam ever since the 2003 Columbia disaster.

"We have a lot to do before we actually settle in on a new launch date," he told reporters.

Friday was the closest NASA had come to launching Discovery on this mission, and news of the leak came as a huge disappointment. All morning, until the leak, the words "Go Discovery" echoed from the firing room, as well as up at the space station, where the crew eagerly awaited the shuttle's arrival.

A launch attempt Thursday was thwarted by stormy weather. Three previous delays were caused by helium and nitrogen gas leaks and a sluggish circuit breaker. Monday was the original launch date.

Shuttle commander Steven Lindsey and his crew headed back home to Houston on Friday afternoon. As for Robonaut, the humanoid robot, he'll remain packed up aboard Discovery.

"We'll wait awhile, get everything ship-shape and try again. I can stand being Earth-bound a little longer, I guess," read an update on Robonaut's Twitter account.

After Discovery, space shuttle Endeavour is set to lift off at the end of February. But if Discovery's flight ends up slipping into early next year, Endeavour's flight almost certainly would be bumped. Shuttle Atlantis may make one extra flight next summer, but Washington has yet to provide the money.

The White House has instructed NASA to shift its focus from launching astronauts into orbit, to sending them to asteroids and Mars. Given the budget limitations, the space agency can achieve that only by giving up the costly shuttle program.
___

Mosque blasts in Pakistan's NW kills at least 71

Pashtun men dig graves for victims of the Waali Mosque suicide bomb attack, in Darra Adam Khel, a tribal …
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) – Two explosions killed at least 71 people in mosques in Pakistan's northwest on Friday, officials said, after a relative lull in militant violence.

In one attack, a suicide bomber blew himself up as Friday prayers were ending, killing at least 66 people, provincial government officials said. The attack occurred in Darra Adam Khel, a suburb of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province capital Peshawar.

"Now the death toll is 66. It may rise further because several injured are in critical condition," Shahid Ullah, a senior provincial government official, told Reuters. He said 80 people were wounded.

Some 300 people had gathered just after prayers when the bomber walked into the Waali Mosque's main hall and detonated himself, witnesses said.

"I had just finished the prayers when there was a big explosion. It was very terrifying. I don't know what happened later. I just fell down," 15-year-old Mohib Ullah said.

Ullah said guards at the mosque gates tried to stop the bomber, but he managed to get in. Officials at the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar said two children were among the dead.

In the second attack, hand grenades were thrown into a mosque on the outskirts of Peshawar during evening prayers, killing at least five people and wounding 11, officials said.

Video from outside the hospital where people were treated after the first explosion showed screaming women, white-bearded old men in blood-stained clothes and a child being wheeled into the emergency room.

Officials said the mosque was owned by a pro-government tribal elder who could have been the target of the attack but it was not clear whether he was hit.

It was the biggest attack in Pakistan since a September suicide bomb attack on a procession of Shi'ite Muslims in the southwestern city of Quetta, which killed 54 people.

Pryor fined $7,500 for Favre hit

Team personnel help Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre, center, off the field after he was hit …
NEW YORK – The NFL  has fined New England Patriots defensive tackle Myron Pryor $7,500 for his hit on Brett Favre that cut the Minnesota quarterback's chin.

Favre left the Vikings' loss midway through the fourth quarter Sunday and needed 10 stitches in his chin.

Pryor was not penalized on the play, in which his helmet got under Favre's facemask and cut Favre's chin.

The league has cracked down on illegal hits and has promised suspensions for hits to the head or neck area of defenseless players.

AP source: Clubhouse manager admitted baseball bet

New York Mets clubhouse  manager  Charlie Samuels admitted betting on baseball, according to a person familiar with the investigation.

Samuels made the admission to an investigator for Major League Baseball in the last few weeks, the person said Friday, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.

"He admitted betting on baseball on at least one occasion," the person said.

Samuels' bet on baseball first was reported by the New York Daily News.

MLB believes most of Samuels' alleged gambling involved NFL games, the person said.

The team said Thursday that Samuels had been suspended but did not say why. The person said Samuels had become involved in an investigation into illegal gambling by the Queens District Attorney and the New York Police Department.

A second person, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said Friday that law enforcement is investigating the possibility that Samuels borrowed money from team accounts for short periods of time without authorization and then paid the money back.

Samuels was hired by the Mets in 1976 and last month completed his 27th season as clubhouse manager. He also has been involved in the team's travel arrangements for many years.

NASA Deep Impact spacecraft flies by small comet

AP – This black-and-white image of the comet Hartley 2 provided by NASA was sent from the NASA EPOXI Mission 

PASADENA, Calif. – A NASA spacecraft sped past a small comet Thursday, beaming pictures back to Earth that gave scientists a rare close-up view of its center. Mission controllers burst into applause upon seeing images from the flyby that revealed a peanut-shaped comet belching jets of poisonous gases.


"It's hyperactive, small and feisty," said mission scientist Don Yeomans of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.


The close encounter occurred 13 million miles from Earth when the Deep Impact craft, hurtling through space, flew within 435 miles of comet Hartley 2. It's only the fifth time that a comet's core has been viewed up close.


Scientists are interested in comets because they're icy leftovers from the formation of the solar system about 4.5 billion years ago. Studying them could provide clues to how Earth and the planets formed and evolved.


"The scientific work is just beginning now," principal investigator Michael A'Hearn, of the University of Maryland, said at a post-mission news conference. "The engineers did a fantastic job of getting us data. Now we have to make sense of it."


Thursday's flyby is actually an encore mission for Deep Impact. It set off cosmic fireworks on July 4, 2005, when it fired a copper probe that crashed into comet Tempel 1. The high-speed collision spewed a cloud of debris into space, giving scientists their first peek of the interior.


After the $333 million comet-buster, NASA recycled Deep Impact for a new mission to visit another comet. It was supposed to target comet Boethin in 2008, but it was nowhere to be found. Scientists theorized the comet may have broken up into small pieces.


Deep Impact was then redirected to Hartley 2. Roughly 1 1/2 miles long, Hartley 2 is the smallest comet to be photographed up close. On its way there, the craft spent several months scanning a cluster of nearby stars with known planets circling them.


While its latest task lacks the Hollywood drama of the Tempel 1 crash, researchers still consider it an important mission. Unlike in 2005, viewers could not see Thursday's comet encounter in real time since the craft's antenna was not pointed at Earth as it flew past Hartley 2.


"There are a lot of open questions about comets and their life cycle," said project manager Tim Larson of JPL, which manages the $42 million encore mission. "We have so little data that every time we have an opportunity to go near a comet, it's a chance to expand our knowledge."


Since September, Deep Impact has been stalking Hartley 2 like a paparazzo, taking images every 5 minutes and gathering data. It's the first craft to visit two comets.


Deep Impact will observe Hartley 2 until Thanksgiving and then wait for further instructions from NASA. The space agency has not decided whether to reuse Deep Impact again. The craft does not have enough fuel on board to do another flyby.


The latest images add to scientists' cometary photo album, said astronomer David Jewitt of the University of California, Los Angeles, who had no role in the project.


"We're visual animals and nothing seems wholly real to us until we have a nice picture of it," Jewitt said.


Hartley 2 passed within 11 million miles of Earth on Oct. 20 — the closest it has been to our planet since its discovery in 1986.


British-born astronomer Malcolm Hartley, who discovered the comet, said he never imagined a spacecraft would get so close to his namesake find.


"When I saw the comet, it was millions and millions of kilometers away," he said. "I'm extremely excited and feel very privileged. After all, I only discovered it."


___

Nicest Canadian couple in world dole out lottery winnings

A retired Canadian couple who won $11.3 million in the lottery in July have already given it (almost) all away.

"What you've never had, you never miss," 78-year-old Violet Large explained to a local reporter.

She was undergoing chemotherapy treatment for cancer when the couple realized they'd won the jackpot in July.

"That money that we won was nothing," her tearful husband, Allen, told Patricia Brooks Arenburg of the Nova Scotia Chronicle Herald. "We have each other."

Study: CT scans modestly cut lung cancer deaths

WASHINGTON – A major study shows giving heavy smokers special CT scans can detect lung cancer early enough to modestly lower their risk of death — the first clear evidence that a screening test may help fight the nation's top cancer killer.

Now the hurdle is deciding who should get these spiral CT scans and how often, because the tests carry their own risks, including repeated radiation exposure and a lot of false alarms that trigger unnecessary repeat testing and even surgery.

"This finding has important implications for public health, with the potential to save many lives among those at greatest risk for lung cancer," said National Cancer Institute Director Dr. Harold Varmus, who released the study results Thursday. But, "we don't know the ideal way yet to do this screening."

Specialists with the American Cancer Society — which hadn't recommended the screening because of lack of evidence — planned to evaluate the findings when the full data is published in a few months.

Until then, "the best advice we can give is to encourage people to have conversations with their doctors about whether lung cancer screening is right for them," said chief medical officer Dr. Otis Brawley.

Standard chest X-ray screenings haven't proved powerful enough to reduce lung cancer deaths, so researchers turned to spiral CTs, where a rotating scanner views the lungs at various angles to spot growths when they're about half the size that regular X-ray can. But previous small studies have produced mixed results about whether the CTs work.

The massive National Lung Screening Trial enrolled 53,000 current or former heavy smokers with no initial symptoms of cancer to try to settle the debate. It found 20 percent fewer deaths from lung cancer among those screened with spiral CTs than among those given chest X-rays, the NCI said Thursday, a difference significant enough that it ended the study early.

The actual difference: Of those who got a spiral CT, 354 died over the eight-year study period compared with 442 deaths among those who got chest X-rays.

But with about 200,000 new lung cancers diagnosed in the U.S. each year and 159,000 deaths, even a modest reduction could translate into big benefits. Today, lung cancer usually is diagnosed at advanced stages, and the average five-year survival rate is just 15 percent.

Still, the best advice to avoid lung cancer, stressed NCI's Varmus: Stop smoking.

Smokers and former smokers have long sought scans in the hopes of earlier lung cancer detection, even though insurance seldom covers the $300 to $400 test in people who have no symptoms.

"Clearly it saves lives," said Dr. Stephen Swensen of the Mayo Clinic, among the 33 sites that conducted the massive study. But, because it carries the burden of unnecessary tests and treatment, "society has to figure out if we can afford this."

"We want to make sure what we recommend is appropriate rather than everybody going out and asking for it," added Dr. Edward F. Patz Jr. of Duke University, who was on the committee that helped design and oversee the study.

The new trial enrolled people ages 55 to 74 who are or had been very heavy smokers, puffing at least 30 "pack-years," the equivalent of a pack a day for 30 years or two packs a day for 15 years. They had one scan a year — either spiral CT or a standard chest X-ray — for three years, and then had their health tracked.

NCI's Varmus stressed that the study provided no data on whether screening helped lighter or younger smokers.

There were risks. The CTs frequently mistake scar tissue from an old infection or some other benign lump for cancer, giving about 25 percent of the spiral CT recipients a false alarm. In an earlier Mayo Clinic study of spiral CTs, more than 70 percent had a false alarm, because that study monitored even smaller lung nodules that the newer study ignored, Swensen said.

Then there's the radiation question. The new study used low-dose spiral CTs, equivalent to the radiation from a mammogram. That's far lower than the radiation emitted by regular CT scans used to diagnose various medical conditions, but several times more than is emitted by a standard X-ray.

The NCI will analyze whether the radiation exposures from the three scans in this study changed a smoker's lifetime risk of other radiation-related cancers. Doses can be vary widely at different hospitals using different scanners, but any CTs used for screening should be low-dose, Swensen said.

Spider-Man musical delays its opening on Broadway

AP – FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2010 file photo, a building-sized banner covers the front of the Foxwoods Theater …


NEW YORK – Spider-Man is having trouble getting off the ground on Broadway.

Producers of "Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark" are delaying by three weeks the opening of the costly and complicated show, meaning it will only be available for previews after the busy Thanksgiving holiday.

Originally scheduled to begin previews on Nov. 14 with an opening four days before Christmas, the show will now begin previews on Nov. 28 and open Jan. 11.

Lead producer Michael Cohl says "getting it right takes time," citing an "unprecedented level of technical artistry" for the delay.

It's the latest blow for the Julie Taymor-led show that features music by U2's Bono and The Edge. Delays have cropped up and producers have come and gone. Two actors have been injured while practicing aerial stunts.

No survivors in Cuba airliner crash with 68 aboard

airliner crash in Cuba
GUASIMAL, Cuba  – A state airliner filled with Cubans and travelers from Europe and Latin America crashed and burst into flames in a mountainous area after declaring an emergency and losing contact with air traffic controllers, the island's worst air disaster in more than 20 years.

All 40 Cubans and 28 foreigners aboard died, authorities announced early Friday.

AeroCaribbean Flight 883 was en route from the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba to the capital when it reported an emergency at 5:42 p.m. local time Thursday, then lost contact with air traffic controllers. It went down near Guasimal, a village in Sancti Spiritus province, carrying 61 passengers and a crew of seven.

Cuba's Civil Aviation Authority issued a statement hours later saying there were no survivors. It released a list of passengers that included nine Argentines, seven Mexicans, three Dutch citizens, two Germans, two Austrians, a French citizen, an Italian, a Spaniard, a Venezuelan and a Japanese. The seven member crew were all Cuban, as were 33 passengers.

Emergency vehicles lined a road about 2 miles (3 kilometers) from the crash site, and journalists were not permitted to get any closer to the wreckage in a remote and rugged area.

Photos posted on the website of the local newspaper, Escambray, showed a large piece of the plane in flames, with rescue workers in olive-green military uniforms standing around it. Others showed rescue workers using a bulldozer to reach the remote site.

Another picture showed an image of the AeroCaribbean plane in happier times, painted white, yellow and blue, and adorned with images of bending palm trees.

The paper said the local Communist Party chief as well as Interior Ministry and other officials were at the scene helping with the effort.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Fifa row has "harmed" England 2018 World Cup bid

Fifa
England's 2018 World Cup bid has been "significantly harmed" by a newspaper investigation into the bidding process, says a key member of the campaign team.

A member of the Fifa executive committee previously claimed there would be no backlash against England.

But it now seems the Sunday Times probe into two members of the committee has left England with a mountain to climb ahead of the vote on 2 December.

"It has significantly harmed England's bid," a senior member told BBC Sport.

With four weeks to go to the decision, England's bid team has not given up all hope of turning the situation around.
But senior sources say that the prospect of any future media investigations into the conduct of Fifa officials - including a potential Panorama programme on the BBC - could be fatal for their chances.

One member of the bid team told the BBC: "The question is: can we recover from this? Fifa members feel they are being persecuted by the British media.
"It isn't dead and the next two or three weeks will be delicate but England's bid has been damaged and it's going to take a lot of hard work to repair that damage."

One move being considered by England's bid is to ask all the editors of the national newspapers and broadcasters to write to Fifa declaring their support for the 2018 bid.

Whether that would address the damage done in recent weeks is unlikely but it was a tactic used by the team leading London's bid for the 2012 Olympics when organisers feared that a Panorama investigation could derail the campaign.
The difference then was London 2012 had more than a year to reassure IOC members that awarding the Games to London would not mark the start of a seven-year campaign against the people who run the Olympics.

Fifa's ethics committee is due to meet from 15-17 November to discuss whether to take further action against the two executive committee members - Amos Adamu from Nigeria and Reynald Temarii from Tahiti - who were accused in the Sunday Times expose.

Reporters from the newspaper posed as lobbyists for a consortium of private American companies who wanted to secure the World Cup for the United States. Adamu has been accused of asking to be paid £500,000 - half of that up front - to build four artificial football pitches in his home country.

Temarii, a Fifa vice-president who represents the Oceania confederation, was alleged to have requested £1.5m for a sports academy to be built in the region.

Both deny any wrongdoing and will fight the allegations when they appear before Fifa's ethics committee later this month.

The committee will also consider claims made by the former Fifa general secretary Michel Zen Ruffinen that Spain and Portugal's bid team for 2018 has formed a voting alliance with Qatar for 2022 - a move which is against Fifa's bidding rules.

Bid leaders from Spain/Portugal and Qatar are refusing to comment officially on the allegations although the head of the Portuguese FA, Gilberto Modail has categorically denied the claims which Zen Ruffinen now says were an exaggeration to impress the reporters posing as American lobbyists.

The Fifa president Sepp Blatter signalled the start of a backlash against the British media last Friday when he said: "One can ask whether such an action is appropriate, trying to set traps for people. It is a deeply rooted problem [with the English media].

"Who is benefitting from this situation and who is being harmed, we are asking ourselves why did it happen and why did it happen specifically by English journalists? We are looking at that."

And the head of the Asian Football Confederation, Mohamed Bin Hammam, has used his blog to attack the British media. He wrote: "Is it ethical to use unethical methods to protect the ethic? How will we clean dirty laundry by using dirty water?"

Sci(ntillating)-fi(ction)

superstar Rajnikanth
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A man makes a machine and the machine turns against his own master to wreak untold havoc on mankind. The onus is now on its creator to set things right. This plot which has been worn threadbare in Hollywood is for the Tamil audience, as novel an idea as any. It becomes palatable too when packed with Rajnikanth’s appeal and Shankar’s sense of grandeur. Enthiran is thus a Hollywood idea which Kollywood has now made its own.

For all its labels of being the first sci-fi film in Tamil cinema, Enthiran is surprisingly easy to follow. Shankar has over the years fine-tuned his film making strategy of putting across simple messages as grandly as possible.

Enthiran’s grandeur compliments the story-telling rather than seeming incompatible with it. If the common man is able to understand what robotics and robots are about, it is largely because Shankar has painstakingly simplified it for them .

Of course, a team of seasoned technicians ( cinematographer Rathnavelu, music composer A R Rahman, art director Sabu Cyril and editor Anthony), have lent him able support.
 And having superstar Rajnikanth on board , makes his task that much easier. So like the vintage Windies team that dominated the cricket world in 1980s, the film scores, almost in every department.

Dr Vaseegaran (Rajnikanth), is a professor in robotics, who successfully creates an android humanoid robot to resemble him.
The machine, which the professor plans to dedicate to the Indian army as a replacement for soldiers in the battlefield, is programmed to excel in all the subjects under the sun.
Vaseegaran is assisted in this task by Siva (Santhanam) and Ravi (Karunaas). Christened as Chitty, the robot wins the approval of Sana (Aishwarya Rai), Vaseegaran’s  ladylove .

Everything is hunky dory until Chitty gets programmed to experience human emotions. It instantly falls for Sana’s beauty, which lands both its creator and itself in deep trouble.  A feud erupts between them.

Enters Dr Bohra (Danny Dengzongpa), Vaseegaran’s mentor, with an evil motive. Dr Bhora sees an opportunity here to further his malicious ambitions.
He gets hold of the machine after Vasseegaran dismantles it and throws it away in a fit of rage . This time the battle between Vaseegaran and Chitty assumes lethal proportions.

Chitty manages to snatch Sana away and develops its own army of robots with the sole motive of killing Vaseegaran. The battery of robots go on a killing spree. It is up to Vaseegaran to end the menace.

Rajnikanth comes firing on all cylinders. He sizzles and scintillates with his onscreen charisma. One minute he is Vaseegaran, the sober intelligent scientist, possessing traits that he is normally not associated with and in the other, he is Chitty, the role which allows him to be his usual hyperactive self.
 As the machine flexing its muscles, as the one-man army unleashing havoc and romancing Aishwarya Rai, he brings enormous energy and credibility to his performance.

Aishwarya Rai, is truly the beauty who can launch wars among her admirers. Unlike contemporary heroines, who appear in blink and miss roles, she is there all through playing a relevant character. Danny Denzongpa is a refreshing change from the regular baddies that we  normally get to see in Tamil cinema.

The rest of the cast includes Kalabhavan Mani, Cochin Haneefa, Sabu Cyril in a cameo, Santhanam and Karunaas.
Technically the movie raises the bar for Tamil movies.

The exotic locales abroad- the venue for romantic songs , the awesome stunts, seen through Rathnavelu’s camera, heighten the cinematic experience. To top it up there is Rahman’s hi-tech music, (unusual in a Rajnikanth film but in keeping with its theme) and realistic sets designed by Sabu Cyril. So what you get to experience is nothing short of movie magic.

Shankar influenced and inspired by late writer Sujatha that he is, has ensured that the masses are initiated into the complex subject of robotics as smoothly as is possible.

The shrewd filmmaker in him has combined mass elements (a must in Rajni flicks) in the right mix. Deriving from sources ranging from Blade Runner to Frankenstein, Shankar uses Chitti to make a comment on the human condition.

The second part is rather exhaustive, but there is no denying that Enthiran is an adrenalin pumping roller-coaster ride. Miss it and you may be missing entertainment at its best.