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Kohat blast death toll pegged at 33, 56 injured

September 19, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Peshawar, Sep.18 (ANI): The death toll from a suicide car bomb blast that tore through a bazaar and gutted shops in Ustarzai, a small mainly Shia northwest town which lies between the garrison city of Kohat and Hangu, has risen to 33. Police sources also confirmed injuries to 56 others.

The little known Lashkar-i-Jhangvi al Almi militant group claimed responsibility for the attack.

“There are 33 dead and more than 50 injured. Twenty-five have been identified while the rest are in a very bad condition. The bodies have been completely damaged,” a foreign news agency quoted a North West Frontier Province police spokesman, as saying.

Police and witnesses said that soon after the blast, Shiite youths took control of the bazaar and attacked two police vehicles with sticks and chanted slogans condemning the Taliban and the Pakistani government.

Shias account for about 20 per cent of Pakistan’s mostly Sunni Muslim population of 167 million. More than 4,000 people have died in outbreaks of sectarian violence since the late 1980s. (ANI)

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Centre allows regulated sell of swine flu medicine

September 17, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

New Delhi, Sep 16 (ANI): Taking into account the current spread of the swine flu in the country, Union Health and Family Welfare Ministry has decided allow retail sell of Oselatamivir Phosphate and Zanamivir in a regulated manner.

The Oselatamivir Phosphate and Zanamivir are only available drugs that can be used for the treatment of swine flu.

The ministry issued an order in this regard under Section 26 E of the Drugs and Cosmetic Act, 1940.

Earlier, the retail sale of Oselatamivir phosphate was banned by the Central Government and its distribution was permissible only through Public Health Institutions and on the other hand, there was no restriction on the retail sale of Zanamivir.

After the issue of the notification, the chemists who have license to sell, stock or distribute drugs specified under Schedule X to the Drugs and Cosmetic Rules, 1945 would be authorized to sell the above named drugs against proper medical prescriptions.

The ministry has asked the pharmaceutical companies manufacturing these drugs to be prepared to roll out the drugs into the retail market after the issue of the notification.

It is expected that within the next five to seven days both the drugs would be available in the retail market. (ANI)

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Banking transforms lives in rural areas in northeast

September 17, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Agartala (Tripura)/ Jorhat (Assam), Sep.16 (ANI): Banking services are playing a major role in transforming the lives of people in rural areas of the northeast India.

To upgrade infrastructure and attract more investment, banks have undertaken several economic upliftment policies and schemes.

In Tripura, a financial outreach camp was recently organized at the State’s Pitra village to raise awareness among villagers about banking and central banking services. It also intended to bring them under the fold of mainstream banking.

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) took the initiative along with different functioning banks in the State. It came as a boon to thousands of villagers, especially farmers, who enthusiastically participated in the camp.

Villagers were familiarized with various banking facilities, security features of currency notes. They were given an opportunity to exchange their soiled and mutilated currency notes and exchange currency notes for coins.

The participants put up their queries about banking facilities in the area.

“Here we do not have any banking system. Because of the camp the villagers would be benefited. With bank accounts, people will get to know about savings and this will help them in the future,” said Bubantala Jamatia, a Pitra villager.

“This outreach camp has helped poor villagers and we are now opening accounts without depositing any money,” said Anishmia Sarkar, a villager. o improve the banking sector in northeast, the Reserve bank of India has set up a Committee on Financial Sector Development.

The committee has made several major recommendations, including financial inclusion, opening of bank branches and enhancement of credit flow to the region.

“As far as Reserve Bank of India is concerned, the approach is that we work together, the State government, the banks, the non-governmental organizations, the local Panchayati Raj institutions and the Reserve Bank will act like a catalyst to make people come together an work for economic development,” said Usha Thorat, Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India.

The United Bank of India (UBI) has drawn up a plan for economic upliftment of the seven northeastern States called ‘Vision 2020 for northeast’ aimed to cover rural people.

‘Vision 2020 for northeast, the plan, was declared during a press conference by UBI held at Tocklai in Jorhat in Assam.

It would include introduction of low rate interest loans for the poor, unemployed youths, farmers, women, self-help groups, small scale industries and entrepreneurs among others.

The bank also handed over rupees 750 million loan to 8,673 Union Bank of India (UBI) account holders.The loans have benefited us a lot. The bank provided us loans based on the need of the customers. We are really satisfied,” said C. Saikia, one of the customers.

At present there are 252 Union Bank of India branches in the northeast region of the country. The bank is setting up 15 branches in different parts of Assam. Two branches each will also be set up in Manipur and Nagaland. By Pinaki Das / Vaschipem Kamodang (ANI)

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Chris Brown feels “incomplete” without Rihanna

September 17, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

London, Sept 16 (ANI): Chris Brown, who was sentenced to five years probation and six months community labour for assaulting ex-girlfriend Rihanna, posted a message on his Twitter account pleading for a second chance.

He wrote: “MY HEART IS INCOMPLETE… the part that is complete is my love for fans, career, friends, family, God. But I’m missing someone or something.”

Brown also posted a YouTube link of a version of his new track Changed Man, reports The Sun.

It features snaps of him and Rihanna together, kissing and laughing.

He later added: “Sorry all, just one of those days.” (ANI)

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MJ’s ‘secret’ novel sparks bidding war between publishers

September 15, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Washington, September 15 (ANI): A secret novel penned by Michael Jackson has reportedly sparked a bidding war for its rights between New York publishers.

The King of Pop is said to have based the untitled book on a rock star’s struggle with money and fame at the pinnacle of stardom.

A source told Essence.com that the novel apparently reflects the singer’s own account of fame and self-imposed isolation, reports Contactmusic.

Jackson allegedly conceptualised the plot and characters and also teamed up with a collaborator on the story. (ANI)

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London’s bridges clash over updates, tolls on Twitter

September 12, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

London, Sep 12 (ANI): Britain’s most famous bridges are at loggerheads on Twitter, by teasing each other not only for their updates, but also over toll prices.

The famous London Bridge is relentlessly teasing its neighbour Tower Bridge for the tedium and pomposity of its updates.

On the other hand, the Severn Bridge and Bristol’s Clifton Suspension Bridge have fallen out over tolls.

And it all started when the managers of Tower Bridge set up an official Twitter account to alert Londoners every time it was raised to let ships pass.

It repeatedly posted updates like: “I am opening for the SB Lady Daphne, which is passing upstream. I am closing after the SB Lady Daphne has passed upstream.”

But, soon someone set up a rival account under the name “I’m London Bridge”, and it’s first words on the site made it clear that it was at a war of words with Tower Bridge.

“Certain other bridges in London think they’re so cool getting a Twitter account. Well they’re not. I’m the coolest bridge in London. Official,” the Telegraph quoted it as saying on Twitter.

While London Bridge’s attempts to get a reaction from its more admired rival have so far proved unsuccessful, but it is still continuing the taunting.

In fact, its witty posts have attracted a decent audience – it has 1,400 followers, compared to Tower Bridge’s 1,900 – and spawned a host of imitators.

Last month, two of the bridges in West Country- the Severn Bridge and the Clifton Suspension Bridge- crossed swords over toll charges.

The Severn mocked the Clifton Suspension for its inability to accept 5p coins, provoking responses like-”You aren’t in Bristol so don’t get all uppity with me young pup” and “FIVE PENCE PIECES ARE EVIL AND NOT WORTH MY TIME.” (ANI)

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New WHO data sheds light on two leading causes of pneumonia

September 12, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

London, Sep 12 (ANI): New World Health Organization data has highlighted two leading causes of pneumonia, which claims the highest number of lives of children under age 5, both globally and within developing countries like India, Pakistan and Kenya.

The findings could serve as a clarion call to developing country governments to invest in pneumonia prevention programs.

According to the studies, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae type b [Hib] infections take the lives of an estimated 1.2 million children under age 5 each year.

Although safe and effective vaccines exist to provide protection against both diseases, use of Hib vaccine has only recently expanded to low-income countries and pneumococcal vaccine is not yet included in national immunization programs in the developing world.

In developing countries, children bear the highest risk for pneumonia and that is where most pneumonia-related child deaths occur.

“Our findings underscore the urgent need for prevention efforts throughout the developing world. The need for vaccination and improved treatment is particularly urgent in Africa and Asia, which together account for 95% of all pneumococcal deaths,” Kate O’Brien, primary author of the pneumococcal study, said.

The ten countries with the greatest number and greatest proportion of global pneumococcal cases were in Asia and Africa, and taken together account for 66 percent of cases worldwide.

These countries include India, China, Nigeria, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya and the Philippines.

“In areas of the world where access to quality care is limited, the use of pneumococcal vaccine is particularly necessary to limit disease and save lives. Implementing pneumococcal vaccine is critical if developing countries are to achieve United Nations Millennium Development Goal 4 for child mortality reduction,” said Thomas Cherian, Coordinator of the WHO Expanded Programme on Immunization.

Through the GAVI Alliance, low income countries can access existing and future pneumococcal vaccines with only a small self-financed contribution of as little as 0.15 dollars per dose.

“If fully rolled out in GAVI-eligible countries, the pneumococcal vaccine could save the lives of more than 440,000 children by 2015. We encourage all developing countries to apply for this support as an important first step to saving children’s lives,” said Dr. Julian Lob-Levyt, CEO of the GAVI Alliance.

Just like pneumococcal disease, the greatest burden of Hib disease lies in Asia and Africa.

The ten countries with the highest estimated number of Hib deaths in 2000 include India, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, China, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Angola and Niger.

“The burden of Hib disease is substantial and almost entirely vaccine preventable. Expanded use of Hib vaccine could reduce the global burden of childhood pneumonia and meningitis and reduce child mortality,” said James Watt at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The World Health Organization and the GAVI Alliance, which is supporting the Hib Initiative, have been working to expand supplies of Hib vaccine, reduce vaccine cost and assist countries with vaccine introduction.

The WHO data will be published in the upcoming edition of the Lancet. (ANI)

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DGCA directs all domestic airlines to charge tariff at last week’s levels

September 12, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

New Delhi, Sep 11 (ANI): The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has written to the CMDs/CEOs of all scheduled airlines to charge air travellers tariff at a level prevalent in the week ending September 6.

In the letter, the DGCA said it was aware of domestic airlines charging tariff almost three to four times higher on various metro routes as compared to those prevalent in the week ending September 6.

It is further noted by the DGCA that the cost of operation of scheduled airlines on account of various constituent elements have not undergone any significant change in the last week to merit a fare hike.

The DGCA warned that any violation of these directives would be dealt with under the appropriate law. (ANI)

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Meera’s bold scenes in Indian film likely to spark fresh rows

September 10, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Islamabad, September 10 (ANI): Pakistani actress Meera may find herself at the centre of renewed criticism after shooting bold scenes for an Indian film.

The Lollywood star was said to have starred with hero Shawar Ali for the movie, which is soon expected to hit the Indian theatres, reports Geo news.

Meanwhile, she continues to battle reports about her alleged marriage with Attiq-ur-Rehman, who claims to be her husband, the Daily Times reported.

Meera recently swore on the lives of her father, mother and brother while denying being married to Rehman.

She apparently swore on the holy Quran while talking to a private TV channel, adding there were 3,000 proposals waiting for her in her email account. (ANI)

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BJP continues public appeal to Jaswant Singh to quit Public Accounts Committee

September 8, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

New Delhi, Sep 7(ANI): As Jaswant Singh chaired the meeting of the Public Account Committee on Monday, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is in a tizzy, and Deputy Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Sushma Swaraj has made a public appeal to the expelled leader to step down from the chairmanship of the Public Accounts Committee urging him ‘to keep up to the parliamentary tradition’, but Jaswant Singh has refused to budge.

Six members of the BJP – NDA combine who are part of the Committee have boycotted today the PAC meet chaired by Jaswant Singh.

This is the second time Sushma Swaraj has appealed to her former Rajya Sabha boss to step down. Singh argues that the position has been given to him by the Speaker and only she can remove him.

The BJP justifies its demand on the ground that if the party had not nominated Singh for the position the Speaker would not have appointed Jaswant Singh for the job.

BJP argues that parliamentary principles require that Jaswant Singh, who has been expelled from the party, has to step down to maintain the dignity of the office.

Sushma Swaraj told reporters that party will wait for Jaswant Singh’s response and if he does not step down then it would approach the Speaker.

The Speaker has already stated that she will go by the book. With very little options in its hand the patience is clearly running out in the BJP. (ANI)

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Britain’s most famous UFO sighting was a pile of blazing dung!

September 6, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

London, Sep 5 (ANI): After almost 30 years of one of Britain’s best-known UFO sightings, the true story behind the event has emerged- a truck load of dung is what caused all the mayhem.

The weird lights, strange marks on the ground, and odd noises in the night were caused by a burning lorry-load of dung.

US Air Force personnel claimed a UFO had landed in Rendlesham Forest, near Woodbridge, Suffolk, and the lurid descriptions given by them fuelled decades of fevered speculation, books, and bizarre theories.

In fact, the area was even proclaimed to be a portal for aliens visiting Earth.

However, Peter Turtill, 66, from Ipswich, has now come forward and has claimed that it was him who was to blame for the whole havoc.

He said that he had been on his way home after collecting a truck he had lent to a friend when it broke down near the USAF airbase at Rendlesham in December 1980.

“To my horror it was loaded with stolen fertiliser (often made at the time from guano bird dung) so we set light to it to destroy the evidence,” The Daily Express quoted Turtill as saying.

“The truck had an aluminium body and the fertiliser and metal made some very unusual coloured flames.

“Some airmen thought it was a multi-coloured cross from outer space, and with the truck tyres popping they were getting a bit edgy.

“I admit it probably looked spectacular rolling through the forest but it was hardly a spaceship,” he added.

While Turtill’s account may not necessarily lay the UFO story to rest, Rendlesham UFO enthusiast Brenda Butler said: “I don’t get what he is saying. Why has he waited 29 years to come forward?” (ANI)

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Arushi Talwar’s vaginal swabs tampered: CBI

September 4, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

New Delhi, Sep 4 (ANI): One and half years after the sensational Aarushi Talwar murder case, another twist has emerged following reports that the swab sample taken from Aarushi’s body was swapped with an unidentified woman’s sample.

According to reports, during the tests conducted by the Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics in Hyderabad, it was noticed that vaginal swabs drawn from teenage murder victim Aarushi were substituted with samples taken from an unidentified woman, who has no connection with the double murder case which took place on May 15, 2008.

Earlier, Dr Sunil Dohere, who had taken Arushi’s vaginal swabs, had said that the swabs contained a white discharge, which was suggestive of seminal fluid. But later, senior doctor S C Singhal had rejected the claim and had said that the swabs had tested negative for semen.

Meanwhile, a national newspaper reports from the account of “highly-placed sources” that “the Central Bureau of Investigation said the CDFD’s findings make clear that there was a conspiracy to destroy evidence that Aarushi might have been sexually assaulted or might have engaged in consensual intercourse on the night of her murder.” (ANI)

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Canadian Govt to challenge racial refugee status decision

September 4, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Ottawa, Sep. 4 (ANI): The Canadian Government has decided to challenge a decision by the country’s Immigration and Refugee Board, which granted refugee status to a white South African because of the colour of his skin.

Brandon Huntley, 31, who had been illegally staying in Canada from 2006, argued that his safety would be in danger if he returned to South Africa, The Globe and Mail reports.

He also claimed he’d been the victim of seven attempted robberies and called a “white dog” and “settler.” He did not report any of the incidents to police, saying he did not trust them.

His refugee claim was accepted by lone board member William Davis, who noted that Huntley had scars on his body to support his account of the attacks.

The panel’s decision infuriated South African officials who labelled Canada as “racist.”

South Africa’s top diplomat has been urging Canadian officials all week to challenge the decision in court.

On Thursday, a spokesperson for Immigration Minister Jason Kenney confirmed Ottawa will seek leave to appeal the decision that allowed Huntley to live in Canada as a refugee.

“The government is going to be seeking leave to appeal the IRB’s decision to grant Huntley refugee status [to] the Federal Court,” spokesman Alykhan Velshi said.

“Our department’s lawyers, as well as those from the Department of Justice reviewed the IRB ruling over the last several days and we’re going to seek leave to appeal and we’ll be making submissions to the court in the fullness of time, and it would be inappropriate to comment further because the matter will be before the courts.” (ANI)

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Victims of workplace bullies can suffer severe sleep problems

September 1, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Westchester, September 1 (ANI): Exposure to workplace bullying is associated with increased sleep disturbances, according to a new study.

A study in the Sept.1 issue of the journal ‘Sleep’ claims association between observed bullying and sleep disruption, indicating that bullying has unfavorable effects even when it is experienced indirectly.

It also helps reveal the prevalence of workplace bullying, with 11 percent of women and nine percent of men facing “hostile behavior” in their jobs at least weekly and for at least six months during the previous 12 months.

The other factors such as age, occupation, weekly work hours and depressive symptoms were taken into account too, but yet it was found that exposure to bullying was significantly associated with self-reported sleep disturbances.

The adjusted odds ratio of having disturbed sleep was more than two times higher in men than women who were nearly two times more likely to report having sleep disturbances if they had experienced daily or almost daily bullying or had been exposed to bullying for more than five years.

Principal investigator Isabelle Niedhammer, PhD, epidemiologist and researcher at the UCD School of Public Health and Population Science at the University College Dublin in Ireland believes that exposure to any form of violence or harassment at the workplace may raise the chances of having sleep disturbances.

He said: “Workplace bullying may be considered as one of the leading job stressors and would be a major cause of suicide and other health-related issues.

“Our study underlines the need to better understand and prevent occupational risk factors, such as bullying, for sleep disorders.” (ANI)

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Dharamsala releases video appeal about plight of Tibetans

August 29, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Dharamsala, Aug 29 (ANI): In an attempt to bring plight of the Tibetans to the notice of the international community, the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) in Dharamsala has released a video appeal from a Tibetan highlighting the lack of human rights and the sufferings inside Tibet.

Kalsang Tsultrim, also known by the pseudonym of Gyitsang Takmig, is a monk of the Gyitsang Gaden Choekorling Monastery in Sangchu County. He has taken the risk of recording a detailed account of Tibetan history since the leader Dalai Lama’s flight to India in 1959.

The hour long footage has been widely distributed in many Tibetan areas in Gansu, Qinghai and Sichuan Province.alsang Thamcheo, who delivered the video testimony to the TCHRD said the main purpose is to make outside world aware of the ground realties in Tibet.

“It was passed on by someone inside Tibet and trusted me with the work of disseminating it to the outside world for a better coverage. The main reason behind releasing this CD is that there are lot of violation of human rights taking place in Tibet. So, through this video CD it’s an attempt to tell the entire world the actual happenings inside Tibet under the Chinese occupation and how the Tibetan people are undergoing a massive, a hardship under the rootless regime of Communist Party in Tibet,” said Thamcheo.

The video also speaks about the recent farmers boycott in Tibet, the self-immolation bid by Lobsang Tashi alias Tapey of the Kirti Monastery, of a suicide by a monk of the Ragya Monastery, arbitrary arrests, detention of thousands of Tibetans after the 2008 March protests in Tibet.

It also appeals to the United Nations and other international farmers that they have a moral obligation to speak on behalf of the Tibetan people inside Tibet who are living in constant fear and under severe repression.

“People are actually deprived of actual information so through this video specially targeting the illiterate and uneducated Tibetan people, he is communicating with those people in rural areas and the nomadic areas, communicating actual ground realties,” said Tenzin Norgey, spokesperson of TCHRD.

Kalsang Tsultrim’s video testimony also touches on the many recent events in Tibet and the Chinese Government’s policies which allegedly led to the displacement of a large number of Tibetans in the name of development. (ANI)

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Hindu board dismisses allegations of financial impropriety against Malay temple

August 27, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Georgetown (Malaysia), Aug.27 (ANI): The Hindu Endowment Board in Penang has dismissed allegations of impropriety over money raised by the Sri Ramar Temple here last year.

Board chairman A. Tana-sekharan said the money collected by the temple at Solok York last year only amounted to RM 66,589.49, after payments and expenses were deducted, and not RM83,000 as claimed by its former committee members.

He said the temple had raised almost RM 110,000 in February last year before the deductions.

“The temple gave us the first RM 60,000 in April and the rest in July. The money is in the temple’s account, which is governed by the board,” the New Strait Times quoted him as saying at a press conference at the temple yesterday.

Tanasekharan was responding to the temple’s former committee members’ demand to know what had happened to the RM 83,000 they had given to the board for the temple’s consecration ceremony and also to carry out programmes for single mothers and poor students.

He said the amount collected during the fundraiser was smaller and explained that the event was approved by the board to collect donations.

The money was to clear its deficits, which totalled over RM 96,000 as at April 2008. (ANI)

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Murdered Indian Australian woman’s boyfriend wanted a family threesome

August 27, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Brisbane, Aug.27 (ANI): Accused killer Max Sica wanted a threesome with his then Indian Australian girlfriend Neelma Singh and another member of her family, the dead girl’s older sister has told a Brisbane Magistrates Court.

Archana Pathik also told the court how Sica had hacked into her email account to send a sex profile to people she knew, including her parents-in-law.

Pathik was giving evidence at a committal hearing where Sica, 39, of Stafford, is charged with murdering Neelma, 24, Kunal, 18 and Sidhi Singh, 12 in different ways in their Bridgeman Downs home in 2003.

During cross-examination by Sica’s barrister, Sam Di Carlo, the Brisbane Times quoted Pathik as saying she and her husband “had a relationship where we do experiment”, including with other women.

She said her parents knew this, as did Neelma, who told Sica, prompting him to send an email exposing Pathik’s bisexuality.

“(He did it) to make me look bad in the Indian community,” she said, adding it was “retaliation” from Sica because she did not approve of him.

Pathik said Neelma told her in 2002 that Sica had asked her to be involved in group sex with another member of the family. She did not say who with. (ANI)

Filed Under: International News Tagged With: account, accused, ANI, Archana, Aug, australian woman, barrister, bisexuality, boyfriend, Bridgeman, bridgeman downs, brisbane, committal, community, Court, cross examination, Dead Girl, Di Carlo, different ways, downs, email, email account, evidence, experiment, family, Girl, girlfriend, group, Group Sex, hearing, home, husband, killer, Kunal, magistrates, magistrates court, Max Sica, member, member of the family, murdered, Neelma, older sister, Pathik, profile, relationship, retaliation, sam, Sex, Sex Profile, Sidhi, Singh, sister, Stafford, threesome, times, woman

MJ pleaded for drugs from his doctor, shows affidavit

August 26, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Even though late King of Pop Michael Jackson’s death has been ruled as a homicide by the L.A. County coroner, an affidavit has revealed new details about actions of the singer’s doctor.

According to a search warrant affidavit released on August 24, Jackson pleaded with his doctor to give him more sedatives to cure his insomnia prior to his death, reports CBS News.

Jackson made “repeated demands/requests” for propofol, which the singer called his “milk”, the affidavit stated.

Dr. Conrad Murray, Jackson’s cardiologist, administered 25 milligrams of the white-coloured liquid, a relatively small dose, and the singer finally fell asleep.

Murray told investigators that, at the time of Jacko’s death, he had been trying to wean the star off propofol, and that he’d been treating Jackson for insomnia for about six weeks with 50 milligrams of the drug every night via an intravenous drip.

The affidavit unsealed in Houston, where Los Angeles police took materials from one of Murray’s clinics last month as part of their manslaughter investigation, includes a detailed account of what detectives say Murray told them.

The L.A. County Coroner’s office will rule Jacko’s death as a homicide based on forensic tests, though the findings have not been publicly released.

“The coroner’s finding doesn’t mean we are going to see a homicide, as opposed to manslaughter case against anyone,” said a CBS News legal analyst.

“The examiner’s office doesn’t distinguish between legal terms ‘manslaughter’ and ‘homicide’,” the analyst added. (ANI)

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Galileo’s telescope was more commercial in nature than scientific

August 26, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Washington, August 26 (ANI): Historians have said that Italian mathematician Galileo Galilei’s invention of the telescope was more commercial in nature than an attempt to contribute in scientific progress.

Galileo’s telescope is today remembered as a revolutionary stargazing tool that changed Earth’s standing in the heavens.

According to a report in the National Geographic News, historians have said that when Italian mathematician Galileo Galilei presented his version of the telescope to officials in the Italian city-state of Venice, he was simply seeking a career boost.

Galileo needed a pay raise, in part to support several illegitimate children, according to science historian Alan Chapman of the University of Oxford in the UK.

“He was a rather obscure professor on the make showing a novelty invented by somebody else to his bosses,” Chapman said.

A math professor at the University of Padua, Galileo based his optical instrument on spyglasses developed the previous year by Dutch spectacle makers.

The Venetian Senate was about to purchase one of the popular gadgets when Galileo stepped in with his own version.

Made of wood and leather, Galileo’s telescope had eight-times magnification, a convex main lens, and a concave eyepiece that-unlike other telescopes of the period-presented the image the right way up.

Venice’s interest in the telescope was commercial rather than scientific, according to science historian Alan Chapman of the University of Oxford in the UK.

“The maritime city’s wealth and power was based on overseas trade, and at the time its vessels were being attacked by the Turks,” Chapman said.

To demonstrate the enemy-spotting potential of his telescope, “Galileo took a number of senators up to one of the bell towers in Venice where you can see ships out in the lagoon,” he said.

In 1609, most Europeans accepted the Christian account of creation, which placed our planet at the center of the universe.

Galileo’s telescope overturned this idea by allowing the scientist to observe moon-like phases in the planet Venus, which could only be explained by a sun-centered solar system.

Galileo likewise discovered that Jupiter was orbited by its own moons.

“This established beyond a doubt that the Earth was not the only center of motion in the universe,” said Robert Massey of the Royal Astronomical Society in London.

Galileo’s telescope and astronomical observations also showed the surface of the moon wasn’t smooth, as was believed, and he was the first person to reveal that the Milky Way was composed of stars. (ANI)

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Matt Damon ‘to finally play real-life alien expert Bob Lazar’

August 25, 2009 By admin Leave a Comment

Washington, Aug 25 (ANI): Matt Damon may soon get to play the role of real-life alien expert Bob Lazar, for which he was signed almost four years back.

Earlier, the plan of movie executives at New Line to chronicle the life story and Lazar’s recollections of working at S4, a secret military base located at Papoose Lake in Nevada, into a movie, was foiled.

However, now Curmudgeon Films has taken over the project, and it intends to stick with ‘The Departed’ star.

“Matt Damon would be at the top of our list to play Lazar. I had heard he was interested in it years ago when New Line was going to do the Lazar story,” Contactmusic quoted the project spokesperson as saying.

Kenneth Yakkel is apparently adapting TV interviews Lazar conducted with Las Vegas reporter George Knapp for the film.

The reps added:”2009 marks the 20th anniversary of Lazar’s amazing account of back engineering one of nine alien flying saucers recovered by the U.S. military. Threats on his (Lazar) life forced him to go public with the story. The film is based on his amazing eyewitness accounts of working at S4.” (ANI)

Filed Under: Entertainment News Tagged With: 20th anniversary, account, Alien, ANI, anniversary, Aug, base, Bob Lazar, chronicle, contactmusic, Curmudgeon, departed, expert, eyewitness, Eyewitness Accounts, film, films, flying saucers, George Knapp, Kenneth Yakkel, lake, las vegas, life, line, list, Matt Damon, Military Threats, movie, Nevada, New, Papoose, Papoose Lake, plan, project, Public, recollections, reporter, role, Secret Military Base, spokesperson, star, story, threats, top, tv interviews, US, Washington
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