EURO BONDS-BAT dual tranche bond

June 25 (Reuters) – News, details on corporate bond issues in the European markets on Friday:

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BAT (BATS.L)

Issue: Cigarette maker British American Tobacco is selling a dual-tranche bond, an official with one of the banks managing the sale said. The deal comprises a 10-year 600 million euro bond and a 30-year 275 million pound bond.

Managing banks: BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, JP Morgan, Lloyds.

Rating: Moody’s Baa1, S&P BBB+ and Fitch BBB+

(London Corporate Finance: +44 207 542 8389)

How bats distinguish between the calls of their own and different species

Washington, May 20 (ANI): Scientists of the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen have found that bats can distinguish between the calls of their own and different species with their echolocation calls.

As opposed to bird song or the human voice, echolocation calls are primarily used for spatial orientation and search for food and not for communication. Bat species with similar ecological requirements use similar echolocation calls.

However, it was recently shown that bats are able to distinguish conspecifics by their individual calls, somewhat similar to how humans can recognize others by voice.

Now, Maike Schuchmann and Bjorn Siemers of the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen have been able to prove that echolocation calls carry more information than assumed.

As humans are able to recognize different languages, bats can not only distinguish their own calls from calls of other species, but also differentiate between different species, even if there is an overlap in the call frequency bands.

The scientists set up behavioral experiments with two horseshoe bat species in Bulgaria. They played echolocation calls of the bats’ own species or calls of three different species through ultrasonic loudspeakers and analysed the animals’ reaction.

Both bat species hardly made a mistake in their distinction, neither between own and foreign calls nor foreign and foreign calls.

“Discrimination was however easier for the bats when the call frequency bands were clearly separated from their own”, said Maike Schuchmann, first author of the study.

The study has been published in journal The American Naturalist. (ANI)

Keeper Haddin says Clarke is the best in the business

St. Lucia (West Indies), May 14 (ANI): Australian wicketkeeper-batsman Brad Haddin has described skipper Michael Clarke as one of the best in the business in the modern era, and rubbished criticism about his form in the ongoing World Twenty20 championship in the Caribbean.

Clarke has made just 48 runs in the World T20 at an average of 12, but has had more success with his captaincy, guiding Australia to five wins from five outings.

His strike-rate in the tournament of 70.58 ranks him well below the other five batsmen in Australia”s top six, but Haddin says the skipper is desperately needed when Australia”s openers fail to fire.

””Michael”s still our best player. He”s still a world-class batsman. Class is always class. The role he plays here can”t be underestimated,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Haddin, as saying.

””Michael is there to do the role that”s pretty tough, running hard between the wickets. He comes out when we”re in trouble. You need explosive batsmen but you need players like Michael to play in any different situations,”” he added.

””His captaincy has been first class. All the teams have explosive bats and world-class bowlers, but what he”s brought to us is make sure we”re doing our little things best, a presence in the field, taking all the catches,”” Haddin said. (ANI)

We cannot take Aghanistan lightly: Dhoni

Gros Islet, April 29 (IANS) India might have been termed the favourites to win World Twenty20 but their captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni is not taking their opening match against debutants Afghanistan lightly.

The World Twenty20 kicks off here Friday and Afghanistan team, with their country’s turbulent past, has generated quite an interest here. The team notched up a five-wicket win against Ireland Tuesday and Dhoni knows his boys cannnot afford to be complacent in a format where every team has a chance to create an upset.

‘I would not consider our opening match against Afghanistan as a practice game,’ Dhoni said in St.Lucia.

‘I don’t take my opponents lightly. At the end of the day you have to win whichever team you play. I don’t know much about them. It is good in a way because if we know too much about a side, then you are thinking too much about them. However, our preparation will remain the same as if you are playing the best opponent in world cricket.’

‘At the end of the day, you are representing India and you have to be at your best when you turn up on the field.’

India will be without Virender Sehwag, out due to a shoulder injury, but Dhoni is not mulling on the absence of their star opener. Sehwag has been replaced by Dhoni’s Chennai Super Kings teammate Murali Vijay and the captain is hoping that he will live up to the expectations.

‘It (injury) is part and parcel of cricket. Players get injured but at the end of the day we have best possible replacements. We just hope that we won’t miss them on the field and people who have come as replacements would step up to the occasion and perform.’

Dhoni also backed an out-of-form Yuvraj Singh and said it’s just a matter of time that the Punjab player will return to his big hitting ways.

‘He (Yuvraj) bats at number four and he can easily play the big shots. There aren’t enough grounds in the world that are big enough for him not to clear,’ Dhoni said.

‘These big hitters have a big impact on the game. Somebody like Kieron Pollard or (Andrew) Symonds are the kind of players who can take the game away from the opponents in three or four overs. It is a big stage for him and, as we have seen of him, he loves challenges.’

The Indian captain said his team is keyed up for the challenge here.

‘Right now we are keen to play the games here (St Lucia). We are not looking too far. It is the not first time that we are touring the West Indies. So we know what the conditions would be like and are mentally prepared for it,’ Dhoni said.

‘We have a couple of days before we play the first game. It is important to get the most out of it. We have to adapt to the conditions here and be prepared for the matches ahead,’ Dhoni said.

Bats rely on sun”s position at sunset to navigate

Washington, March 30 (ANI): Despite the fact that bats are nocturnal creatures, they rely on the position of the sun at sunset to navigate, a new study has found.

For the study, scientists at the Max Planck Institute examined greater mouse-eared bats to see if they could find their way home even from somewhere they had never been before or if Earth”s magnetic field, which earlier studies have shown are used by bats to navigate, had been tinkered with.

First, the researchers captured bats and released them 25 kilometers from their roost cave.

When they followed the bats with the help of small radio transmitters, the researchers found that within one to three kilometers most of the bats were heading in the direction of their cave. The fastest were back home within two hours.

Once the researchers had worked out that bats could find their way home from a strange place, they wanted to know how they did it.

They tested the hypothesis that bats do as birds do and calibrate their magnetic compasses – which use the Earth”s magnetic field to navigate — to the sun.

The researchers altered the magnetic field for half the bats at night, shifting it from north to east using a Helmholtz coil after the sun had completely set.

The bats with the altered magnetic field flew in the same direction as the control bats – in other words, they headed home.

When the researchers altered the magnetic field when the sun was setting, the bats flew off course, heading east instead of south, towards home.

The researchers concluded that the bats used the position of the sun at sunset as the most reliable indication of direction.

Bats seem to know that the sun always sets in the west whereas Earth”s magnetic field is less reliable, because its iron deposits can change its qualities, the researchers concluded.

By watching bats” flight pattern, the researchers were able to determine where the sun had set, even an hour after it had completely disappeared, the researchers said.

The study has been published online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. (ANI)

Council takes crack at bat eradication

The City of Greater Bendigo is trying to prevent a colony of bats from damaging historic trees in central Bendigo.

About 2,000 bats have migrated from northern Australia and are now living in Rosalind Park.

Chief executive Craig Niemann says the park includes several protected trees and the council wants to minimise any damage.

“They tend to be congregating in a few of those trees and we took some action yesterday by using … fairly low-impact air horns and we did crack a stock whip a couple of times just to see if we could disperse them around the trees a bit more,” he said.

Flying fox exodus to escape Queensland floods

Flooding in Queensland has caused a huge increase in the number of flying foxes at Yarra Bend, in Melbourne.

The Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE) estimates the bat population has almost doubled to 52,000.

The head of wildlife management at the DSE, Ian Temby, says heavy rains further north have knocked the blossoms off the trees that they normally feed on.

“Their food’s gone and we think there’s been a massive movement down to the southern end of their range,” he said.

Mr Temby says flying foxes do not pose any risk to the general public.

“People are often afraid of diseases associated with flying foxes, and they can carry a virus, which is related to rabies,” he said.

“However, there’s no risk associated with these bats if you don’t actually get bitten or scratched.”

Mr Temby says the flying foxes are a nationally threatened species and the aim is to increase their numbers, rather than reduce them.

World’s largest bats on the verge of extinction in Peninsular Malaysia due to hunting

Washington, August 26 (ANI): The world’s largest species of fruit bat, Pteropus vampyrus, could be driven to extinction in Peninsular Malaysia at the current hunting rate, scientists have warned.

They say that around 22,000 of these bats, also known as “large flying fox”, are legally hunted each year in Peninsular Malaysia, a level that is unsustainable based on their estimates of the number of bats in the country.

Dr Jonathan Epstein, a veterinary epidemiologist at Wildlife Trust, surveyed 33 roost sites across Peninsular Malaysia and repeatedly counted the numbers of bats at eight sites between 2003 and 2007.

Writing about their work in the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Applied Ecology, he and his colleagues revealed that they compared this data along with the number of hunting licenses issued by the Malaysian Department of Wildlife and National Parks using computer models to see whether the number of bats hunted each year was sustainable.

The researchers also used satellite transmitters attached to bats to see how far the species migrated, and found that they travelled from Malaysia to Indonesia and Thailand.

The Malaysian Department of Wildlife and National Parks, which regulates the hunting of flying foxes, also participated in the current study because there was interest in generating data to help assess the impact of current hunting rates.

It was observed that, based on the average number of licenses issued each year, around 22,000 flying foxes per year were allowed to be killed in Peninsular Malaysia, yet this rate was unsustainable even with the most optimistic population level of 500,000 assumed by their model.

The researchers reckon that this level of hunting will drive the species to extinction in between six and 81 years.

Epstein says: “Our models suggest that hunting activity over the period between 2002 and 2005 in Peninsular Malaysia is not sustainable, and that local populations of Pteropus vampyrus are vulnerable to extinction. Now that we know that these bats migrate between Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia, coordinated assessments of their status throughout their range will be important for developing effective management strategies. Any additional hunting pressure on this species that occurs in Thailand or Indonesia may hasten the population’s decline.”

Epstein and his colleagues suggest that a temporary ban be imposed on hunting flying foxes so that their population can recover, and the species can be saved from local extinction.

“Our study illustrates that bats, like other migratory species, require comprehensive protection by regional management plans across their range,” says Epstein.

The study’s findings have prompted the Department of National Parks and Wildlife to review their policy on bat hunting. (ANI)

How ‘kinky’ flying foxes maintain their ‘harem’ of choosy females

London, Aug 20 (ANI): A team of German scientists has found the secret of sexual success for flying foxes.

They found that males with relatively high levels of testosterone in their blood are better able to maintain their ‘harem’ of choosy females.

The authors say that this link is only evident during breeding season.

According to the researchers, a better understanding of the reproduction and behaviour of these bats could help efforts to conserve them.

Study’s lead author Stefan Klose from the University of Ulm in Germany and colleagues examined grey-headed flying foxes, which are fruit-eating bats that live in colonies of up to 20,000 animals.

“This species is in decline. And flying foxes disperse seeds so they’re really important for ecosystems,” the BBC quoted Klose as saying.

The research team studied a colony of the flying foxes in New South Wales, Australia.

“In these colonies you see flying foxes hanging everywhere – it looks absolutely random, but that’s not the case. Every metre of branch that you see is someone’s territory. And within that [male's] territory, there is a group of females. The size of that group depends on the attractiveness of the male,” Klose said.

Klose and his team counted the number of females in each male’s harem, then captured a group of males using a special device to remove the bats directly from their branches.

“We kept the males in captivity for three days, and during that time we took a blood sample to determine the testosterone levels. Then we released the males back into the colony and watched where they went,” Klose said.

During the mating period, males with high testosterone were better able to reclaim their harems, the researchers found.

“This was when all the matings took place – when it really mattered,” Klose said.

He explained that one of the roles of testosterone, which is the primary male sex hormone, is the mediation of aggression. So a male with high testosterone levels is likely to have more confrontations with other males.

“If you can afford high testosterone because you’re strong and you’re very healthy, then you’re able to reap the benefits. So you will potentially get a lot of females in your territory and have a lot of offspring,” Klose said.

He also suggested that a larger territory might be a ‘quality indicator’ to females.

“It’s all about female choice. So you could imagine that the females think that if a male is able to defend a large territory in an attractive location, he must really be a hotshot,” Klose said.

The study has been published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters. (ANI)

Scientists solve age-old mystery of horseshoe bat’s elongated nose

Washington, July 8 (ANI): Scientists have solved the mystery of a bat with an extraordinarily long nose, by determining that the creature uses its elongated nose to create a highly focused sonar beam, which helps in the detection of its environment.

The bat, called the Bourret’s horseshoe bat (known scientifically as the “Rhinolophus paradoxolophus,” meaning paradoxical crest), has a nose that is roughly 9 millimeters in length.

“The typical horseshoe bat’s nose is half that long,” said Rolf Mueller, an associate professor with the Virginia Tech mechanical engineering department and director for the Bio-inspired Technology (BIT) Laboratory in Danville, Virginia.

“This nose is so much larger than anything else,” among other bats of the region, he said.

Mueller’s findings show that the bat uses its elongated nose to create a highly focused sonar beam.

Bats detect their environment through ultrasonic beams, or sonar, emitted from their mouths – or noses, as in the case of the paradoxolophus bat.

The echoes of the sound wave convey a wealth of information on objects in the bat’s environment.

Much like a flashlight with an adjuster that can create an intense but small beam of light, the bat’s nose can create a small but intense sonar beam.

Mueller and his team used computer animation to compare varying sizes of bat noses, from small noses on other bats to the large nose of the paradoxolophus bat.

In what Mueller calls a perfect mark of evolution, he says his computer modeling shows the length of the paradoxolophus bat’s nose stops at the exact point the sonar beam’s focal point would become ineffective.

“By predicting the width of the ultrasonic beam for each of these nose lengths with a computational method, we found that the natural nose length has a special value: All shortened noses provided less focus of the ultrasonic beam, whereas artificially elongated noses provided only negligible additional benefits,” Mueller said.

“Hence, this unusual case of a biological shape can be predicted accurately from its physical function alone,” he added. (ANI)

Humans can develop echolocation like dolphins and bats

Washington, July 1 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have shown that human beings can develop echolocation, the system of acoustic signals used by dolphins and bats to explore their surroundings.

The research was conducted by a team of researchers from the University of Alcala de Henares (UAH) in Spain.

“In certain circumstances, we humans could rival bats in our echolocation or biosonar capacity”, said Juan Antonio Martínez, lead author of the study and a researcher at the Superior Polytechnic School of the UAH.

The team led by this scientist has started a series of tests, the first of their kind in the world, to make use of human beings’ under-exploited echolocation skills.

In the first study, the team analyses the physical properties of various sounds, and proposes the most effective of these for use in echolocation.

“The almost ideal sound is the palate click, a click made by placing the tip of the tongue on the palate, just behind the teeth, and moving it quickly backwards, although it is often done downwards, which is wrong,” Martinez explained.

According to the researcher, palate clicks “are very similar to the sounds made by dolphins, although on a different scale, as these animals have specially-adapted organs and can produce 200 clicks per second, while we can only produce three or four”.

By using echolocation, “which is three-dimensional, and makes it possible to ‘see’ through materials that are opaque to visible radiation,” it is possible to measure the distance of an object based on the time that elapses between the emission of a sound wave and an echo being received of this wave as it is reflected from the object.

In order to learn how to emit, receive and interpret sounds, the scientists are developing a method that uses a series of protocols.

This first step is for the individual to know how to make and identify his or her own sounds (they are different for each person), and later to know how to use them to distinguish between objects according to their geometrical properties.

The next level is to learn how to master the “palate clicks”.

According to Martinez, his team is now working to help deaf and blind people to use this method in the future, because echoes are not only perceived by their ear, but also through vibrations in the tongue and bones.

A better understanding of the mental mechanisms used in echolocation could also help to design new medical imaging technologies or scanners, which make use of the great penetration capacity of clicks. (ANI)

Brit Pakistani cricketer says customs drilled holes in bats worth 536 pounds

London, May 9 (ANI): A British Pakistani cricketer has alleged that Customs officials ruined eight of his bats by drilling holes in them to check for drugs.

Dilawar Hussain, 28, claimed that he spent 536 pounds on the new kit from Pakistan for his team.
He told The Sun that he was baffled when the bats were delivered to him in Britain riddled with holes.

Takeaway owner Dilawar, who captains a local side in Blackburn, Lancashire, said: “They are now useless. They will splinter in a few games.

Dilawar bought the kit on a trip to Lahore and arranged for their shipping.

He said UK and Pakistani officials had blamed each other for making the holes, adding: “No one is owning up to the gaffe.”

A spokesman for UK Customs urged Dilawar to get in touch again to complain. (ANI)

Salman Khan bats for Manmohan Singh as PM

Vadodara, Apr 20 (ANI): Bollywood actor Salman Khan batted for Manmohan Singh as Prime, saying Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi would be the next best bet.

“I would love Manmohan Singh to be the Prime Minister. I think he is very smart man and a genius,” he said.

Thousands of fans gathered here to catch a glimpse of Khan as he campaigned for Satyajeet Gaekwad, a Congress candidate from Vadodara constituency.

Khan, who has earlier campaigned for his friends cutting across the party lines, said that Rahul could follow Singh “when he was ready.”

Earlier, Khan had campaigned for Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel in Bhandara region in Maharashtra.

Moreover, he has campaigned for veteran actor-turned-politician Vinod Khanna, a BJP candidate from the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha constituency in Punjab. (ANI)

Ryder not too taken up with Gray Nicolls’s double-sided bats

Wellington, Apr.2 (ANI): Double-sided bats are here to stay, but Kiwi batsman Jesse Ryder isn’t too taken up with the idea of using it.

New sponsor Gray Nicolls handed Test batsman Jesse Ryder the jazzy bat, invented for hitting reverse sweeps with the back of the bat’s flat surface, and some space-age helmets yesterday.

Gray Nicolls’ Cameron Black said the bats had caused a stir in Australia after David Warner hit Australian team-mate Shaun Tait on to the roof of the Adelaide Oval using the back of the bat.

“It created quite a storm. It was developed for players that were looking for that reverse sweep shot. So what we did was we developed a bat where you can hit off both sides. It has been passed by the MCC, so it is legal,” a Dominion Post report quoted him, as saying.

Ryder was slightly less enthusiastic about his new toy.

“I’m not planning on using it. I’m not the best player to be reverse sweeping, so I don’t practice it. But I’ll give it a go in the nets and see how it goes,” he said. (ANI)

World Cup 2011 will go ahead even if all matches are held in India: Bindra

Sydney, Mar 9 (ANI): ICC’s Principal Adviser and one of cricket’s most influential administrator, Inderjit Singh Bindra, is convinced the World Cup in 2011 will go ahead in the sub continent, even if all of the matches are played in India.

“We won’t jump to that conclusion, but if the situation is bad, India is big enough to stage the competition,” he said.

“The IPL has 59 matches spread over eight franchises. The next World Cup has 49 matches,” The Telegraph quoted Bindra, as saying.

Bindra also said he was 100 per cent certain that the IPL would go ahead as planned, despite the reservations of some players.

“I was reading on the internet about the Taliban’s attitude to cricket. They say Muslims should use swords not bats.

They say cricket in Asia is like opium in 19th century China – a tool of imperial powers. It is a very pernicious philosophy,” Bindra said.

Bindra believes Pakistan should not start playing at neutral venues.

“That is a booby-trap and they will cease to be a Test-playing country. How do youngsters watch and learn the game if Pakistan do not play at home?” he said.

“Give Pakistan a chance to get their act together – and they must ensure presidential-style security. But, ultimately, this is something that cannot be tackled by cricket administrators but by global powers,” Bindra added.

To make matters worse, Pakistan’s tour of Bangladesh was postponed last week, after the ICC realised the security plan featured the Bangladesh Rifles, who have just mutinied. (ANI)

India beat Pakistan by 10 wickets in World Cup opener

Sydney, Mar 7 (ANI): India on Saturday started its World Cup campaign in style and thrashed Pakistan by 10 wickets in the opening match of the tournament.

India won the toss and elected to bowl first.

Indian team bowled with a great length and line and shot out the Pakistani team for a paltry 57 in 29 overs.

Indian openers Anjum Chopra and Anagha Deshpande scored 17 and 26 runs respectively and guided India to victory in only 10 overs.

For Pakistan only Sana Mir (17) and opener Nain Abidi (10) put up some resistance as all other bats-women failed to touch the double-digit mark.

Three of their players could not even open their accounts.

Indian Rumeli Dhar wreaked havoc as she accounted for three Pakistani players with an incredible figures of 8-5-7-3.

Anju Sharma and Priyanka Roy took two wickets each. (ANI)

Cricket not quintessentially English after all

London, Mar.1 (ANI): Cricket is not quintessentially English after all, a new Australian research has claimed.

According to the research, north European immigrants imported the game to England in the 14th century, and that it was first resisted by the local population.
The claim challenges the traditional theory that the sport evolved from children’s games played in England since Anglo-Saxon times.

The Telegraph quotes Paul Campbell, of the department of English and theatre at the Australian National University, in Canberra, as saying that he has uncovered a reference to the sport in a 1533 poem, attributed to John Skelton, a popular poet and playwright of the day, in which he links it to immigrants from Flanders, in modern day Belgium, France and Holland.

In the work, “The Image of Ipocrisie” – much of which is a diatribe against parts of the Church – Skelton also appears to rail against the Flemish weavers who settled in southern and eastern England from the 14th century, labelling them dismissively as “kings of crekettes”.

In what appears to be a call for the weavers to be driven out of England, Skelton writes:

“O lorde of Ipocrites/Nowe shut vpp your wickettes/And clape to your clickettes!/A! Farewell, kings of crekettes!”

The poem is the earliest known reference to the sport and adds weight to claims that the weavers brought the game over with them and played it on fields close to where they tended their sheep, using shepherd’s crooks – or curved sticks – as bats to strike a ball.

It was uncovered by Campbell following a search of historical archives, in which he looked for variations of the early ways in which the word cricket was spelt.

A German academic, who first established that the word has its linguistic origins in Flemish, guided Campbell.

Dr Heiner Gillmeister, of the department of English at the University of Bonn, suggests the term cricket has its roots in the Flemish phrase “met de krik ketsen”, or “to chase with a curved stick”.

He goes on to suggest that the origins of hockey goals and the wickets in cricket were in imitation of chivalric games, in which a knight on horseback guarded a narrow passage or opening.

It had previously been thought that the first written reference to cricket was in 1589, when it was mentioned during a court case in Guildford, Surrey, in which a certain John Derick – possible from the Flemish name Hendrik – recalled that as a young man at the Royal Grammar School “he and diverse of his fellowes did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies”.

But the new finding is the most conclusive proof that the sport – as well as the word itself – was foreign in origin.

Skelton’s poem is contained in a collection published by The Ballad Society in 1868. (ANI)

Cricket not quintessentially English after all

London, Mar.1 (ANI): Cricket is not quintessentially English after all, a new Australian research has claimed.

According to the research, north European immigrants imported the game to England in the 14th century, and that it was first resisted by the local population.
The claim challenges the traditional theory that the sport evolved from children’s games played in England since Anglo-Saxon times.

The Telegraph quotes Paul Campbell, of the department of English and theatre at the Australian National University, in Canberra, as saying that he has uncovered a reference to the sport in a 1533 poem, attributed to John Skelton, a popular poet and playwright of the day, in which he links it to immigrants from Flanders, in modern day Belgium, France and Holland.

In the work, “The Image of Ipocrisie” – much of which is a diatribe against parts of the Church – Skelton also appears to rail against the Flemish weavers who settled in southern and eastern England from the 14th century, labelling them dismissively as “kings of crekettes”.

In what appears to be a call for the weavers to be driven out of England, Skelton writes:

“O lorde of Ipocrites/Nowe shut vpp your wickettes/And clape to your clickettes!/A! Farewell, kings of crekettes!”

The poem is the earliest known reference to the sport and adds weight to claims that the weavers brought the game over with them and played it on fields close to where they tended their sheep, using shepherd’s crooks – or curved sticks – as bats to strike a ball.

It was uncovered by Campbell following a search of historical archives, in which he looked for variations of the early ways in which the word cricket was spelt.

A German academic, who first established that the word has its linguistic origins in Flemish, guided Campbell.

Dr Heiner Gillmeister, of the department of English at the University of Bonn, suggests the term cricket has its roots in the Flemish phrase “met de krik ketsen”, or “to chase with a curved stick”.

He goes on to suggest that the origins of hockey goals and the wickets in cricket were in imitation of chivalric games, in which a knight on horseback guarded a narrow passage or opening.

It had previously been thought that the first written reference to cricket was in 1589, when it was mentioned during a court case in Guildford, Surrey, in which a certain John Derick – possible from the Flemish name Hendrik – recalled that as a young man at the Royal Grammar School “he and diverse of his fellowes did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies”.

But the new finding is the most conclusive proof that the sport – as well as the word itself – was foreign in origin.

Skelton’s poem is contained in a collection published by The Ballad Society in 1868. (ANI)

Warne spends time with bush fire affected kids

Melbourne, Feb.12 (ANI): Former Australian leg-spinner Shane Warne on Wednesday spent some time with children who had survived the bush fires that have ravaged most parts of Victoria.

According to Fox Sports, Warne, dressed in faded jeans with torn hems, had the kids gather around him at the local skate-ramp to sign their bats, balls and T-shirts autographed.

“There you are, buddy,” he would say, ruflling a little boy’s hair. When it was time to finish and move on but a young one lingered, he’d say, “Gimme five!” They’d grin and slap his hand and take the hint.

It wasn’t till the game of bush cricket started that he managed to really crack the ice.

A skateboard was the wicket and a cardboard box the stumps. He bowled, an effortless graceful curve, while a determined small boy with a tight face and a bat waited. Every now and again one managed to thwack the ball. “Run run run!” Warnie would yell.

While the batter kicked up a cloud of brown dust racing to the wicket, fellow bowler Garry Lyon yelled to the crowd, “We need some fielders over there!”

Warne wouldn’t have known it, but one of the little boys there to see him had just lost his best friend. Another had lost his home and the rest of his street. The lucky parents there had cameras to capture their child’s moment with their hero. The unlucky ones had the clothes they were standing in.

Whenever a child thanked him, Warne would say, “No worries. No worries at all.”

He was right about that. (ANI)

Symonds’ Proteas tour hopes recede as he fails again for Queensland

Brisbane, Jan.31 (ANI): Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds failed for a second day in his first-class cricket comeback to leave his South African tour hopes hanging by a thread.

Symonds lasted just eight balls on Saturday as he was caught behind for three, hot on the heels of his first-innings five, on return from knee surgery for Queensland at the Gabba.

The wayward all-rounder edged a forward defensive push to a good length ball by Steve Magoffin, giving gloveman Luke Ronchi a regulation catch low down.

With chief selector Andrew Hilditch again watching from the northern stand at the Vulture St end, Symonds’ second consecutive failure is a serious blow to his hopes of a Australian recall for the three-Test tour of South Africa.

The disappointment bubbled over as he left the wicket, kicking his boot in disgust midway down the pitch.

Symonds then smashed his bat into the concrete side of the players tunnel on the way to the Bulls dressing room.

His 11-minute stay leaves him with just 88 runs from eight bats at a dreadful average of 11 for Queensland this season.(ANI)