Air travellers can face problems as volcanic ash returns to threaten flights

London, May 4 (ANI): Air travellers could face further problems on Tuesday as experts monitored the return of the volcanic ash cloud over UK airspace

The skies over parts of Scotland were closed as a precaution last night after an increased concentration of volcanic ash was detected in the atmosphere, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) said.

The ash is forecast to exceed the safe level agreed by the CAA and airlines in the Outer Hebrides today, The Scotsman reports.

Airspace over the Outer Hebrides was closed to all operations at 6 p.m. following advice from the Met Office.

The closures could see flights to and from the Western Isles cancelled, but the situation will be constantly reviewed. Passengers are advised to check with their airline before travelling, The Scotsman reports.

The move came as flights in and out of Ireland, including Dublin, Cork and Belfast were grounded for six hours from 7 a.m. this morning as a dense plume travels across the island

The Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) said the decision to ground aircraft was based on the safety risks to crews and passengers as a result of the drift south of the volcanic ash cloud caused by the north-easterly winds, The Scotsman reports. (ANI)

Muhammad Ali given huge Irish hero’s welcome

Belfast (Ireland), Sep.2 (ANI): Former World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali was given an Irish hero’s welcome on Tuesday at Turnpike Road from where his great-grandfather Abe Grady set out for the New World almost 150 years ago.

The former three times world heavyweight boxing champion was welcomed like a returning prodigal son when he arrived in Ennis, Co Clare, and was made its first Freeman.

Clearly moved by the fervour of the welcome, he refused to be ushered into a waiting vehicle by his security guards as the crowds chanted: “Ali! Ali! Ali!”

After unveiling a monument near the spot where his ancestral home – a two-room thatched cottage – once stood, he walked with his wife, Yolanda, to meet his fans, the majority of whom were not even born when his brilliant career was dimmed by the onset of Parkinson’s disease, reports The Times.

Today Turnpike Road is lined with primly neat council houses, none prouder than the home of the late Eileen O’Grady, whose daughter, Mary, kissed and hugged her famous distant cousin.

Eileen died nine months ago, preferring to keep her association with one of the greatest sportsmen of all time a secret.

Genealogists traced the roots of Ali, formerly Cassius Clay Jr, to Abe Grady through land registry documents, which record that Grady left Ireland in the 1860s from Cappa Harbour in Kilruch, Co Clare. He settled in Kentucky, where he married a freed African-American slave.

Their son also married an African-American and one of the daughters of that union was Odessa Lee Grady, who married Cassius Clay Sr. (ANI)

England’s Ashes heroes angry and frustrated over playing against Ireland

London, Aug. 26 (ANI): Six of England’s Ashes-winning heroes flew to Ireland last night for a match that has left them angry and frustrated.

They believe it is ridiculous they must play a one-day international in Belfast tomorrow in the same week as their epic win over the Aussies at The Oval.

The players already have a packed schedule of two Twenty20 matches and seven one-dayers against Australia in the next three weeks.

The ECB, however, insists England must face Ireland and Scotland in alternate years to spread the cricket gospel in those countries.

Wicketkeeper Matt Prior admitted: “It’s not ideal. But the boys have got their heads around it and now we’re concentrating on the job.”

Andrew Strauss is having a break, so Paul Collingwood will captain the team. The five other travelling Oval stars are Jonathan Trott, Prior, Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann and Jimmy Anderson. (ANI)

Collingwood says he knows he has to improve to keep his place

London, Aug.26 (ANI): England middle order batsman Paul Collingwood has said that he knows he has to improve as a batsman to keep his place in the England side.

Collingwood, who takes over as England’s captain this week for a one-dayer against Ireland in Belfast on Thursday and two Twenty20 internationals against Australia next week, was quoted by The Independent as saying: “I know I am going to have to tinker a bit with technique and become a better player to be able to stay in the side.”

“But I am willing to do that. I am still at an age when I am enjoying my cricket. He [Trott] came in and had a dream debut and I understand the position I am in. I am going to have to work my absolute nuts off to keep my place. I know I can do it and I still feel I am fit enough and mentally strong enough to do that,” he added.

After his match-saving innings of 75 in Cardiff, Collingwood’s final four innings were worth just 42 runs.

The Australians shut off Collingwood’s leg-side options, and now he is in the familiar position of fighting for his place in the side at the age of 33.

“I’ve had a great year playing Test cricket,” he said. “Look at my stats, they have been good. I would have loved to have played a lot better in last few Tests but the innings in Cardiff went a long way to winning these Ashes,” he says in his favour.

Perhaps it was the knowledge this could be his last crack at the Australians which made Collingwood appear the most nervous England player on Sunday, when he dropped several catches, including one at slip he would normally take with his cap pulled over his eyes.

“People sometimes think we are robots and don’t have emotions and nerves don’t get to us but believe me the closer you get to winning the Ashes the more nervous you become,” he said. (ANI)

Ancient Irish skeletons could help solve mystery of rare genetic bone disease

Dublin, August 25 (ANI): Two ancient skeletons with a rare genetic bone disease unearthed from a medieval Irish graveyard may hold key insights for medical experts in solving the mysterious ailment.

The two skeletons – one around 800-years-old and the other 1,100-years-old – dug up along with the remains of more than 1,000 men, women and children from the Ballyhanna graveyard site at Ballyshannon, Co Donegal, have attracted the attention of international medical researchers.

There have only been 16 cases of the hereditary bone growth disorder, now known as multiple osteochondromas, identified in ancient remains worldwide.

Dr Eileen Murphy, an archaeology lecturer at Queen’s University Belfast, believes that the discovery of the remains – afflicted by massive bone growths – could help modern-day clinicians glean more information about that unusual debilitating condition.

According to Dr Murphy, the two cases could “help inform clinicians” in understanding the disease.

“I think it is good for clinicians to look at how diseases change and the way they turn up in the body over time. Some of the Jericho cases (dating from the Middle Bronze Age) are very old and can show if it has progressed in any way or mutated,” said Dr Murphy, who is writing a paper on the two cases.

A sample of the 800-year-old remains from Skeleton 331 known as ‘Ballyhanna Man’ was sent to a genetics unit in Italy for further examination.

“We took a sample of the bone to send off to genetics units but the DNA in the bone was too degraded,” Dr Murphy explained.

However, the research team holds hopes that in the future, a specialized laboratory may be able to extract DNA of sufficient quality for analysis to provide clues as to the evolution of the disease, which is estimated to affect one in 50,000 people.

Researchers from the Institute of Technology in Sligo and Queen’s University Belfast are collaborating on the Ballyhanna project.

The 800-year-old remains of the worst-affected man, who died aged between 25 to 35 years old, showed he would have been physically disabled due to massive bony projections.

It is likely that he would have suffered from pain and have been recognized by others as having a physically debilitating condition from a young age.

The remains of the other man, who died a few hundred years earlier aged around 35-50 years, had less prominent growths.

In both cases, they were interred in the community graveyard, suggesting they were not shunned and treated as equals. (ANI)

Kamalesh Sharma elected chancellor of Queen’s University Belfast

London, Aug 25 (ANI): Commonwealth Secretary General Kamalesh Sharma has been appointed as the new chancellor of the Queen’s University Belfast (QUB).

Sharma succeeds Senator George J. Mitchell.

Sharma has been the Secretary General of the Commonwealth of Nations from 2008, having previously served as the High Commissioner for India in London.

He was elected to the position of Secretary General over Michael Frendo, foreign Minister of Malta, during the biennial Commonwealth Summit in Kampala, Uganda in2007.

He took over from Sir Don McKinnon of New Zealand on April 1. 008.

He served as India’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations before his retirement from IFS.

From 2002 to 2004, he served as U.N. Secretary General’s special representative to East Timor. (ANI)

England team won’t undertake open-top bus parade

London, Aug.24 (ANI): England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) Managing Director Hugh Morris has ruled out the possibility of the victorious England cricket team undertaking an open top bus parade similar to the one that was done in 2005.

He told Sky News: “Perhaps last time we partied a bit too long and didn’t plan enough and obviously we know what the result was in Australia 18 months afterwards. We’re going to plan hard, we’ve got some big challenges ahead of us… that’s what we’ve be focusing on.”

The last home Ashes win sparked wild celebrations scenes and an open-top bus parade for the players. It also saw the team enjoy a marathon drinking session, with Andrew Flintoff famously turning up drunk at a Downing Street reception.

Things will be different this time around – with England aiming to capitalise on their success and become the best Test team in the world.

Playing commitments in Belfast later this week also mean the players will not be able to celebrate for too long.

Morris paid particular tribute to captain Andrew Strauss and team director Andy Flower.

Referring to the sackings of Kevin Pietersen as captain and former head coach Peter Moores, he said: “It was a dark, difficult, challenging time for all of us. But the way Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss have marshalled the troops to get to winning an Ashes series seven months later is a fantastic achievement.”

The chairman of selectors, Geoff Miller, told Sky News England can’t afford to dwell on the victory for too long.

“In 2005 we’d not beaten Australia for some time, now it’s a different situation. They can party, they can celebrate but they know there’s still a big job to be done. We want to be the best in the world and to be the best we’ll have to focus on what we do on and off the field,” he said. (ANI)

Belfast kids’ finger painting world record bid

London, Aug 21 (ANI): More than 4,000 children in Belfast have attempted to beat the world record for finger painting.

The previous record was set in Austria two years ago and was 699sq ft smaller than the new gigantic spread.

Two adjudicators approved by Guinness World Records are currently examining the artwork to find if it is a new record.

The latest painting was stitched together at the Belfast zoo carpark to produce a massive 22,496.5sq ft canvas.

Northern Ireland Child Minding Association organized the event to mark its 25th anniversary celebrations.

Sky News quoted association director Bridget Nodder as saying: “We wanted to do something a bit different to celebrate our anniversary.”

Belfast Lord Mayor Naomi Long called the effort “a great opportunity for children to get involved in a creative project which is tremendous fun.”

The confirmation of the new record will be known in a couple of weeks. (ANI)

Rod Stewart, Suggs urge musicians to busk for charity

London, May 26 (ANI): Rod Stewart and Madness frontman Suggs have urged fellow musicians to take to the streets and start busking to help raise funds for charity.

The duo is initiating “Busking Cancer”, a “concert” to encourage artists across Britain to perform in public and gather money from audience to help Cancer Research UK.

Suggs and his fellow band members are due to play their tunes on HMS Belfast, secured on the banks of the River Thames for an exclusive one-night busking show.

Meanwhile, Stewart, who battled thyroid cancer, is asking musicians to come out and play.

“Busking is how I started, in the early 60s, on the streets of Paris. It is what music is all about – just getting out there and singing or playing for the sheer joy of it,” The Scotsman quoted him as saying. (ANI)

Sextuplets born in Northern Ireland

London – A woman in Northern Ireland has given birth to six babies – four girls and two boys – in a caesarian section delivery involving 30 medical staff, the Royal Jubilee Maternity Hospital in Belfast said Friday.

The mother conceived the babies naturally and not had undergone fertility treatment. The babies weighed between 500 grams and 1 kilo, the hospital said.

The family had requested privacy and would not be available for photographs.

The birth of sextuplets is rare across the world, occurring in about one out of 4.5 million pregnancies.

Previously, the largest multiple birth in Northern Ireland was quintuplets, born in 2002. (dpa)

PCB consider Ireland and Scotland as hosts

PCB consider Ireland and Scotland as hostsVenues in Ireland and Scotland are in the running to host Pakistan’s international matches against Australia next year, as the expense of hosting a series in England becomes clearer to the Pakistan board.

Discussions between the ECB, Cricket Australia and the PCB are already underway for Pakistan to ‘host’ Australia for two Tests and two T20Is in England next summer.

But the venues have yet to be finalised and the prohibitive costs of organising a Test series in England for a financially-struggling PCB means other options are being looked at.

“There are proposals from Scotland and Ireland and we are seriously looking at them,” a PCB official told Cricinfo.

“They are cheaper than the options in England, which are quite high, in terms of accommodation and travel.

We were scheduled to play a match in Glasgow against India which was eventually washed out, so we will look at it.” Cricket Australia would be comfortable if the engagements were held in the United Kingdom.

“It’s their [Pakistan's] series, so it’s up to them to work out the venue,” a Cricket Australia spokesman said.

Both Warren Deutrom, the chief executive of Cricket Ireland, and his Scotland counterpart, Roddy Smith, confirmed an interest in hosting matches, with Deutrom even proposing Stormont in Belfast as a possible venue for a Test match.

Both boards, however, said they had not received any feedback from the PCB since holding preliminary discussions earlier this year.

“Discussions haven’t really progressed that much further in the last few weeks,” Deutrom told Cricinfo.

“Our proposal was simply outlining some headline costs for accommodation and transportation, and we forwarded that information to the PCB.

Thus far we haven’t had a response, so I’m guessing they are still considering all the options.

“We clearly wanted to throw our hat into the ring for any match, whether it was a Twenty20, ODI, or a Test match, because it’s an excellent opportunity to host Pakistan, and potentially to play against them as well.

We are already hosting Australia next year in an ODI, and if Pakistan are over here as well it would be unseemly not to suggest we have the opportunity to play them too.” Ireland are currently on a high after topping the table at the ICC World Cup Qualifiers in South Africa, and Deutrom believes that the challenge of hosting a Test match would not be out of the question.

“We hosted India and South Africa at Stormont in 2007, and played five ODIs in nine days,” he said.

“Obviously they were played on different pitches, but if Ireland’s facilities are good enough to host four-day Intercontinental Cup matches, we could also host a five-day Test match.” Cricket Scotland have rather more limited ambitions, but nevertheless remain interested in bringing Pakistan and Australia north of the border for one-day contests.

“In all honesty I think they will play in England as it makes more economic sense to play in big stadia,” Smith told Cricinfo.

“But we’ve been consistent all the way through that they we’d love to play them, and also we could be used as a venue.

“It all depends on the economics – we can’t provide a 15-20,000-seater stadium, our grounds are nearer 4000-5000,” said Smith.

“We have a large Scottish Asian population but not the numbers they have in England.

But the ball is in the PCB’s court, so we’ll wait for firm discussions and proposals on both sides.” The PCB, for their part, seem unconcerned about the limited capacity of Scotland and Ireland’s grounds, even though some English counties, most notably Yorkshire, believe they could attract full houses if they were to stage Pakistan international fixtures.

“Though there are no stadiums as such, they have grounds there,” said the PCB official.

“Temporary erections can be put up there like they used to do at the ground in Toronto where the Sahara Cup used to be held.” An ECB spokesman confirmed that England’s stance had not changed since last week, when the chief executive David Collier welcomed the prospect of offering Pakistan a temporary home in the country.

Yorkshire lasses are Britain’s Bustiest Babes

London, May 14 (ANI): A new survey has revealed that girls from Yorkshire are the bustiest babes in Britain, with 35 per cent needing DD cups or larger.

The study, conducted by MBT, who makes footwear for those with posture problems, revealed that girls from Newcastle were next, with the lasses from Bristol not lagging far behind, reports the Sun.

But London’s women were nowhere near the competition, after the survey revealed they had the smallest boobs in the country, with only 21 per cent a DD size or more.

It was also revealed that many of the big girls viewed their assets differently, with four in ten saying they make it harder to find a fella, while two thirds reckon they cannot keep fit.

Ten per cent say they are too embarrassed to dance or chat to men, and 22 per cent have at least considered breast reduction surgery.

The survey was conducted on one thousand women, and the results, showing percentage in each city with DD cup size or above, were as follows:

Leeds/Sheffield 35; Newcastle 35; Leicester 31; Bristol 30; Birmingham 29; Belfast 29; Glasgow 28; Cardiff 26; Brighton 26; Norwich 24; Manchester 22; London 21. (ANI)

Liam Neeson finally becomes a graduate after 40 years

London, May 8 (ANI): Almost 40 years after enrolling in Queen’s University, Belfast, Oscar-nominated actor Liam Neeson has finally received his doctorate from the university.

The ‘Schindler’s List’ actor, born in Ballymena, was still an undergraduate at Queen’s in 1971 as a Physics and Computer Science student, when he left to work in ‘Guinness’.

And Vice-Chancellor Professor Peter Gregson finally awarded the 56-year-old actor an honorary doctorate in New York.

The actor said that he would “finally” be able to tell his mother that he had graduated.

On the occasion, the professor even spilled out some details from the actor’s original university application form from 1970.

Gregson awarded the actor with a Doctorate of the University for his Outstanding Contribution and Service to the Arts.

Neeson said that Northern Ireland would “always be home”.

“I have often found that no matter where I meet people in the world, there is a path that leads back to Queen’s,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

He added: “Queen’s University flies the flag for the arts in Northern Ireland and beyond. It is to be commended on its commitment to the arts sector and in nurturing new talent through its broad range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses.”

Liam Neeson has starred in more than 50 television and film productions and was nominated for an Oscar for his performance as Oskar Schindler in Schindler’s List.

In March, his wife of 15 years, Natasha Richardson, died of head injuries after a fall at a ski resort in Quebec. (ANI)

The truth about Bob Dylan’s reclusive life revealed

London, May 5 (ANI): Even though American singer Bob Dylan is very well known as a music legend, and for being one of the most influential songwriters, not much is known about his life behind the scenes.

Dylan, 67, who has just become the oldest musician to have a No. 1 album in the UK, when his ‘Together Through Life’ was released last week, still manages to intrigue many, and following are some of the quirks that made the man.

When on tour, Dylan never stayed at luxury hotel suites and preferred budget accommodation like Travelodges, and his entourage would strip the beds of all linen in the morning, in case his dirty sheets appeared on eBay for sale.

Dylan married Sara Lownds in secret on November 1965 in front of just two witnesses. Wanting to keep his life private, he denied being married and was reported to have bundled her into a walk-in wardrobe backstage in Vancouver after hearing two radio announcers were nearby.

He later married his back-up singer Carol Dennis in 1986, but the marriage was kept a secret until 2001, nine years after they divorced.

During a show in Belfast in 1991, he ignored the car sent by the promoter and waited at a bus stop instead, and his arrival was captured by the local evening news.

In the 90s, when he spoke to fellow songwriter Marshall Crenshaw about joining his band, Dylan advised him to eat chilli peppers every day.

When on tour, Dylan would be cycling around the towns he was playing, and he also revealed that he lived to tour.

“A lot of people can’t stand touring, but to me it’s like breathing. I do it because I’m driven to do it,” the Mirror quoted him as having said once.

In 2000, head honchos from Sony Records had been promised a meet-and-greet with Dylan. It kept getting cancelled until the last night of the UK tour at Wembley when he was found in the car park lying under a tour van with his head on a pillow.

When reminded he had the meet-and-greet, he replied simply: “Yeah. Why do you think I’m lying here?”

During the 70s and 80s, Dylan’s mastiff hounds travelled with him everywhere.

When he recently wandered into the Mark Twain Boyhood Home and Museum in Hannibal, Missouri, unannounced and alone, the curator spotted him and asked if it was really “him”.

“I guess I am,” Dylan said before disappearing.

“Being noticed can be a burden,” he later said.

“Jesus got himself crucified because he got himself noticed. So I disappear a lot,” he added. (ANI)

Cheryl Cole left ‘terrified’ after female fan bites her on lips

London, May 4 (ANI): Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole was left ‘absolutely terrified’ after she was bitten on the lips by a female fan.

Cole, 25, was posing for photos outside her hotel when a teenager lunged at her, and as per witnesses the X Factor judge looked “petrified” when the incident occurred.

A security guard shoved the hysterical fan, who wore a brace on her teeth, out of the way and whisked the singer into the hotel.

“I kissed Cheryl, I kissed Cheryl” the Sun quoted the fan as shouting, not realising she had accidentally bitten Cole.

The incident happened as the girl group arrived back at the Malmaison Hotel, Belfast, after a show on their Out Of Control tour at the Odyssey Arena, and about 30 fans were waiting to meet the girls.

“This girl was hysterical and totally obsessed with Cheryl,” a witness said.

“She lunged at her and her brace must have nicked her lip. Cheryl looked absolutely terrified.

“The band’s security manager said Cheryl had been hurt and was shaking,” the witness stated.

Moments later Nadine Coyle, 23, stepped off the tour bus ready to chat with fans, but she also was swiftly ushered into the hotel by security.

“Nadine didn’t know what had happened. It had left Cheryl petrified,” another witness said.

“Cheryl was left shaken. As a result the girls have been more cautious greeting fans,” a Girls Aloud spokeswoman added. (ANI)

Cheryl Cole left ‘terrified’ after female fan bites her on lips

London, May 4 (ANI): Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole was left ‘absolutely terrified’ after she was bitten on the lips by a female fan.

Cole, 25, was posing for photos outside her hotel when a teenager lunged at her, and as per witnesses the X Factor judge looked “petrified” when the incident occurred.

A security guard shoved the hysterical fan, who wore a brace on her teeth, out of the way and whisked the singer into the hotel.

“I kissed Cheryl, I kissed Cheryl” the Sun quoted the fan as shouting, not realising she had accidentally bitten Cole.

The incident happened as the girl group arrived back at the Malmaison Hotel, Belfast, after a show on their Out Of Control tour at the Odyssey Arena, and about 30 fans were waiting to meet the girls.

“This girl was hysterical and totally obsessed with Cheryl,” a witness said.

“She lunged at her and her brace must have nicked her lip. Cheryl looked absolutely terrified.

“The band’s security manager said Cheryl had been hurt and was shaking,” the witness stated.

Moments later Nadine Coyle, 23, stepped off the tour bus ready to chat with fans, but she also was swiftly ushered into the hotel by security.

“Nadine didn’t know what had happened. It had left Cheryl petrified,” another witness said.

“Cheryl was left shaken. As a result the girls have been more cautious greeting fans,” a Girls Aloud spokeswoman added. (ANI)

Baldini fails in doping appeal

Belfast – Italian world class fencer Andrea Baldini has failed to have a six months ban for a doping violation overturned, the sports’ governing body FIE said Friday. Baldini has, however, already served the suspension and is allowed to compete again.

The Italian, who won the silver medal at the world championships in 2006 and 2007, tested positive for the banned diuretic furosemide at the European championships in Kiev last July.

He has always maintained his innocence and said he had fallen victim to a campaign to frame him.

The FIE took this into consideration, as they took the fact that it was his first offence into consideration. The 23-year-old, who was one of the favourites to win a gold medal at the Olympics had also been prevented from competing in Beijing.

FIE said the ban was from September 4 2008 for six months.

As Baldini did not compete in any competitions since that date, he has effectively served his ban.

Brit men’s feet are growing bigger by the day

London, Apr 10 (ANI): Men in UK are certainly walking ahead and that too with big shoes-new figures have revealed that British men’s feet are getting bigger and the average shoe size has grown by one in the last five years.

According to Debenhams-the UK departmental store-the average man’s shoe size in 2004 was eight, but now it is size nine.

The demand for size 12 shoes has soared, and for the first time gone ahead in requests for size sevens.

According to the figures, Men in Birmingham have the largest feet, followed by Liverpool, Belfast and Cardiff.

Statistics also suggest that the average shoe for women has apparently become broader and longer.

“For the first time, we’re considering stocking size 13 as a standard fitting across all of our ranges, and size 14 is a possibility too. Our largest shoe currently available is a size 12. In the past, these shoe sizes would have been available only on special order,” the Telegraph quoted a Debenhams spokesman as saying.

He added: “We think it is because people are growing taller. The trends tell us that clothing sizes are also getting bigger. Interestingly, women’s shoes are getting broader as well as longer, which would suggest that women are getting bigger in general.”

The top 10 cities by men’s shoe size are:

1. Birmingham. Liverpool. Belfast. Cardiff. London. Manchester. Aberdeen. Cambridge. Bristol0. Milton Keynes (ANI)

Crabs not only suffer pain but remember it as well

Washington, March 27 (ANI): A new study by a Queen’s University Belfast academic has shown that crabs not only suffer pain but that they retain a memory of it.

The study, which looked at the reactions of hermit crabs to small electric shocks, was carried out by Professor Bob Elwood and Mirjam Appel from the School of Biological Sciences at Queen’s.

Professor Elwood, who previously carried out a study showing that prawns endure pain, said his research highlighted the need to investigate how crustaceans used in food industries are treated.

Hermit crabs have no shell of their own so inhabit other structures, usually empty mollusc shells.

Wires were attached to shells to deliver the small shocks to the abdomen of the some of the crabs within the shells.

The only crabs to get out of their shells were those which had received shocks, indicating that the experience is unpleasant for them.

This shows that central neuronal processing occurs rather than the response merely being a reflex.

Hermit crabs are known to prefer some species of shells more strongly than others and it was found that that they were more likely to come out of the shells they least preferred.

The main aim of the experiment, however, was to deliver a shock just under the threshold that causes crabs to move out of the shell, to see what happened when a new shell was then offered.

Crabs that had been shocked but had remained in their shell appeared to remember the experience of the shock because they quickly moved towards the new shell, investigated it briefly and were more likely to change to the new shell compared to those that had not been shocked.

According to Professor Elwood, “There has been a long debate about whether crustaceans including crabs, prawns and lobsters feel pain.”

“We know from previous research that they can detect harmful stimuli and withdraw from the source of the stimuli but that could be a simple reflex without the inner ‘feeling’ of unpleasantness that we associate with pain,” he said.

“This research demonstrates that it is not a simple reflex, but that crabs trade-off their need for a quality shell with the need to avoid the harmful stimulus,” he added.

“Trade-offs of this type have not been previously demonstrated in crustaceans. The results are consistent with the idea of pain being experienced by these animals,” he explained. (ANI)

Spandau Ballet reunites for world tour

London, Mar 26 (ANI): Eighties pop group Spandau Ballet is reuniting for a world tour, band members told reporters at a press conference on the HMS Belfast in London.

The band, which gave hits like ‘Gold’ and ‘True’, will begin a world tour in the autumn, announcing an initial eight dates across Ireland and the UK, starting in Dublin on 13 October.

All five original members of the band got together publicly for the first time since they split in 1989.

“This is my other family really and I just missed them for the last 20 years,” the BBC quoted Gary Kemp, the group’s songwriter and guitarist, as saying.

“I wanted to get together just to have a chat about all those great experiences we had. To be able to make some new experiences is a really great opportunity and that’s what we plan to do,” he added.

Kemp’s bassist brother Martin said: “Families go through terrible times sometimes and they argue. But in the end we’ve got back together – which is the main thing.”

Hadley said they had buried the hatchet after ‘the realisation that time is a great healer’.

The band said that the world tour will focus on greatest hits, but if it goes well they will consider writing new material together. (ANI)