Original Walt Disney drawings found in an attic office in Blackpool

London, Sep 9 (ANI): Original Walt Disney drawings have been recovered from an attic office in Blackpool, which could be worth up to 12,000 pounds each.

The 15 mint condition black and white and colour drawings were in the middle of hundreds of files gathered in over a century of Blackpool Illuminations.

Altogether the files have been valued at 500,000 pounds for insurance purposes, but it is thought the original Disney drawings alone could fetch up to 180,000 pounds altogether should they be auctioned off.

The material is being catalogued, and will be archived for future public viewing for the first time.

The Disney drawings had been sent from Hollywood to Blackpool by Walt Disney himself.

His studio was first approached in 1953 by Blackpool Council’s Illuminations staff, when they wanted to include characters, including Mickey Mouse, in their tableaux.

One of the drawings featuring Mickey shows how they wanted to animate him for the Golden Mile, but Disney demanded the characters be totally accurate to the original cinema blockbusters, and so sent off artists’ work to the English resort.

“The attic room is actually part of one of Blackpool’s original farmhouses built long before the town became a seaside resort,” the Telegraph quoted Colette Halstead, Illuminations’ creative development coordinator, as saying.

“The Illuminations department has just grown round it over the decades and old files and equipment like the ex Army field telephones used to co-ordinate the seven mile switch on were stored there.

“We are slowly moving to new premises and we were asked to catalogue the room’s contents when we came across the Disney material,” she added. (ANI)

50 things that are being killed by the Internet

London, Sep 4 (ANI): The Internet has been touted as one of the most useful tool for the last two decades, and has had a huge impact on our lives, but along with its benefits, the World Wide Web has also had some negative impacts on people.

While tasks that once took days can be completed in seconds, traditions and skills that emerged over centuries have become redundant.

The Telegraph has compiled a list of 50 things that are in the process of being killed off by the web and other tools of modern communication, from products and business models to life experiences and habits.

These things are:

1. The art of polite disagreement

2. Fear that you are the only person unmoved by a celebrity’s death

3. Listening to an album all the way through

4. Sarah Palin

5. Punctuality

6. Ceefax/Teletext

7. Adolescent nerves at first porn purchase

8. Telephone directories

9. The myth of cat intelligence

10. Watches

11. Music stores

12. Letter writing/pen pals

13. Memory

14. Dead time

15. Photo albums and slide shows

16. Hoaxes and conspiracy theories

17. Watching television together

18. Authoritative reference works

19. The Innovations catalogue

20. Order forms in the back pages of books

21. Delayed knowledge of sporting results

22. Enforceable copyright

23. Reading telegrams at weddings

24. Dogging

25. Aren’t they dead? Aren’t they gay?

26. Holiday news ignorance

27. Knowing telephone numbers off by heart

28. Respect for doctors and other professionals

29. The mystery of foreign languages

30. Geographical knowledge

31. Privacy

32. Chuck Norris’s reputation

33. Pencil cricket

34. Mainstream media

35. Concentration

36. Mr Alifi

37. Personal reinvention

38. Viktor Yanukovych

39. The insurance ring-round

40. Undiscovered artists

41. The usefulness of reference pages at the front of diaries

42. The nervous thrill of the reunion

43. Solitaire

44. Trust in Nigerian businessmen and princes

45. Prostitute calling cards/ kerb crawling

46. Staggered product/film releases

47. Footnotes

48. Grand National trips to the bookmaker

49. Fanzines

50. Your lunchbreak (ANI)

Image of different regions of Trifid Nebula captured by European Southern Observatory

Munich, August 27 (ANI): A new image by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) has captured the different regions of the Trifid Nebula, which is a rare combination of three nebula types, as seen in visible light.

This massive star factory is so named for the dark dust bands that trisect its glowing heart, revealing the fury of freshly formed stars and presaging more star birth.

Smoldering several thousand light-years away in the constellation of Sagittarius (the Archer), the Trifid Nebula presents a compelling portrait of the early stages of a star’s life, from gestation to first light.

The heat and “winds” of newly ignited, volatile stars stir the Trifid’s gas and dust-filled cauldron.

In time, the dark tendrils of matter strewn throughout the area will themselves collapse and form new stars.

The French astronomer Charles Messier first observed the Trifid Nebula in June 1764, recording the hazy, glowing object as entry number 20 in his renowned catalogue.

Observations made about 60 years later by John Herschel of the dust lanes that appear to divide the cosmic cloud into three lobes inspired the English astronomer to coin the name “Trifid”.

Made with the Wide-Field Imager camera attached to the MPG/ESO 2.2-meter telescope at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in northern Chile, the new image prominently displays the different regions of the Trifid Nebula as seen in visible light.

In the bluish patch to the upper left of the image, called a reflection nebula, gas scatters the light from nearby, Trifid-born stars.

The largest of these stars shines most brightly in the hot, blue portion of the visible spectrum.

This, along with the fact that dust grains and molecules scatter blue light more efficiently than red light, imbues this portion of the Trifid Nebula with an azure hue.

Below, in the round, pink-reddish area typical of an emission nebula, the gas at the Trifid’s core is heated by hundreds of scorching young stars until it emits the red signature light of hydrogen, the major component of the gas, just as hot neon gas glows red-orange in illuminated signs all over the world.

The gases and dust that crisscross the Trifid Nebula make up the third kind of nebula in this cosmic cloud, known as dark nebulae, courtesy of their light-obscuring effects.

Within these dark lanes, the remnants of previous star birth episodes continue to coalesce under gravity’s inexorable attraction.

The rising density, pressure and temperature inside these gaseous blobs will eventually trigger nuclear fusion, and yet more stars will form. (ANI)

Giant Martian egg cups could be used to trace the Red Planet’s climate

London, July 14 (ANI): A new study has suggested that craters embedded on pedestals that tower above the Martian landscape like giant egg cups could be used to trace the planet’s climate.

‘Pedestal’ craters were gouged out by impacts, like other craters, but stand out because they sit atop plateaus that loom an average of 50 metres above the Martian surface.

It’s not clear exactly how the pedestals formed.

According to a report in New Scientist, a comprehensive catalogue of the objects is lending weight to the idea that the pedestals may conceal ice-rich soil from previous eras, when the planet’s spin axis tilted at a different angle than it does today.

Seth Kadish of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, and colleagues identified 2696 pedestal craters in the planet’s mid- and low-latitudes from images taken primarily by the thermal imager aboard NASA’s Mars Odyssey spacecraft.

The craters seem to be concentrated at the mid-latitudes, with very few found at the planet’s equator.

About 3 per cent of them have depressions around their bases that resemble areas in Antarctica where permafrost ice vaporizes, creating pits in the soil left behind.

The team said that strengthens the hypothesis that the pedestals were created from soil that was enriched in ice during a period when the Martian poles pointed more towards the sun and its mid-latitudes were colder.

Because Mars does not have a massive satellite that stabilises it, like Earth’s moon, the tilt of its axis is thought to change regularly on scales of tens of thousands of years.

When the planet is tilted most drastically on its side, the planet’s poles receive a lot of sunshine. Any water locked in ice there is thought to vaporize and move towards the equator, where it falls as snow.

Tens of metres of snow are thought to be deposited on the planet’s mid-latitudes during these episodes.

Pedestal craters may preserve regions with this ancient snow.

The researchers suspect the impact of the meteorite that created each pedestal crater could somehow ‘armour’ the ground in the area, producing a top layer that protected ice from sublimating into gas during warmer periods.

The unprotected ice surrounding the armoured area, however, would eventually disappear when the planet’s tilt changed and the area warmed.

That would leave behind the modern-day, ice-laden pedestals that can be more than 100 metres thick.

“These pedestals represent almost like a cookie-cutter section of past icy, dust-rich layers,” Kadish said. (ANI)

Omega Nebula’s ‘watercolors’ revealed in new image

Munich, July 8 (ANI): A new image captured by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) has reveled the Omega Nebula, a stellar nursery where infant stars illuminate and sculpt a vast pastel fantasy of dust and gas, in all its glory.

The Omega Nebula, sometimes called the Swan Nebula, is a dazzling stellar nursery located about 5500 light-years away towards the constellation of Sagittarius (the Archer).

An active star-forming region of gas and dust about 15 light-years across, the nebula has recently spawned a cluster of massive, hot stars.

The intense light and strong winds from these hulking infants have carved remarkable filigree structures in the gas and dust.

When seen through a small telescope, the nebula has a shape that reminds some observers of the final letter of the Greek alphabet, omega, while others see a swan with its distinctive long, curved neck.

Swiss astronomer Jean-Philippe Loys de Cheseaux discovered the nebula around 1745. The French comet hunter Charles Messier independently rediscovered it about twenty years later and included it as number 17 in his famous catalogue.

In a small telescope, the Omega Nebula appears as an enigmatic ghostly bar of light set against the star fields of the Milky Way.

In recent years, astronomers have discovered that the Omega Nebula is one of the youngest and most massive star-forming regions in the Milky Way.

Active star-birth started a few million years ago and continues through today.

The newly released image, obtained with the EMMI instrument attached to the ESO 3.58-metre New Technology Telescope (NTT) at La Silla, Chile, shows the central region of the Omega Nebula in exquisite detail.

The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has also imaged small parts of this nebula.

At the left of the image, a huge and strangely box-shaped cloud of dust covers the glowing gas.

The fascinating palette of subtle color shades across the image comes from the presence of different gases (mostly hydrogen, but also oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur) that are glowing under the fierce ultraviolet light radiated by the hot young stars. (ANI)

Rare sheep perfect blood donors for diagnosing infectious disease in developing world

Washington, July 4 (ANI): Scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine say that the hair sheep, a less-hirsute version of the familiar woolly barnyard resident, may be key to better diagnostic tests in developing world.

The researchers have found that not only are these ruminants low-maintenance and parasite-resistant, they’re also perfect blood donors for the microbiology tests necessary to diagnose infectious disease in the developing world.

Writing about their work in PLoS ONE, they point out that identifying microbes from a patient’s urine or sputum requires growing those microbes in culture dishes filled with gelatinous agar and a small amount of blood.

They say that the blood provides nutrients to the growing bugs, and also provides clues as to the microbes’ identities: Microbiologists can rule out or identify certain strains of bacteria based on how the organisms interact with the blood cells in culture.

Generally, microbiologists in the developed world use sheep or horse blood. However, in many places, horses are prohibitively expensive, and regular sheep, with their constant need for shearing and tendency to get infections, are difficult to keep alive.

Importing animal blood can’t be feasible because shipping is costly and often unreliable.

Dr. Ellen Yeh, a resident in pathology at Stanford, says that many labs in the developing world use human blood, often donated by lab technicians themselves, but diagnostic tests aren’t standardized for human blood.

“You don’t get the same test results when you use human blood versus sheep blood,” she said.

She further says that the use of human donors increases technicians’ risk of infection with blood-borne diseases.

Dr. Ellen Jo Baron, a professor of Pathology at the medical school who said she wanted to do better, added: “Up until the time I saw a hair sheep – which I first saw in Botswana – I had no idea there was even such a thing.”

She wasted no time in learning about the animals, finding that they resist parasites, don’t need to be sheared, and do well in the tropical climes prevalent in much of the developing world.

Her team collected blood from hair sheep, created test cultures using the blood, and ran a series of common diagnostic tests, in order to determine whether the blood was equivalent to horse or sheep blood.

“It worked for every single thing,” Baron said.

The researchers also found that they could collect the blood in donation bags, much like those human donors might see at the Red Cross.

Baron and her colleagues have found that hair sheep blood collected in donation bags performed the same as defibrinated blood.

The researchers now say that the only hurdle is getting the sheep to the labs that need them.

Two veterinary labs in Botswana already provide hair sheep blood to local labs based on Baron’s initial results, and the researcher is now lobbying the charity Heifer International to add hair sheep to its catalogue so that microbiologists can donate and send the animals to the developing world.

After all, she said, the sheep can provide milk and meat – and that’s on top of their role as donors of blood that, in her words, “works perfectly for every microbiology test that a laboratory would need to do.” (ANI)

Jacko leaves behind ‘mountain’ of unreleased material

London, July 2 (ANI): Michael Jackson has left behind a mass of unreleased recordings that did not make it onto the records.

Tommy Mottola, the former chairman and CEO of Sony Music, which owns the distribution rights to the singer’s music, confirmed there were stacks of previously unheard Jackson songs that might be repackaged and released in future.
“There are dozens and dozens of songs that did not end up on his albums. People will be hearing a lot of that unreleased material for the first time ever. There’s just some genius and brilliance in there,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

The material includes unused tracks from studio sessions of some of the late King of Pop’s best albums, along with more recent tracks compiled with Akon, a Senegalese R andB singer and producer, and will.i.am, the Black Eyed Peas frontman.

Mottola, who explained himself as the as the “shepherd and gatekeeper” of Jackson’s catalogue, added, the releases “could go on for years and years – even more than Elvis.”

However, who would hold the ownership rights to Jackson’s unreleased music and concert footage still remains to be cleared. (ANI)

Fans grab 2M Jacko songs and 300K albums in 3 days post his death

New York, July 1 (ANI): Late King of Pop Michael Jackson’s fans have bought almost 300,000 to 400,000 copies of his albums and 1.8 million individual digital tracks in the three days after his death, according to Billboard Magazine.

However, figures have revealed that Jackson’s albums sold just 10,000 copies in the week before his death, while digital sales capped at 40,000.

Based on weekly tracking that ended Sunday (June 28), the figures might just put three of the star’s albums -’Number Ones’, ‘The Essential Michael Jackson’ and ‘Thriller’- in the top three spots on the latest Billboard Top Pop Catalogue chart.

However, Billboard’s regular Top 200 Albums chart will not feature Jackson’s albums, as it bans any disc that’s older than 18 months.

Still, this will mark the first time in Billboard’s history that a Top Catalogue entry has outsold the No. 1 disc on its regular album list.

The Black Eyed Peas’ ‘The E.N.D.’ moved just under 100,000 copies as Jackson peaked the chart.

Besides the three Jackson albums crowding the Catalogue chart peak, other titles by the star will also occupy the Top Ten, including ‘Off The Wall’, ‘Bad’, ‘Dangerous’, and ‘The Ultimate Collection’.

Two of Jackson 5 compilations, ‘The Ultimate Collection’ and ’20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection’, are also selling like hot cakes.

Jackson’s top selling digital tunes include ‘Man in the Mirror’, ‘The Way You Make Me Feel’, ‘Billie Jean’, and ‘Smooth Criminal’. (ANI)

Space and robotics technology used to improve forest planning and harvesting

Washington, June 30 (ANI): Space and robotics technology have been combined to develop an advanced Precision Forestry Positioning System, which allows more efficient forest planning and harvesting.

Invented by researchers at the Institute of Man-Machine-Interaction at the RWTH Aachen University in Germany, the system has helped catalogue 240 million single trees in the German region of North Rhine-Westphalia. he system combines remote-sensing maps from airplanes with satellite navigation data to map each tree in a forest.

This information is then used to plan which trees are to be cut, and when.

Finally, the plan is used on harvesters to identify which trees to cut. This helps make the harvesting more efficient, optimises overall wood production and reduces costs.

The system won the North Rhine-Westphalia Region’s 2008 European Satellite Navigation Competition, which was supported by ESA’s Technology Transfer Programme Office.

“We already have one harvester in operation with our system onboard. As the prototype works well, we are fairly close to the stage where we can go into production. Another 6 to 12 months, and we should be there,” said Professor Dr Jurgen Rossmann from RWTH Aachen University, who developed the system together with Petra Krahwinkler, Arno Bucken and Dr Michael Schluse.

The objective of the Precision Forestry Positioning System is to automate and optimize all the work involved in foresting, from the early planning of the forest to the final cutting of single trees, in order to be competitive on the worldwide market, and to overcome efficiency problems related to the forest ownership structure of the region.

“Precision farming is important in today’s agriculture, where farmers can save money with the use of satellite navigation systems,” explained Arno Bucken.

“However, the accuracy of the GPS navigation system, which is of 20 to 30 m, is not enough to identify single trees in a forest. Much higher accuracy is needed,” he added.

“We found a solution to this problem, which increases the accuracy to 50 cm, by using GPS as the initial reference position, and then taking remote-sensing data to identify the single trees in the forest,” he explained.

To help the planning, a virtual computer-based forest has been developed with all trees being identified by their location, based on the GPS and remote-sensing data.
In addition, a fourth dimension, ‘time’, has been added, and is of the utmost importance for this system.

“All trees are not only known by their geo-coordinates, but they are also time-stamped, and all measurement data are archived.

This makes it possible to see ‘how trees grow’, as well as look back to learn from the past,” said Rossmann. (ANI)

Carla Bruni’s sexy lingerie pics before supermodel fame

London, June 30 (ANI): Steamy shots of French First lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy have been unearthed which show the stunner in lacy lingerie – before she became the Next big thing in the modeling industry.

The sexy snaps were taken in 1989 for clothes giant Next’s mail order catalogue, reports The Sun.

The pics have been unearthed from the High Street chain’s archives as Next celebrates its 21st anniversary.

Other models who made it big after appearing in Next Directory include Naomi Campbell, Claudia Schiffer, and Linda Evangelista.

Next’s Natalie Pead said: “We have consistently discovered modelling’s future superstars.

“Our shrewd judgment has helped kick-start the careers of a succession of supermodels.” (ANI)

Buddhist Mount Wutai in China listed as World Heritage site

New Delhi, June 27 (ANI): Buddhist Mount Wutai in China has become the country’s 38th site to join UNESCO’s World Heritage List as a cultural landscape.

“We’ve been through a rough path, full of suspense,” said Tong Mingkang, deputy chief of China’s State Administration of Cultural Heritage, after the announcement.

Mount Wutai, literally the five-terrace mountain, is a sacred Buddhist mountain with five flat peaks.

The cultural landscape features 53 monasteries and includes the East Main Hall of Foguang Temple, a structure that was built in 857 during the Tang Dynasty (618-917) and is one of the oldest wooden buildings in China

It also features the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Shuxiang Temple with a huge complex of 500 statues representing Buddhist stories woven into three dimensional pictures of mountains and water.

The structures on the site represent a catalogue of the way Buddhist architecture developed and influenced palace building in China for more than one millennium.

Mount Wutai, located in Shanxi Province, is the highest mountain in northern China and is remarkable for its morphology characterized by precipitous sides with five open treeless peaks.

Temples were built on the site from the first century AD to the early 20th century. (ANI)

Woolworths makes comeback as online shop

London, June 25 (ANI): Former high street store Woolworths has made a comeback as an online retail company called Woolworths.co.uk.

The brand was taken over by Shop Direct, the online and catalogue retailer owned by Sir David and Sir Frederick Barclay, after the retailer collapsed leading to the shut down of 800 stores and a loss of 31,000 jobs.

Mark Newton-Jones, the chief executive of Shop Direct, said the online shop, which opens on June 25, is directed towards attracting young families.

“Woolworths.co.uk makes perfect sense for young families,” The Telegraph quoted him as saying.

“They don’t want to trawl around a shopping centre and find a parking space. They want a lot of fun in one place,” he added. (ANI)

The mystery face behind M and S lingerie ads revealed

London, May 29 (ANI): Lingerie fashion model Natalie Suliman is the mystery face behind UK fashion brand Marks and Spencer lingerie billboard campaign.

The 23-year-old stunner said when she first saw herself on the billboards she nearly crashed her car.

“I nearly crashed my car when I saw the advert for the first time,” the Sun quoted her as saying.

“I was happily driving to a shopping mall with my music blasting when I suddenly saw a 20ft picture of my chest on the horizon.

“It was shocking to see my boobs looking so huge, but I guess that’s not something I can complain about! I’m just happy the advert has been such a success,” she added.

Since the advertising campaign headed by 5 foot 8 Suliman, online lingerie shopping orders of the silky green lingerie from fashion retailer Marks and Spencer have sourced 163 per cent, despite the tough economic and financial climate in Europe.

M and S marketing chief Steve Sharp said: “The ad has caused quite a stir.

“Not only have we seen a real uplift in our bra sales, but we have also received hundreds of calls asking who the model is.”

In the near future, Suliman has her sights on becoming a Victoria’s Secret lingerie stunner.

“I’m hoping to go to America and model for the Victoria’s Secrets catalogue,” she said. (ANI)

Eminem’s new obsession – kids’ TV show Hey Arnold!

London, May 28 (ANI): Eminem has found a new way to battle and replace his prescription drug addiction for the rapper is now hooked on to kids’ TV show Hey Arnold.

The nine-time Grammy-winning singer had spent hours watching the cartoon with daughter Hailie, who is now a teen.

And the Real Slim Shady confessed he recently rediscovered the toon and managed to grab its entire back catalogue.

“I don’t think it is running in the States any more but I noticed it when I was flicking through the channels in Britain,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

“I’m not going to lie, I love that show, man,” he added.

The 36-year-old has been fighting his drug demons since the release of his last album, Encore, in 2004.

The Academy Award winner, who has been sober for a year, released his comeback album Relapse this month and it has landed the top spot in the UK albums chart. (ANI)

Ferguson keeps vigil beside his gravely injured grandson’s hospital bed

London, May 7 (ANI): Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson kept vigil beside his gravely injured grandson’s hospital bed, as the kid fought back from the brink of death.

Ferguson clutched Charlie’s hand and whispered words of support as the sedated ten-year-old recovered from a five-hour op to reduce brain swelling.

Ferguson, 67, was shaken to learn of the crash hours before his side’s Champions League semi-final second leg clash with Arsenal.

Charlie, who dreams of one day playing for Sir Alex’s Manchester United, was last night in a “serious” condition and faces more surgery today to repair his spine after shattering a neck vertebra. e is the stepson of Sir Alex’s manager son Darren, 37, but both treasure him as “their own flesh and blood.”

He suffered a catalogue of injuries, including a punctured lung and bowel damage, in a head-on car smash in Macclesfield, Cheshire, on Tuesday.

His mum Nadine Metcalfe – Darren’s ex – broke both legs and was cut free with Charlie’s sister Grace, six.

Charlie walked unaided when they reached Leighton Hospital in Crewe, Cheshire. But medics realised that he had severe internal bleeding only after he keeled over.

He was airlifted to Liverpool’s Alder Hey Hospital for surgery, The Sun reported.

Nadine was “stable” last night in Manchester’s Wythenshawe Hospital. Grace, who had cuts, has been released from the hospital. (ANI)

Telescopes reveal chaotic and overcrowded stellar nursery

Washington, April 21 (ANI): Astronomers, using different telescopes, have found that the well-known Great Nebula of Orion, which is a stellar nursery of sorts, is a lively and overcrowded place, with young stars emitting gas jets in all directions, creating quite a chaotic picture.

This was observed by astronomers using the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) in Hawaii, the IRAM Millimeter-wave Telescope in Spain, and the Spitzer Space Telescope in orbit above the Earth.

With the naked eye, one can only see the brightest stars, like Betelgeuse and Rigel at the shoulder and knee of the constellation, or perhaps the Orion Nebula as a vaguely fuzzy patch around the sword.

What the eye does not see is an enormous cloud of molecules and dust particles that hide a vast region where young stars are currently being born.

On the sky, the region – known to astronomers as the Orion Molecular Cloud – is more than 20 times the angular size of the full moon.

It is one of the most intense regions of star formation in the local Milky Way and has been the subject of many small-scale studies over the years.

However, the current work is the first to present such a complete study of the young stars, the cloud of gas and dust from which they are being born, and the spectacular supersonic jets of hydrogen molecules being launched from the poles of each star.

Tom Megeath, an astronomer from the University of Toledo, provided a catalogue of the positions of the very youngest stars – sources revealed only recently by the Spitzer Space Telescope.

Thomas Stanke, a researcher based at the European Southern Observatory in Garching, Germany, then provided extensive IRAM maps of the molecular gas and dust across the Orion cloud.

Dirk Froebrich, a lecturer at the University of Kent, later used archival images from the Calar Alto Observatory in Spain to measure the speeds and directions of a large number of jets by comparing them with their positions in the new images.

Armed with these data, Davis was able to match the jets up to the young stars that drive them, as well as to density peaks within the cloud – the natal cores from which each star is being created.

According to Dr Davis, “Regions like this are usually referred to as stellar nurseries, but we have shown that this one is not being well run: it is chaotic and seriously overcrowded.” (ANI)

Sachin Tendulkar’s wax-statue unveiled in Mumbai

Mumbai, Apr 14 (ANI): Indians have long believed no one holds a candle to Sachin Tendulkar and now the master batsman is having his image cast in wax at Madame Tussauds in London.

Tendulkar’s image will go up at the famous waxwork museum on April 24 on his birthday, next to other cricketing greats such as retired West Indies batsman Brian Lara and Australian spinner Shane Warne.

Tendulkar’s wax-figure was unveiled in Mumbai on Monday in his presence, besides his wife Anjali, son Arjun and daughter Sara.

Tendulkar will be featured in a typical celebratory “on the pitch” pose after scoring a century, dressed in cricket whites.

He had a sitting with a team that travelled to Mumbai to capture a catalogue of reference photographs and over 200 precise measurements.

Tendulkar, while posing with his mirror image, said that the wax figure lacked flesh and blood.

Tendulkar also expressed pleasure of being the first Indian sports player to be immortalised in wax.

“I am very proud to be the first Indian player at Madame Tussauds. I am very happy that this will be launched at the wax museum on my birthday. I think that my contribution to my country till now has been appreciated and this is a reflection of my contribution.”

Liz Edwards, official spokesperson of Madame Tussauds, said that Tendulkar was missed by many of their visitors.

“We wanted to put Tendulkar in the attraction now because he is iconic sports star. It’s a huge honour to be immortalised in wax. Sachin’s reaction since we asked him to come to the attraction and be part for it the whole process was so exciting that we knew it’s going to be really special,” said Edwards.

The highest test and one-day run-getter’s figure will also rub shoulders with sporting headliners such as David Beckham and Tiger Woods in the museum’s interactive sports zone.

Tendulkar will be the first Indian sports personality to be unveiled at Tussauds, although the museum features wax statues of many Bollywood actors and Indian politicians.

There will be a cricketing challenge around the introduction of the figure, where guests can test their skills against the ‘master blaster’. (ANI)

Western classical composer Handel ‘was binge eater and problem drinker’

London, Apr.2 (ANI): Western classical composer George Frideric Handel was a binge eater and problem drinker.

According to a study reported by The Times, Handel’s gargantuan appetite resulted in lead poisoning that eventually killed him 250 years ago this month at the age of 74.

For 20 years before his death, he had been fighting severe health problems, including blindness, gout, bouts of paralysis and confused speech, the paper quoted David Hunter, music librarian at the University of Texas and author of more than 60 articles on Handel, as saying.

Surprisingly little is known about Handel’s private life, but evidence from portraits and contemporary descriptions support the theory that he began to suffer from lead poisoning in 1737, when he temporarily lost the use of his right hand, an incident previously attributed to a stroke.

In search of a cure, he travelled to Aachen, where he was immersed up to his chin in hot spring water.

Handel continued to have attacks and recoveries until, on the evening of April 13, 1759, he announced that he would no longer receive guests as he had “done with the world”. He died the following morning at the house in Brook Street, Mayfair, where he had lived for 36 years.

The building in London is now the Handel House Museum and Dr Hunter’s theory is explained in the catalogue to its forthcoming exhibition Handel Reveal’d. (ANI)

US military to boost satellite monitoring programme to avoid space smash-up

London, April 1 (ANI): The US military is planning to boost the number of satellites it routinely monitors for the risk of a smash-up with orbiting debris, like the recent collision between a US communications satellite and a defunct Russian probe.

The US Air Force has catalogued more than 19,000 pieces of space debris larger than 10 centimetres across, General Robert Kehler, Commander of Air Force Space Command, told New Scientist.

But, despite the extensive catalogue, the military does not have the ability to calculate the risk this space junk poses to every operational satellite.

“We keep that catalogue up to date, but we do not watch everything for collision purposes all the time,” Kehler said.

“We’re limited by computing and we’re limited by analytical wherewithal, both of which we are now going to increase in the near-term so that we can expand the population of satellites that we can perform routine collision avoidance assessments on,” he added.

The exact number of satellites the Air Force will aim to routinely screen for the risk of collision is unclear.

“We want to stay away from numbers and specifics right now,” Andy Roake, a spokesperson for Air Force Space Command, told New Scientist.

But, another official has put the target at 800 maneuverable satellites by October 1.

There are no details yet on how the effort would be funded or how much it might cost, according to an Air Force official.

That would put the Air Force close to a complete survey of the risk to space probes.

Some 900 operational satellites currently orbit the Earth, according to data compiled by the Union of Concerned Scientists.

“It’s absolutely a step in the right direction,” said Brian Weeden, a technical consultant for the Secure World Foundation and a former orbital analyst at the US Strategic Command’s Joint Space Operations Center.

“Boosting the number of satellites that are routinely watched may reduce the chance of collisions, but only if satellite operators are notified and given the information they need to determine whether to move the satellite,” he added. (ANI)

Proteas opener Gibbs doing community service to save himself from booze charge

Cape Town, Mar. 24 (ANI): Habitual cricketing “bad boy” Herschelle Gibbs has been asked to perform a form of community service after being charges with driving under the influence of alcohol last year.

He was pulled over in Sea Point in the early hours of March 28 last year.

Gibbs is not entirely off the hook, as evidenced by a statement issued by his lawyer, Peter Whelan, after the court appearance.

The statement said: “We would like to inform you of the constructive steps Herschelle will be taking personally in response to this matter. These include his ongoing efforts to embrace the recommendations made by Harmony Addictions Clinic, where he voluntarily, and at his own expense, attended a four-week programme over the Christmas period.”

Gibbs entered rehab not long after being banished from the national team camp in Johannesburg following a lengthy drinking session in the team hotel in the lead-up to a Pro20 international match against Bangladesh at the Wanderers.

The statement added: “Further, he has agreed to commit, for an agreed number of hours over the next three years, to a meaningful period of service to Sporting Chance.

“Sporting Chance was launched by former cricketer Brad Bing to help get youths in South Africa, from all sectors of our society, involved in healthy physical activity.

Gibbs’ manager, Donne Commins, told Sport24 they were keen to emphasise that the cricket star was not getting special treatment.

It is understood that Gibbs’s contribution to Sporting Chance will be formally monitored, and that his chief employers, Cricket South Africa, and the authorities in the light of his catalogue of troubles will also closely peruse his general behaviour over many years. (ANI)