Ancient book of Buddhism chantings found in Korean temple

Seoul, September 16 (ANI): Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient Chinese book of Buddhism chantings in a Korean temple.

According to a report in Korea Times, the Hangeul copy of an ancient Chinese book, which contains the notes of the Joseon Kingdom (1392-1910) scholar Kim Si-seup, was discovered at Baekryunam, Haein Temple.

The book was originally written by a Buddhist master from the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and dates back to the 16th century.

“We discovered the ‘shiphyeondam eonhaebon’ while we were examining the library of Ven. Seong Cheol (1912-1993) at Baekryunam, Haein Temple, in April this year,” Ven. Won Taek said at a press conference at the Jogye Order, northern Seoul.

“It’s a rare book ? perhaps even the only copy ? that is not included in the Natural Treasures list nor on the lists of national libraries and university libraries,” he said.

An eonhae copy, or eonhaebon, is a book or writing that contains the literal translation of a sentence in Chinese to Hangeul, or Korean.

It is different from the normal translation books as it features a word-for-word translation, and is far removed from the Hangeul sentences used today.

‘Shiphyeondam’ refers to the 10 songs and poems made to praise Buddha’s teachings, written by Tang Dynasty Buddhist master Dongan Sangchal of the Jodong Order of Zen Buddhism, a sect of the religion in China.

The songs are comprised of seven Chinese characters and contain the traditions and the practices of the Jodong Order.

Ven. Won Taek explained that the discovery was meaningful as the book was from the 16th century. Most of the eonhaebons known today are from the 15th century.

“We found many precious ancient books and eonhaebons while examining the library and we will apply these artifacts as Natural Treasures after examining the value of them. We will also make photo prints of the eonhaebons for ancient hangeul and writing experts to use them as research material,” he said. (ANI)

Oz speed-reader to demystify Dan Brown’s Lost Symbol 2hrs after release

Melbourne, September 14 (ANI): Publishers of Dan Brown’s much-anticipated book, ‘The Lost Symbol,’ will host speed reading competition during its launch in Australia.

The person who ends reading the book fastest will be provided with an opportunity to give its first review.

Speculations are high on the closely-guarded plot, which is believed to focus on the Freemasons.

Publisher Random House will provide a copy of the book at the State Library of NSW the moment it is released.

It is expected that the first person should complete reading in two hours.

After which the reader will give a review to public and press.

“Millions of Australians have enjoyed the pure adrenalin thrill of Dan Brown’s novels, coupled with their fascinating historical insights,” News.com.au quoted Margie Seale, managing director of Random House Australia, as saying in a statement.

The publishers anticipate that the book will match 81 million copies of The Da Vinci Code sold around the world. (ANI)

Missing protein in rare genetic brain disorder restored

Washington, Sep 7 (ANI): By using protease inhibitors, researchers at the University of California-San Francisco (UCSF) have restored to normal levels a key protein that is involved in early brain development, and causes the rare brain disorder lissencephaly.

Reduced levels of the protein called LIS1 have been shown to cause lissencephaly, which is characterized by brain malformations, seizures, severe mental retardation and very early death in human infants.

The findings in mice offer a proof-of-principle that the genetic equivalent to human lissencephaly, also known as “smooth brain” disease, can be treated during pregnancy and effectively reversed to produce more normal offspring.

The researchers are hoping that this approach could also be used to treat other defects in utero, or even those manifesting after birth, when caused by a partial deficiency in one gene, according to Dr. Anthony Wynshaw-Boris.

“Researchers have not considered it possible to treat such a pervasive, early developmental brain disorder as lissencephaly. Not only were we able to show a clear cellular effect from using these protease inhibitors, but also were able to treat the disorder in utero,” Nature quoted Wynshaw-Boris as saying.

The work is the culmination of 15 years of collaborative research into the cause and mechanisms of lissencephaly, which is caused by a deletion or loss of one copy of the LIS1 gene, and affects an estimated one in 50,000-100,000 infants.

In 1998, the researchers reported of producing a mouse with the same mutation that displayed defective brain development.

The current research used these mice, and found that the protein calpain degrades the LIS1 protein to less than half its normal levels near the surface of the cells.

The team then used a specific small-molecule protease inhibitor of calpain in these mice.

At a cellular level, the protease inhibitors enabled LIS1 protein to be expressed at near-normal levels.

The team then gave daily injections of a calpain inhibitor to pregnant mice whose foetuses had the mouse-model of this defect.

They observed that the resulting offspring had more normal brains and showed no sign of mental retardation.

“This study is really a proof-of-principle not only for treating complex developmental brain disorders, but also for any disorder with reduced protein levels where proteases normally play some role in breaking down that protein. This will be much more difficult to apply to humans, because of the safety issues involved, but it could lead to new therapies that might be effective for a wide range of developmental disorders,” said the researchers.

The findings have been published in the journal Nature Medicine. (ANI)

Spare gene in fish provides raw materials for evolution of new Traits

Washington, September 4 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have discovered that a duplicate copy of a gene involved in embryonic development of fish has taken up a newer role in the evolution of fish scales.

Scientists have suspected that spare parts in the genome-extra copies of functional genes that arise when genes or whole genomes get duplicated-might sometimes provide the raw materials for the evolution of new traits.

Now, researchers say that they have discovered a prime example of this in fish.

The researchers show that a duplicate copy of a gene involved in embryonic development has taken up a newer and decidedly less essential role in the development of fish scales.

Zebrafish carrying a mutant version of that extra fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (fgfr1) gene show decreases in their scale formation.

What’s more, the spare fgfr1 gene is at the root of similar scale loss seen in domesticated carp, which have been selectively bred by humans for the last 2,000 years.

“Our finding is an excellent case for (gene) duplication supporting diverse forms,” said Matthew Harris of the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology.

“By ‘tweaking’ the use of one of the two copies of the fish fgfr1, the teleost order that contains zebrafish and carp have a specialized ‘toolbox’ gene that now controls adult-specific variation in form,” added Nicolas Rohner, also of the Max Planck Institute.

Fish species outnumber all other vertebrates combined and include many with spectacular features to match the diverse environments in which they live, according to Harris and Rohner.

Teleost fish in particular represent the largest assemblage of vertebrates, comprising over 26,000 species with astonishing diversity in their form and physiology.

Although little is known about the genetic basis of that diversity, it is clear that gene duplication is commonplace within teleost groups, providing a source of genetic raw material for selection.

To further explore in the new study, the researchers first examined mutant strains of zebrafish in search of those with changes to their fins, skulls, or scales, all structures that tend to vary among species.

They focused their attention on one with fewer scales and in an unusual pattern-an abnormality they traced to fgfr1.

“We were surprised to find severe coding mutations in such an important developmental gene to cause an adult-specific and viable phenotype,” Harris said.

Further study showed the reason why: zebrafish maintain two copies of fgfr1 that function redundantly during embryonic development. One of those two genes is also required for the formation of the scales in juveniles. (ANI)

Counting duplicated genome segments now possible with new computational method

London, August 31 (ANI): Counting copies of duplicated genome sequences and doing initial analyses of their contents are possible with the aid of a new computational method, according to a study.

Led by scientists at the University of Washington (UW), the study suggests that the number of copies of particular DNA segments can differ from one person to the next.

The researchers use the term mrFAST, an acronym for micro-read Fast Alignment Search Tool, to refer to the novel method.

In their study report, they have highlighted the fact that segmental duplications in the human genome have been associated with susceptibility and resistance to disease.

The report points out that duplicated segments have been linked to such disorders as lupus, Crohn’s disease, mental retardation, schizophrenia, colour blindness, psoriasis, and age-related macular degeneration.

It adds that segmental duplications often contain duplicated genes, many of which have an unknown function, and that individuals have different numbers of copies of some of these duplications.

The researchers write that determining the number, content, and location of segmental duplications is an important step in understanding the health significance of gene copy-number variation.

“New computational methods, combined with next-generation DNA sequencing technology, has provided for the first time an accurate census of specific genes that exist in varying number of copies,” Nature magazine quoted Alkan as saying.

“This is a way to deal with some of the most complex regions of the human genome and do what might appear to be a simple thing: Count whether a person has one, two, three or more copies of a gene. In fact, such counting is surprisingly difficult,” said Kidd.

The researchers say that next-generation technology for sequencing the human genome has far greater detection power, and costs substantially less than the traditional sequencing method known as Sanger sequencing.

According to them, the new technologies are beginning to distinguish subtle dissimilarities between nearly identical gene copies.

“This can provide researchers with a more accurate assessment of specific gene content and insight into functional constraints,” Alkan said.

“The newer, faster genome sequencing platforms may eventually make it feasible to detect the full-spectrum of genomic variation among many individuals, including patients suffering from diseases of genetic origin. Next-generation technology and computational methods promise low cost, rapid sequencing of different individuals and may lead to a fuller understanding of the patterns and significance of human genetic variation,” Alkan added.

The analytical method they devised is already being tapped for the 1000 Genome Project, an international effort to catalog and compare the genomes of hundreds of people from around the world.

Alkan, Kidd, and their colleagues note that the ability to accurately and systematically determine the absolute copy number for any genomic segment is a notable step toward a true and complete picture of individual genomes, and how the genome shapes a person’s characteristics.

“The next challenge will be defining variation in the sequence content and the structural organization of these dynamic and important regions of the human genome,” they wrote.

A research article describing their study has been published in the journal Nature Genetics. (ANI)

Maharashtra Govt. challenges revocation of MCOCA provisions in Malegaon blasts case

Mumbai, Aug 24 (ANI): The Maharashtra Government has filed an appeal in the Bombay High Court challenging the revocation of the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) provisions in the September 2008 Malegaon blasts case.

The court will hear the matter on September 8. It asked the state to serve a copy of the appeal to the 11 accused.

On August 2, Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan said that his government would challenge the verdict given by the Special Court to drop the charges under MCOCA framed against the 11 accused of the Malegaon blast, in the Supreme Court.

Earlier, a Special Court in Mumbai had dropped provisions of the MCOCA invoked against Sadhvi Pragya Singh, Lt Col Prasad S P Purohit and other accused of September 2008 Malegaon bomb blast.

The Court in its verdict observed that none of these accused are part of an organised crime group.

The court also ordered the trial will be heard in a regular Nashik court and that the accused can now become eligible for regular bail.

The Malegaon blast investigations were the first instance of an official probe, which charged a Hindu terrorist group with involvement in serial blasts. (ANI)

Jaswant Singh says he sent an advance copy of his book to Advani

Shimla, Aug. 19 (ANI): In a startling revelation, expelled BJP leader Jaswant Singh said on Wednesday that he had sent an advance copy of his latest book ” Jinnah – India-Partition-Independence” to senior party leader and Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha L.K. Advani, and therefore, this made his removal from the party after 30 years of association even more painful and shocking.

Interacting with journalists here on the sidelines of a three-day party Chintan Baithak, which he is not attending in the wake of his sudden expulsion, Jaswant Singh said that at the time of his sending the book over to Advani, there was no reaction or hint of things to come, and this made his expulsion from the party one of the saddest episodes of his adult life.

He said he never could have imagined in his wildest dreams that he would be expelled from the BJP just for “writing a book”. The book, he said, was a personal viewpoint, and had nothing to do with the policies or stances of the BJP.

Singh’s revelation came hours after Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president Rajnath Singh announced that Singh was being expelled from the BJP.

Singh, who arrived here last evening for the Chintan Baithak of the party, kept away from the meeting by changing his hotel.

According to sources Singh kept away citing bad health. He also skipped a dinner hosted by Advani.

The BJP has distanced itself from the book and Singh’s views on Jinnah.

BJP is meeting here to discuss the causes for the party”s defeat in 2009 general elections and its strategy for the future.

The meeting is also likely to take up the issue of former Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje, who has refused to quit as Leader of Opposition in the State Assembly.

Over 25 senior party leaders, including members of the party’s parliamentary board and chief ministers Narendra Modi of Gujarat, Raman Singh of Chhattisgarh, Ramesh Pokhriyal of Uttarakhand and B.S. Yeddyurappa of Karnataka, will participate in the three-day meeting. (ANI)

Coming soon: 15-minute, $100 human genome sequencing

Washington, July 28 (ANI): Human genome sequencing is expected to become as cheap as 100 dollars per case, and that too at speeds 20,000 times faster than second-generation sequencers currently on the market, with a new device being developed to watch DNA being copied in real time.

Stephen Turner, the Chief Technology Officer at Pacific Biosciences, has revealed Single Molecule Real-Time (SMRT) sequencing will be released commercially in 2010.

A decade ago, it took Celera Genomics and the Human Genome Project years to sequence complete human genomes.

In 2008, James Watson’s entire genetic code was read by a new generation of technology in months.

With SMRT sequencing, Pacific Biosciences experts expect to accomplish the same feat in minutes.

The method used in the Human Genome Project taps into the cell’s natural machinery for replicating DNA.

The enzyme DNA polymerase is used to copy strands of DNA, creating billions of fragments of varying length. Each fragment ends with a tiny fluorescent molecule that identifies only the last nucleotide in the chain, and by lining these fragments up according to length, their glowing tips can be read off like letters on a page.

Instead of inspecting DNA copies after polymerase has done its work, SMRT sequencing watches the enzyme in real time as it races along and copies an individual strand stuck to the bottom of a tiny well.

Every nucleotide used to make the copy is attached to its own fluorescent molecule that lights up when the nucleotide is incorporated, and this light is spotted by a detector that identifies the colour and the nucleotide – A, C, G, or T.

The researchers behind this technology hope that repeating this process simultaneously in many wells may help bring about a substantial boost in sequencing speed.

“When we reach a million separate molecules that we’re able to sequence at once … we’ll be able to sequence the entire human genome in less than 15 minutes,” said Turner.

The device also has the potential to reduce the number of errors made in DNA sequencing. Given that the errors made by SMRT sequencing are random, that is not systematically occurring at the same spot, they are more likely to disappear as the procedure is repeated.

A presentation on “Single Molecule Real-Time DNA Sequencers” was made at the 2009 Industrial Physics Forum, a component of the 51st Annual Meeting of American Association of Physicists in Medicine, on Monday. (ANI)

Pak using delaying tactics due to lack of evidence against Mumbai suspects: Defence lawyer

Islamabad, July 10 (ANI): While Pakistan has vowed that it is sincerely probing the Mumbai attacks and would soon start the trial of the six men accused of masterminding the November 26-29, 2008 carnage, documents regarding the case and the details of the evidence against the suspects have still not been handed over to the defence lawyers, casting serious doubts over Islamabad’s intentions.

Pakistan’s Attorney General, Sardar Latif Khosa claimed that the trial process is heading in the right direction, but it is learnt that important documents regarding the case have still not been handed over to the defence lawyers, The Dawn reports.

India has already made it clear that the resumption of peace talks with Pakistan would depend on progresss in the Mumbai probe, and the United States along with several western countries are monitoring Pakistan’s efforts to penalize the perpetrators, as it has failed to punish the militants accused of carrying out terror strikes against India in the past.

Earlier, Khosa had said that the trial would start ‘soon,’ but failed to mention a date.

“There are no reasons (for a delay) other than the fulfillment of some legal requirements and resolution of technical issues before the start of the trials,” he said.

On the other hand, lawyers representing the suspects like Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi and Zarrar Shah, claimed that the government does not have any evidence against the suspects.

“I have applied to get the copy of the charges submitted by the police, but am still awaiting. In fact, there is no evidence against my client. That is why the government is not showing any enthusiasm in this matter. I would say it is using delaying tactics,” said Shahzad Rajput, who is representing one of the suspects.

The Pakistan government has been claiming that the 26/11 probe is in its final stages as it has acquired vital information, but the statement of the suspects’ lawyers has certainly put a question mark over Islamabad’s credibility. (ANI)

Tributes paid to eminent theatre personalities in Shimla

Shimla, July 9 (ANI): A play based on a famous Indian novel, Devdas was recently staged at 122-year-old Gaiety theatre to pay tributes to some eminent theatre artistes and playwrights.

‘Devdas’ was performed by some promising theatre artistes to pay tributes to late theatre personalities like Habib Tanvir and Manohar Singh.

The director of the play, Abhimanyu felt that the play was perfect to pay tribute to the unforgettable theatre personalities.

“It is a proud moment for us to pay tribute to such personalities because they have given us a path on which we are supposed to walk among all the hurdles and in the end we will reach our destination where we can earn honour and dignity for ourselves. Even they earned it after much hard work and we salute them for that,” said Abhimanyu.

Residents were very happy to see young artists performing in Gaiety where actors like Prithvi Raj Kapoor, K.L Saigal, Pran, Prem Chopra, Anupam Kher, Shashi Kapoor, Jennifer Kendall and Naseeruddin Shan have given performances. Novelist Rudyard Kipling too has performed on the Gaiety stage.

“A tribute to the senior artistes that is what this play is all about. As you just said that the play has been performed on the stage for the first time after its reopening on June 25, I think it’s a great tribute to the artistes who have gone,” said Captain Dhiman, a resident.

Built by the British in 1889, in Victorian gothic style and said to be a copy of the Royal Albert hall in London, the theatre was closed for renovation and was reopened on June 25. By Hemant Chauhan(ANI)

US Congressman opposes proposed American legend title for MJ

Washington, July 9 (ANI): A US Congressman has insisted he intends to oppose plans to honour Michael Jackson as an official American legend.

Republican Peter King recently slammed the King of Pop, tagging the late star as a “pervert, child molester, paedophile” during a CNN interview.

And he insists he intends to fight the motion to declare the icon “an American legend and musical icon (and) a world humanitarian”, saying he will do “whatever I have to do”, reports Contactmusic.

Texas Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee, who represented Congress and the U.S. Black Caucus at the Jackson memorial on Tuesday, announced that she would lead the motion.

She also showed off a framed copy of the motion, which was to be debated at the U.S. House of Representatives. (ANI)

Jackson’s death certificate emerges online

London, July 8 (ANI): A copy of Michael Jackson’s death certificate has emerged online, stating the cause of death as “deferred”.

The document apparently lists “entertainment” as the type of business, and his occupation as a “musician”.

The number of years in this occupation is given as 45, which comes as no surprise considering the King of Pop, who died aged 50, became a world celebrity as early as at the age of five, reports The Sun.

His race is marked as “black”, and the informant, who gave the information for the certificate, is shown as his sister La Toya Jackson.

The certificate also said that Forest Lawn Cemetery was a “temporary” disposition of the body, though final burial is “pending at an unknown location”.

The document emerged on tmz.com just hours after the end of his memorial service at the Staples Center, in Los Angeles on July 7. (ANI)

No proposal with Central Govt. to introduce Bill for police reforms

New Delhi, July 7 (ANI): The Centre today informed the Lok Sabha that in light of the recommendations made by the Soli Sorabjee Committee there is no proposal under government’s consideration to introduce a Bill on police reforms.

“Police is a state subject under the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution and therefore, police reforms is primarily the responsibility of the state government,” Minister of State for Home Affairs Mullapally Ramachandran said in Lok Sabha on Tuesday.

“There is no proposal under consideration to introduce a Bill on Police Reforms” he added.

Ramachandran said his ministry had set up the Sorabjee Committee to draft a Model Police Act in September 2005, which submitted its report along with Model Police Act on 30th October 2006.

He said the copy of the Act was sent to all states and Union Territories for consideration and appropriate action.

“As per available information, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala, Rajasthan, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura and Uttrakhand have either framed new police Act or amended the existing one.” (ANI)

Indian origin scientist makes breakthrough in developing “spintronic devices”

London, June 27 (ANI): A team of researchers led by a scientist of Indian origin has created new ‘superatoms’ with magnetic properties for the first time, a breakthrough that could be used to make “spintronic devices”, faster computer processors and denser memory storage.

According to a report in New Scientist, the research was led by Shiv Khanna from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Superatoms were discovered in the 1980s when Walter Knight and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, found that groups of sodium atoms can share electrons amongst themselves.

The electrons form a collective “supershell” that coats the cluster.

Until now, clusters that copy the magnetic properties of other elements have proved more difficult to design.

Magnetism is caused by the spin of an atom’s electrons, which are arranged in shells, or orbitals, around the atom’s nucleus.

Their net spin determines the strength of the atom’s magnetic “moment,” and because they tend to occur in pairs that cancel each other out, it is the atom’s unpaired electrons that contribute to its magnetic moment.

Unpaired electrons, however, will make an atom, or a superatom, more likely to react with others in an attempt to fill its orbitals and become stable.

As a result, stability and magnetism have long been thought to be mutually exclusive.

A team led by Shiv Khanna at Virginia Commonwealth University has come up with a way around the problem.

Khanna’s team worked out that encapsulating an atom of vanadium in a cage of eight caesium atoms would create a stable supershell of electrons around the entire cluster.

This would prevent the vanadium atom’s unpaired electrons from reacting with other atoms, maintaining its magnetism.

The arrangement would yield a magnetic moment of five Bohr magnetons, which is the same as an atom of manganese.

“What we have done is expand the range of possible magnetic materials,” said Khanna.

Khanna’s magnetic superatoms are only calculations at this point, but he has funding from the Department of Energy to make them a reality.

He hopes the clusters can be used to give researchers a new dimension of control in designing new materials.

For example, stable magnetic clusters could one day be used in new “spintronic” devices, which compute or store information using magnetic moments rather than simply electrical charge.

Encoding data in this way means the devices can be far smaller than those used to make conventional electronic components, potentially providing an overall boost in computing power. (ANI)

Study links more gene mutations to autism risk

Washington, June 26 (ANI): A collaborative team of geneticists from The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and several other institutions say that they have found more autism susceptibility genes.

The researchers said that they identified 27 different genetic regions where rare copy number variations – missing or extra copies of DNA segments – were found in the genes of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), but not in the healthy controls.

The complex combination of multiple genetic duplications and deletions is thought to interfere with gene function, which can disrupt the production of proteins necessary for normal neurological development.

“We focused on changes in the exons of DNA-protein-coding areas in which deletions or duplications are more likely to directly disrupt biological functions,” said study leader Dr. Hakon Hakonarson, director of the Center for Applied Genomics at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and associate professor of Pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

“We identified additional autism susceptibility genes, many of which, as we previously found, belong to the neuronal cell adhesion molecule family involved in the development of brain circuitry in early childhood,” he added.

According to him, the study also revealed many “private” gene mutations, those found only in one or a few individuals or families-an indication of genetic complexity, in which many different gene changes may contribute to an autism spectrum disorder.

“We are finding that both inherited and new, or de novo, genetic mutations are scattered throughout the genome and we suspect that different combinations of these variations contribute to autism susceptibility,” said Dr. Maja Bucan, professor of Genetics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Chair of the Steering committee for Autism Speaks’ Autism Genetic Resource Exchange (AGRE).

“We are grateful to families of children with autism spectrum disorders for their willingness to participate in genetic studies because family-based studies have many advantages. We have learned a lot both from genetic analyses of children with autism as well as analyses of their patents and their unaffected siblings,” the researcher added.

During the study, the researchers compared genetic samples of 3,832 individuals from 912 families with multiple children with ASDs from the AGRE cohort against genetic samples of 1,070 disease-free children from The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

They said that their research also unveiled two novel genes in which variations were found, BZRAP1 and MDGA2. According to them, they were thought to be important in synaptic function and neurological development, respectively.

Key variants of these genes, say the researchers, were transmitted in some, but not all, of the affected individuals in families.

A research article on the findings has been published in the journal PloS Genetics. (ANI)

The list of 10 bizarre things that students leave behind

London, Jun 25 (ANI): A list of bizarre things that British students leave behind in their rooms includes snakes and white rabbits among other things.

The audit carried out by British student accommodation provider Unite has revealed that trophy traffic cones and road signs are no longer the must-have collectibles.

Instead, students are leaving behind a more eclectic group of items when they leave their digs at the end of the year, and pets were among the unusual items left behind.

Unite found a pair of budgies, a six-foot snake, and a white rabbit that had been left behind by their owners.

Among the other items left behind were frozen chicken feet, an inflatable pool, which was filled with water, a scuba diving suit and a pole-dancing pole.

The most common items left behind were mobile phone chargers (24 per cent), while almost one in five (19 per cent) of the items found were text books and one in ten (11 per cent) were iPods.

“After a year of working hard and playing hard, it is no surprise that students forget to pack everything at the end of term – and what they leave behind never fails to surprise us,” the Telegraph quoted Nathan Goddard, Unite sales and marketing director, as saying.

“From the risque to the ridiculous, we often wonder how these items make it into their rooms in the first place,” he added.

Unite, which has properties in 23 UK cities and towns said it tries to reunite students with their belongings.

Unclaimed items are donated to charity or recycled and all pets are found a good home.

The 10 most bizarre items:

1. A six-foot snake.

2. Pole dancing pole.

3. Life-size skeleton.

4. Pair of budgies.

5. Giant white pet rabbit.

6. 10ft inflatable outdoor pool filled with water.

7. Frozen chicken feet.

8. A whip and a copy of the Kama Sutra.

9. Scuba diving suit with air tank and flippers.

10. Full-size air hockey table. (ANI)

Evolution in animals is faster in regions with warmer climates

London, June 25 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have found out that evolution in animals is faster in regions with warmer climates, which could help explain why the warm topics are so species-rich.

According to a report by BBC News, researchers have found that among pairs of mammals of the same species, the DNA of those living in warmer climates changes at a faster rate.

These mutations, where one letter of the DNA code is substituted for another, are a first step in evolution.

DNA can mutate and change imperceptibly every time a cell divides and makes a copy of itself.

But, when one of these mutations causes a change that is advantageous for the animal, for example, rendering it resistant to a particular disease, it is often “selected for”, or passed down to the next few generations of that same species.

Such changes, which create differences within a population but do not give rise to new species, are known as “microevolution”.

The idea that microevolution happens faster in warmer environments is not new. But, this is the first time the effect has been shown in mammals, which regulate their own body temperature.

“The result was unexpected,” said Len Gillman from Auckland University of Technology, who led the study.

“We have previously found a similar result for plant species and other groups have seen it in marine animals. But, since these are ‘ectotherms’ – their body temperature is controlled directly by the environment – everyone assumed that the effect was caused by climate altering their metabolic rate,” he added.

Scientists believe that this link between temperature and metabolic rate means that, in warmer climates, the germ cells that eventually develop into sperm and eggs divide more frequently.

“An increase in cell division provides more opportunities for mutations in the population over a given time,” explained Dr Gillman.

“This increases the probability of advantageous mutations that are selected for within the species,” he said.

“We suspected the same effect might be happening in mammals, because seasonal changes affect the animals’ activity,” Dr Gillman told BBC News.

In the DNA study, it was found that at higher latitudes where environments are colder and less productive, animals often conserve their energy – hibernating or resting to reduce their metabolic activity.

“In warmer climates annual metabolic activity is likely to be greater, so this will lead to more total cell divisions per year in the germline,” said Dr Gillman.

These results support the idea that high tropical biodiversity is caused by faster rates of evolution in warmer climates. (ANI)

Khanduri’s successor to be elected today

New Delhi, June 24 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislature party is likely to meet here today to elect the successor of B C Khanduri, who resigned from the post of Chief Minister of Uttarakhand.

The names of Minister for Tourism and Parliamentary Affairs Prakash Pant and Health Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal are doing the rounds as possible front-runners to replace Khanduri.

Khanduri handed over a copy of his resignation letter to the party president Rajnath Singh on Tuesday, after discussions with the top leadership of the BJP. Khanduri has sent his resignation letter to the state Governor for acceptance separately.

The BJP in Uttarakhand has been in turmoil after it lost all five Lok Sabha seats in the state and dissidents led by senior leader B S Koshiyari landed in Delhi to press for Khanduri’s removal. (ANI)

Khanduri’s successor to be elected today

New Delhi, June 24 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislature party is likely to meet here today to elect the successor of B C Khanduri, who resigned from the post of Chief Minister of Uttarakhand.

The names of Minister for Tourism and Parliamentary Affairs Prakash Pant and Health Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal are doing the rounds as possible front-runners to replace Khanduri.

Khanduri handed over a copy of his resignation letter to the party president Rajnath Singh on Tuesday, after discussions with the top leadership of the BJP. Khanduri has sent his resignation letter to the state Governor for acceptance separately.

The BJP in Uttarakhand has been in turmoil after it lost all five Lok Sabha seats in the state and dissidents led by senior leader B S Koshiyari landed in Delhi to press for Khanduri’s removal. (ANI)

One in seven freed GITMO detainees have returned to terrorism: Pentagon report

Washington, May 21 (ANI): About one in seven of the 534 prisoners released from the Guantanamo Bay dentition center in Cuba, has returned to terrorism or militant activity, an unreleased Pentagon report has claimed.

This conclusion could strengthen critics’ arguments against the transfer or release of any more detainees as part of President Obama’s plan to shut down the facility.

Past Pentagon reports on Guantanamo recidivism have been met with skepticism from civil liberties groups and criticized for their lack of detail.

The Pentagon promised in January that the latest report would be released soon, but Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman, said this week that the findings were still “under review.”

Pentagon officials said there had been no pressure from the Obama White House to suppress the report about the Guantanamo detainees who had been transferred abroad under the Bush administration.

The report is the subject of numerous Freedom of Information Act requests from news media organizations, and Whitman said he expected it to be released shortly.

The report, a copy of which was made available to The New York Times, says the Pentagon believes that 74 prisoners released from Guantanamo have returned to terrorism or militant activity, making for a recidivism rate of nearly 14 percent.

Among the 74 former prisoners that the report says are again engaged in terrorism, 29 have been identified by name by the Pentagon, including 16 named for the first time in the report. The Pentagon has said that the remaining 45 could not be named because of national security and intelligence-gathering concerns.

Terrorism experts said a 14 percent recidivism rate was far lower than the rate for prisoners in the United States, which, they said, can run as high as 68 percent three years after release. ANI)