Former Miss Universe hopeful taking up career in boxing

Melbourne, June 4 (ANI): Former Miss Universe hopeful and Water Ski world champion Lauryn Eagle has revealed that she would like to take up professional boxing.

Eagle, 22, a beauty pageant regular, also revealed that her mother has no idea about her plans, and that if she did, she would definitely be disowned.

“She is going to be in shock. She doesn’t know a thing,” News.com.au quoted the model/athlete as telling the Daily Telegraph during a break in training at her gym in Sydney’s Sutherland shire.

“I would like to have a fight and I am sussing it out now.

“I know some might be critical because I am a girl but I can’t really let what other people think get to me. It’s something I want to do. I just love it,” she said.

Eagle hasn’t given up on another crack at Miss Universe either, a competition she withdrew from this year after a run-in with the law.

“The Miss Universe thing was just bad timing. But it is something I can do later on,” she said.

“Right now I am focused on my boxing training and my skiing,” she stated.

Her trainer Losh Matthews said: “You bet.”

“She is a young girl who has been through a lot but I have never seen anyone more committed or dedicated in my life,” he added. (ANI)

China cracks down on Internet mapping to prevent leaking of state secrets

Beijing, May 19 (ANI): Aiming to prevent state secrets from being disclosed and uncertified maps from being published online, an updated standard for Internet map servers would be implemented next month.

“The new standard issued by the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping, one year after the first standard was launched, requires all Internet map servers to keep servers storing map data inside the country and provide public Internet protocol addresses,” The China Daily reports.

As per the latest standard, the qualified online map servers must have no record of information leakage in any form in the past three years.

The new regulation includes all maps downloaded or copied from the Internet onto cell phones and handheld computers.

It has been reported that by the end of December, the authorities would also crack down on unregistered or illegal Internet map servers and release the blacklist to the public.

Song Chaozhi, Deputy Director of the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping, said in a conference on Internet map services last week that there are two main problems existing in the field: one is publishing maps with wrong locations or information, and the other is leaking sensitive information involving State secrets on maps. (ANI)

Ferrari needs ` four or five” podiums to challenge for F One title: Alonso

London, May 12 (ANI): Racing champ Fernando Alonso has said Ferrari must crack down on chaos and score “four or five” podiums on the trot if he is to challenge for the world championship.

The Sun quoted the double world champ, 28, as saying: “So far we have had two engine problems, one gearbox problem, one jumped start, some chaotic races. But still we are only three points behind the leader, so we are happy.”

“It”s still very early in the championship, but better to be in the first three or four positions than eighth or ninth. From now we need four or five podiums in a row. We cannot have one podium and then another three races with mistakes if we are to win the championship,” he added.

Alonso said: “We were a super Ferrari team over that weekend with no mistakes at all.” (ANI)

Wife takes back Mark Owen

London, April 24 (ANI): English singer Mark Owen has been taken back by his wife Emma Ferguson after he cheated on her, it has emerged.

His wife has given the 38-year-old singer another chance. But she has also reportedly warned him saying, “One more strike and you’re out.”

Owen, after being scolded by band-mate Gary Barlow and spending a month in a rehab, has promised to change. He has also agreed to take the help of a marriage counsellor, reports The Mirror.

“Mark is itching to resume family life. He has not touched alcohol in five weeks and has done a lot of navel-gazing as well as receiving serious professional counsel. Emma knows he is a great dad. She has agreed to give their marriage one more crack on the proviso he behaves himself, doesn’t so much as look at another woman and attends marriage counselling,” a source said.

“Mark has agreed to all her terms. And he has even suggested they try for another baby to cement their relationship. Another influence was Gary Barlow who has been a rock for both Emma and Mark. He’s been telling Mark to pull his socks up. It was the talking to he needed,” the source added.

The couple’s marriage was almost over when Owen admitted having a number of extra marital affairs.

His short-tempered wife immediately took off her wedding ring, and shut all sources of contact with him. (ANI)

US may still cancel Obama, Karzai Washington meeting

Washington, Apr.7 (ANI): The May 12 meeting between US President Barack Obama and his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai in Washington could still be cancelled, White House sources said Tuesday.

Obama has asked Karzai to crack down on internal corruption, and according to sources here, his administration is also unhappy with comments attacking the U.S. and its allies.

Over the last several days the White House has maintained that next month’s meeting wouldn’t be compromised as a result of Karzai’s remarks.

However, according to Fox News, in his daily briefing Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs changed his tone. “We certainly would evaluate whatever continued or further remarks President Karzai makes as to whether that’s constructive to have such a meeting.” (ANI)

McLaren needs to improve qualifying pace for crack at title: Hamilton

London, Mar 31(ANI): Former Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton has said that the McLaren team needs to beef up their cars in the qualifying rounds for them to have a decent crack at this year’s title.

Hamilton believes that despite McLaren collecting 54 points from the opening two Grand Prix’s to sit second in the constructors’ championship, their weakness has been their qualifying rounds.

It had resulted in Hamilton and fellow team-mate Jenson Button starting fourth and eighth on the grid in the season-opener in Bahrain, and 11th and fourth in Melbourne.

“In both Bahrain and Australia we’ve felt more comfortable with our race pace than the pace we showed in qualifying. While that’s encouraging, it’s clear we need to improve our qualifying pace if we’re to have a regular shot at winning races,” The Daily Express quoted Hamilton, as saying.

“It’s all very well being quick in the race, but if you can’t make up places from your grid position, then your race is still going to be a struggle,” he added.

Hamilton further said that the team’s saving grace has been the performance of the car during a race.

“We can take home the positives: our car is fast, much faster than it was this time last year, and it seems to be reliable. Now we need to work on single-lap pace, the sooner the better,” he added. (ANI)

Council takes crack at bat eradication

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

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

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

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

Bunbury helps Perth storm clean-up

Emergency service crews from Bunbury are heading to Perth to help authorities deal with a backlog of calls for help after yesterday’s freak storm hit the city, causing widespread damage.

Five State Emergency Service crews will help in the clean up after the storm dumped heavy rain and hail on the city, smashing car windows, flooding roads and causing widespread power blackouts during peak hour traffic.

Emergency service personnel say it is the worst storm damage they have seen for 16 years.

Marisa Chapman from Western Power says more than 95,000 customers around the city remain without power.

She says it is one of the worst storms the city has seen.

“Certainly, the only one that would be close to an equivalent would be 1994, I think there were about 60,000 homes that were affected, but we had about half the population, so it’s a bit difficult to compare, but certainly it’s one of the worst storms that Western Power has faced,” she said.

The Fire and Emergency Services Authority says so far there has been no reported damage in the south-west.

However, a Bunbury man was lucky to escape injury after being struck by lightning.

The man, known as John, says lightning struck a calculator in his pocket.

“Just as I left the house I’ve never heard a crack of thunder like it in my life, I had this calculator in my pocket and it actually hit it and it jumped out of my bloody pocket,” he said.

”Little Ashes” gay sex scene was uncomfortable, says ‘straight’ Robert Pattinson

New York, Mar 23 (ANI): ‘Twilight’ star Robert Pattinson has said that he is ‘straight’ and was quite ‘uncomfortable’ doing gay sex scenes in “Little Ashes.”

In the art house film, Pattinson plays Spanish artist Salvador Dali, who embarks on a sexual relationship with writer Frederico Garcia Lorca (played by Javier Beltran).

“We were both straight, but he was Spanish, so much more confident about being naked and stuff,” the New York Daily News quoted Pattinson as telling London”s Times.

However, the British heartthrob admitted that love scenes could be just as “awkward” with a girl.

For example, he said that for his on-screen romance with Emilie de Ravin in “Remember Me” was a closed set.

And despite all the precautions Pattinson took for the film – including “a little patch on your privates” – his sex scenes didn”t go quite as smoothly as he had hoped.

“I’d spent so long taping [the patch] round myself and then literally it falls off within one second and it’s taped to the sheet. You realize the whole crew are looking directly at your b— crack,” said Pattinson. (ANI)

Landslip threat forces gas tanks move

Landslips are affecting residents in three locations on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

The latest problem caused by the recent wet weather is below a service station on the Nambour connection road where a 15 metre-high retaining wall has collapsed.

Two large gas tanks near the edge of the slip have been removed.

Cracks began forming on five properties at Glen Con Court in Buderim last weekend where retaining walls collapsed and a pool was damaged.

Mooloolah residents are worried a large crack on the edge of Brandenburg Road may cause a retaining wall to collapse.

Council probes ‘extensive’ backyard landslip

The Sunshine Coast Regional Council is investigating a landslip at Buderim.

The backyards of five homes on Glen Con Court have been affected by large cracks in the soil after recent heavy rain.

The council’s Andrew Ryan says steps were taken yesterday to control the landslip.

“There’s a fairly extensive crack at the bottom of the properties – at their backyard – and you can see certainly evidence of movement,” he said.

“Up to 300 millimetres or so has dropped down below their backyard. That’s across about four or five properties, so it’s a reasonable length that’s occurred.”

Opposition questions need for stop and search

The State Opposition says evidence given to a parliamentary committee contradicts the State Government’s reasons for introducing stop and search laws.

The committee is reviewing proposed legislation which would give police the power to stop and search people without their consent or grounds for suspicion.

The Police Commissioner Karl O’Callaghan told the committee he believed the discussion of the laws had been too focused on Northbridge.

He said he didn’t intend to declare whole suburbs stop and search zones but would instead use the laws to target small pockets of an area.

The Opposition’s Police spokeswoman Margaret Quirk says the evidence is in stark contrast to the Government’s bid to sell the laws as a crack down on weapons and drugs in Northbridge.

“Clearly the whole premise on which this legislation was necessary is now dubious. The Commissioner said that he was concerned that there was too much focus on Northbridge.”

“He also said that he thought he’d only use the powers about a dozen times a year and that they wouldn’t be looking for drugs.”

Mike Beck | Mike Beck Death | Mike Beck Shot and Killed | Mike Beck Dead | Mike Beck Killed | Mike Beck Died | Mike Beck Rip | Mike Beck Rapper | Koch Records

Mike Beck | Mike Beck Death | Mike Beck Shot and Killed | Mike Beck Dead | Mike Beck Killed | Mike Beck Died | Mike Beck Rip | Mike Beck Rapper | Koch Records

Watch Mike Beck Always Strapped Freestyle Video Click Here

Mike Beck, a member of Fat Joe’s K.A.R. collective, an aspiring rapper  was shot and killed on late night Friday 30th October 2009, in a botched robbery attempt in Brooklyn, New York.

He was an up-and-coming rapper, born and raised in Brooklyn, New York.

His good friend Bill Blass — who has also passed — was managing Rakim, and encouraged him to take music seriously.
On his grind, Beck began making guest appearances on official albums from Fat Joe, Greg Street, and has appeared on countless mixtapes over the years.

He was also set to appear, heavily, on the upcoming Koch Records compilation, Joey Crack & Pistol Pete presents K.A.R.

Ponting backs captain Clarke

London, Sep.13 (ANI): Australian captain Ricky Ponting has endorsed Michael Clarke as his successor to captain Australia’s Twenty20 side.

Cricket Australia is yet to announce who will lead the team following Ponting’s decision to retire from Twenty20 internationals to concentrate on his Test and one-day career, but Ponting believes the 28-year-old Clarke, who was skipper for Australia’s first three one-day internationals against England, has earned his stripes.

“Michael has done a terrific job in my absence, be it in Twenty20 or 50-over cricket. He’s continued to grow as a player and a leader,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Ponting, as saying.

“I know Cricket Australia said at my announcement they’d wait until later in the year before they name the captain, but Michael’s done everything right and deserves the first crack at it,” Ponting added. (ANI)

Priority is to win, I am never going to smile on court, says Murray

New York, Aug 29(ANI): British tennis player Andy Murray has said that during a match his main focus is on winning it, and he won’t crack a grin to impress his fans as he doesn’t care about anything else.

“I don’t go out of my way to ask the general public if they like me or not. That’s not really No.1 in my priorities,” The Mirror quoted Murray, as saying.

“I am never going to smile on the court. I don’t see the other top guys smiling and joking when they are playing. It is a serious business. Just like it is in other sports. Before or after you might joke around – I spend most of my time joking around – but when you step on the court, it is business,” he added.

The 22-year-old further displayed his qualities to become a top player and said that he likes to concentrate hard on his game and he extracts gratification it.

“I’ve got three hours to concentrate. To concentrate hard. So, that’s what I do. Is it still fun? That’s a good question. When you are training, it is hard work but you feel you can enjoy yourself. There’s no pressure,” Murray said.

“It is just practising a sport I love playing. But when it comes to a tournament, it is all dependent on whether you are winning or not,” he added. (ANI)

Slow-moving faults may help protect some cities against destructive quakes

Washington, August 29 (ANI): A new research by scientists from the University of Arizona (UA) in Tucson has determined that some slow-moving faults may help protect some regions of Italy and other parts of the world against destructive earthquakes.

Until now, geologists thought when the crack between two pieces of the Earth’s crust was at a very gentle slope, there was no movement along that particular fault line.

“This study is the first to show that low-angle normal faults are definitely active,” said Sigrun Hreinsdottir, UA geosciences research associate.

According to Richard A. Bennett, a UA assistant professor of geosciences, “We can show that the Alto Tiberina fault beneath Perugia is steadily slipping as we speak – fortunately, for Perugia, without producing large earthquakes.”

Perugia is the capital city of Italy’s Umbria region.

Creeping slowly is unusual. Most faults stick, causing strain to build up, and then become unstuck with a big jerk. Big jerks are big earthquakes.

For decades, researchers have known about the Alto Tiberina and similar faults and debated whether such features in the Earth’s crust were faults at all, because they didn’t seem to produce earthquakes.

Hreinsdottir and Bennett have now shown that the gently sloping fault beneath Perugia is moving steadily at the rate of approximately one-tenth of an inch (2.4 mm) a year.

Perugia has not experienced a damaging earthquake in about 2,000 years, according to Hreinsdottir.

“Because the fault is actively slipping, it might not be collecting strain. To have an earthquake, you have to have strain,” she said.

Other towns in the region that lie near steeply sloping faults, including L’Aquila and Assisi, have experienced large earthquakes within the last 20 years.

The UA team became interested in the Alto Tiberina fault because previous research suggested the fault might be moving.

To check on the fault, the UA team measured rock movements in and around Perugia using a technique called geodesy.

The geodesy network can tell where one antenna and its rock are relative to another antenna. Taking repeated measurements over time shows whether the rocks moved relative to one another.

The UA team analyzed data from 19 GPS stations within approximately a 30-mile (50 km) radius around Perugia.

“Having such closely spaced stations and several years of data were key for detecting the fault’s tiny motions,” said Hreinsdottir.

“This study is one more piece in the puzzle to understand seismic hazards in the region and can apply to other regions of the world that have low-angle normal faults,” she added. (ANI)

Abramovich backs UEFA to rein in Man City spending power

London, Aug. 28 (ANI): Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich is backing UEFA to crack down on Manchester City’s spending power – because he does not want to flash any more cash himself.

According to The Sun, UEFA president Michel Platini has vowed that any club that does not break even in the next three years will be kicked out of uropean competitions.

Abramovich, who has spent 700 million pounds on the Blues in six years, but no longer wants to pour his fortune into the club, is spurring Platini on.

And, he does not want anyone to forge ahead of Chelsea either.

City have spent 120 million pounds in this transfer window alone in a bid to gatecrash Europe’s top table compared to Chelsea’s 23 million pounds.

But UEFA has adopted the mantra of ‘financial fair play’ in a bid to make the European game a more level playing field.

Platini is proposing clubs can only spend what they earn in football revenues.

He said: “I have met with Abramovich, who is a football person and passionate about the game. He said that we must do something about this. It doesn’t matter if one team doesn’t agree, because this is what the clubs want.” (ANI)

Playing Ashes tour of 2013 is achievable, says Ponting

Melbourne, Aug 26 (ANI): Ricky Ponting, who become the first Australian captain to surrender the Ashes twice to England in England, has said that he is determined to play the Ashes tour of 2013, even if he is no longer captaining the side.

Australian fans back home want Ponting to be replaced as skipper by his deputy Michael Clarke, after the team lost three of their past five series and slipped this week from first to fourth on the Test rankings.

Ponting’s captaincy role appears safe for now, but fears of Australia’s all-time leading run scorer quitting the game when he eventually loses the leadership role may be unfounded, The Age reports.

“Having a pretty bitter and sour taste in my mouth at the end of that Test match, I’d love to be able to go back and give it one more crack,” Ponting said.

“I’ve got to worry about that the next 12 or 18 months and see if all that hunger or commitment is still there. Right at the moment it most definitely is. It’s probably higher right now than ever before. Who knows, 2013 might be something achievable,” he said.

Asked if handing Clarke the captaincy for the Twenty20 and one-day teams to preserve himself for Test cricket would be an option in the future, Ponting said he was open to the idea.

“If that’s the way that I or others outside of what I’m thinking decide (is) the right way to go, there’s absolutely no reason why that couldn’t happen,” said Ponting.

“It has happened in the past with Australian teams. It is happening with other teams around the world right at the moment. Paul Collingwood is captain of the England Twenty20 team and Andrew Strauss is captain of the one-day and Test cricket teams.

Ponting said he hoped talk of him playing in 2013, as a player only was hypothetical.

“I still think I’ve got a lot to offer the team, as a batsman and as a captain and as a leader. If it ends up getting to the point where I’m not the captain, my hunger and determination to keep playing this game are as good as ever,” he said. (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)

Gemma Merna has no qualms about nudity to crack Hollywood

London, Aug 9 (ANI): Hollyoaks babe Gemma Merna has revealed that she’s ready to strip off to fulfill her movie dreams.

The sexy star, who plays who plays chavvy Carmel Valentine, has admitted that she would ditch the Channel 4 soap and everything else for Hollywood career.

“They usually pay a lot for film work,” the News of the World quoted Merna as saying.

“Saying that, I’d do a nude scene with Brad Pitt for free . . . I’d have to go to the gym about five times a day before though,” she added. (ANI)