ERNET India ~ ERNET India 2009 Recruitment ~ Jobs Opportunities in ERNET India in eis.ernet.in

ERNET India ~ ERNET India 2009 Recruitment ~ Jobs Opportunities in ERNET India in eis.ernet.in

ERNET India, an autonomous scientific society under Department of Information Technology invites applications for the following posts :

1. Senior Manager : 01 post, Pay Scale : Rs.37400-67000 Grade Pay Rs.8700
2. Manager : 02 posts, Pay Scale : Rs.15600-39100 Grade pay Rs.7600
3. Technical Assistant : 02 posts, Pay Scale : Rs.9300-34800 grade pay Rs.4200
4. Private Secretary : 01 post, Pay Scale : Rs.9300-34800 grade pay Rs.4200
5. Assistant : 02 posts, pay scale : Rs.9300-34800 grade pay Rs.4200
6. Stenographer : 05 posts, Pay Scale : Rs.5200-20200 grade pay Rs.2400

How to Apply :

Application in the prescribed format should be send with in 45 days with copies of certificates.

Visit http://www.eis.ernet.in/ for more details and application form.

Heavy rains disrupt life in Mumbai on 14th July 2009

For the third time in ten days, heavy rains Tuesday disrupted normal life in the country’s commercial capital.

Waterlogging was reported from many low-lying areas of the city like Dadar, Khar, Santacruz, Goregaon, Malad, Kandivli, Andheri, Jogeshwari (western suburbs), Byculla, Mazagaon, Sion, Wadala, Vikhroli and Ghatkopar (all eastern suburbs).

According to the Weather Bureau, the city recorded 98 mm rainfall till this morning while the suburbs notched 125 mm.

Disruptions were reported in road, rail and air traffic movement since the morning. While traffic jams hit office-goers on the two highways serving the city and on other important roads, trains on the Western Railway, Central Railway and Harbour Line were running 15-25 minutes behind schedule.

A spokesperson for Mumbai Airport said that all incoming flights were delayed by 15-20 minutes on account of poor visibility (about 800 metres) and due to gusty winds over the city.

As a precautionary measure, several schools in the city and suburbs declared a holiday. Children were informed by phone not to attend school in view of the heavy rains and the forecast for a downpour during the day.

The Weather Bureau has forecast heavy to very heavy rains accompanied by strong gusty winds in the city over the next two days.

Earlier, heavy rains had disrupted life in the city July 4 and 8, causing great hardship to office-goers, working women and students.

King of Pop Michael Jackson gets royal send off

Los Angeles, July 8 (DPA) From the fleet of Bentley limousines that transported his family, to the endlessly fawning comments of television anchors throughout the blanket coverage, Michael Jackson, the late King of Pop, got a send-off Tuesday that was fit for royalty.

As the 30-vehicle convoy left the Forest Lawns Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills, it drove past dozens of broadcast trucks, with several news helicopters buzzing overhead. Police closed the 101 Freeway to allow the procession easy passage to the public memorial in downtown Los Angeles. Traffic in the opposite direction also slowed to a virtual standstill as commuters halted their journey to catch a glimpse of the hearse.

As the procession drew up to the Staples Centre a high-flying plane drew a huge heart in the blue Los Angeles sky, while fans screamed, “We love Michael!” TV crews were set up on dozens of large podiums close to the entrance, as the country’s most distinguished news anchors, from Katie Couric to Brian Williams, led the coverage.

“We made so many sacrifices to see him one last time. We sold everything we had in our house,” said one fan, who journeyed for three days on buses from South Carolina to southern California to attend the memorial, even though she had no ticket.

Inside the arena, a large royal blue stage was erected at a basketball court that usually plays host to the Los Angeles Lakers. The backdrop featured a photo of a smiling Jackson looking up towards the sky and the words: “In loving memory of Michael Jackson King of Pop. 1958-2009.”

A lavish gold-coloured programme featured pictures of Jackson with presidents, political leaders and showbiz stars, and tributes from his family and friends.

The elaborate service began with Smokey Robinson reading tribute letters from the likes of Diana Ross and Nelson Mandela. The backdrop then changed to an image of stained glass windows as Jackson’s casket, laden high with flowers, was wheeled in. His pallbearers were each wearing a single, sequined glove in a tribute to one of Jackson’s signature styles, as a gospel choir sang.

The elite of pop music performed tributes for Jackson, from Mariah Carey and Stevie Wonder to John Mayer and Usher.

“The title King of Pop is not big enough for him,” said Berry Gordy, the founder of Motown who discovered Jackson and guided his early career. “I think he is simply the greatest entertainer that ever lived.”

But for some in the entertainment world, the endless fawning and hagiography was a little much. Media columnist Brian Lowry could barely wait for the event to end as he blogged it live for entertainment trade paper Variety. He juxtaposed the reverential tones with the bizarre behaviour that Jackson often displayed and which “makes the worshipful tone characterizing much of this coverage even more questionable.”

African American activist Al Sharpton, in his eulogy for Jackson, tried to explain the pop star’s mass appeal. “You would have to understand the journey of Michael to understand what he means to us,” said Sharpton.

“When Michael started it was a different world but because he kept going, because he refused to let other people decide his boundaries, he opened up the whole world. It was Michael Jackson who brought blacks and whites and Asians and Latinos together. It was MJ who made us say ‘We Are The World’ and ‘Feed the Hungry’.”

Only one reader of Variety, commonly regarded as the Bible of the US entertainment industry, bothered to post a comment – and he obviously did not agree with Sharpton. “A grotesque and vulgar display,” noted reader Jack Henry of the ceremony. “The US is not only financially bankrupt, but morally and culturally bankrupt as well. God help us.”

Now ’99′ too defies strike, gets set to arrive on 1st May

While bigger producers are battling it out for equal rights with multiplexes and refraining from releasing any new films, relatively smaller producers have a different take on the situation. While this Friday saw the arrival of as many as six films – TERA MERA KI RISHTA, EK SE BURE DO, COFFEE HOUSE, PAL PAL DIL KE SAATH, SCHOOL DAYS and ROYAL UTSAV, even in weeks to come there would be something or other trickling in at theaters. One such film which has made it’s plans quite clear in advance is ’99′ which is certainly arriving on 1st May.

Says a source attached to the film, “The response to the theatrical promo of ’99′ has been amazing and we have all the plans for reaching out to the audience. We have kick started promotion on quite a few popular Bollywood portals and social networking sites. The promo has come in for quite some good feedback and movie buffs have been appreciating the super slick, fast-paced and funny feel of this comic thriller.”

Produced by Anupam Mittal and Aditya Shastri of People Pictures, ’99′ is directed by debutants Raj Nidimoru and Krishna DK and promises to be an original concoction of crime, comedy and coolness.

“Ours is an original story inspired by real events between 1999 and 2000″, says Krishna, “It is as much “what could have been” as it is “what really happened.” In other words, it is historical and #64257; ction. It may all sound a little tricky on paper but the treatment has been kept simple enough for audience to grasp the film’s graph. You would know exactly what we have tried to get into the narrative once you see the film.”

Starring Kunal Khemu and Soha Ali Khan in lead with Cyrus Broacha and Simone Singh playing an integral part of the film, ’99′ is touted to be an unpredictable and hilarious ride spread over two cities with colorful characters, unbelievable circumstances, small time crooks, big time conspiracies, fateful car crashes, loads of coffee, a briefcase full of money, a budding romance and a historical controversy brewing in the background!

All set to arrive now on 1st May, the film also features the trio of Boman Irani, Mahesh Manjrekar, and Vinod Khanna in important parts. -Sampurn Media

DM, DIG meet injured freedom fighter in hospital

NINE DAYS after 90-year-old freedom fighter Mangar Ram was brutally beaten by the Varanasi Police, District Magistrate A.K. Upadhyaya and DIG P.C. Meena, on Tuesday, finally found time to meet the freedom fighter. The officials went to the Varanasi divisional hospital to take stock of Mangar’s health and assure him of all possible support.

While talking to HT, DM A.K. Upadhyay said, “Mangar’s health is improving and the best possible facility is being provided to him.” The DM also said that due to the model code of conduct, the process of action against the cops of Chaubeypur police station is taking some time.

Mangar Ram, a native of Bariyasanpur village, was allegedly dragged out of his house by the police personnel of Chaubeypur police station and brutally beaten in the presence of the entire village on March 29. He was admitted to the hospital’s private ward on March 29.

Taking suo moto cognizance of the report published in HT (Lucknow edition) on April 1, the State Human Right Commission had served notices to the UP Government, after which the two constables involved in the incident were reportedly sent to lines.

Q+A – What is happening in Israeli coalition talks?

Benjamin Netanyahu met Roni Bar-On, finance minister in the outgoing Israeli government and a member of the centrist Kadima party, on Tuesday.

The right-wing Likud leader, nominated to be prime minister after a Feb. 10 parliamentary election, was continuing efforts to build a broad coalition government despite an initial rejection from Kadima leader Tzipi Livni.

Here are some questions on the challenges Netanyahu faces in forming a government:

WHAT ARE NETANYAHU’S CHANCES?

On paper, the Likud leader has the support of 65 legislators from right-wing and Jewish religious parties in the 120-member parliament. So Netanyahu, asked by President Shimon Peres on Feb. 20 to try to form a government, might be able to do so well within the 42-day period mandated by law. But a narrow, rightist coalition could put Netanyahu on a collision course with the Obama administration in Washington, which has pledged swift pursuit of Palestinian statehood, because of the smaller parties’ opposition to concessions to the Palestinians. Netanyahu is therefore seeking a broad, middle-of-the-road coalition: a unity government that would include the Kadima and centre-left Labour, which are the core of the outgoing administration.

IS A UNITY GOVERNMENT POSSIBLE?

That’s still unclear. Netanyahu held talks on Sunday with Livni, who said there were still “substantial differences” between her party and Likud. But she agreed to meet again. Much could depend on whether she comes under pressure from within Kadima, many of whose leaders, like Livni, once belonged to Likud, to agree to a political alliance. As Israel’s chief negotiator with the Palestinians, Livni has been pursuing a land-for-peace deal. Netanyahu wants to shift the focus of talks to economic matters. As for the Labour party, its leader, Defence Minister Ehud Barak, met Netanyahu on Monday. Barak reaffirmed that Labour would go into opposition, but said he and Netanyahu were likely to hold further discussions.

WHAT ABOUT A NETANYAHU-LIVNI “ROTATION” ARRANGEMENT?

Netanyahu has publicly rejected the idea of sharing the prime minister’s post with Livni, whose party finished one seat ahead of Likud in the inconclusive Feb. 10 election. But Israeli politics produces strange bedfellows — as in 1984, after a similarly inconclusive election, when Peres, Labour leader at the time, served as prime minister for two years before “rotating” with Likud’s hardliner, Yitzhak Shamir.

WHAT’S NEXT?

A lot of coalition negotiating, in public and in back rooms. In Israel, the bargaining over cabinet posts and government policy usually goes down to the wire. Netanyahu has until April 3 to put together a government.

AND IF HE FAILS?

Then Peres asks another legislator to try for a period of up to 28 days. If he or she fails, Peres, acting on a written request from a majority of legislators, assigns someone else to the task, which would need to be completed within 14 days. If that fails, a parliamentary election is held within 90 days.

Battle of oranges unleashes Italy’s Carnival spirit

Once a year the reserved people of Italy’s Piedmont region at the foot of the Alps follow the advice of an old Latin adage and go a bit mad.

Solid evidence that “Semel in anno licet insanire” is an edict the Piedmontese take seriously can be found on the streets of Ivrea — a town near the northwestern city of Turin — during the last three days of Carnival.

Teams dressed in brightly coloured costumes wage a fierce orange-throwing battle that leave the cobbled streets of Ivrea covered in a thick carpet of mashed orange pulp.

Bystanders are encouraged to wear a red cap to avoid being targeted by the “aranceri” (orange-throwers).

But it might still be difficult to dodge the oranges altogether when hundreds are flying everywhere as aranceri on foot battle their rivals standing on carts drawn by horses.

Even when taking shelter behind the large fishing nets stretched in front of buildings, it is impossible for spectators to avoid getting splattered by pulp and juice.

Some 6,000 people are divided into nine teams. Participants range in age from young children to veterans like Basilio Mobolo, who threw his first oranges at age 11 in 1964.

Some enrol at an even younger age.

“I should not say it aloud but I don’t even remember when I started: I must have been about five,” said 26-year-old farmer Daniele Vota. “I guess it can be a little dangerous for children, but then Carnival is Carnival. And if you are born here you’ve got it in your blood.”

About 180 people were treated for minor bruises on Sunday, the first of three days of orange-pelting, according to the event’s organisers.

Last year’s battle sent four to five people to hospital, said Franca Piscitelli of the Red Cross.

“For the local people, a black eye is something to be proud of,” she added.

Two legends account for the origins of Carnival celebrations in this Piedmont town best known for being the base for Olivetti, once a major industrial company whose typewriters feature in exhibits of Italian design.

Oranges replaced beans in the Carnival battle in the middle of the 19th century.

One legend says poor people in the Middle Age would throw beans into the streets to show their feelings of resentment towards their feudal lord.

A more dramatic tale tells of Violetta, the proud daughter of a miller and symbol of Ivrea’s Carnival, who was bound by feudal laws to spend her wedding night with a local marquis. To save her honour for her betrothed she chops off the head of the marquis and starts a popular revolt.

More than 200 years after the first Carnival, the fighting between people on the ground and those on the carts symbolises the struggle among commoners and the tyrant’s henchmen.
Valentina Za

Top official abducted in Pakistan’s Swat Valley

Mingora (Pakistan), Feb 22 (IANS) Suspected Taliban militants Sunday abducted a top government administrator and six guards in Pakistan’s Swat Valley, officials said.

District administrator Khushal Khan was going in his car to Mingora, the main town of Swat, when he was abducted by the suspected militants, The News reported.

The abductors have also kidnapped six of Khan’s bodyguards who were accompanying the official.

Khan was transferred to Swat only two days ago.

The kidnappings have dealt a blow to the peace efforts in the region, as the government and Taliban militants have pledged a ceasefire in the region.

Pakistani authorities last Monday entered into a deal with Taliban militia to restore sharia, or Islamic law, for peace in Swat, a idyllic valley where Pakistani military has been engaged in an unending war with Islamist militants.

A journalist working for a local television channel and newspaper was abducted and killed Wednesday as he covered a ‘peace march’, led by radical cleric Maulana Sufi Mohammad who was freed by the government to negotiate peace with Taliban militants.

Last Sunday, Islamist militants announced a 10-day ceasefire in the valley as a ‘goodwill gesture’ towards the peace talks.

Pakistan said Saturday the government and the militants have agreed to a ‘permanent truce’, but a Taliban commander said their ceasefire would be reviewed on its expiry Wednesday.
Indo Asian News Service

Israeli President asks Netanyahu to form new government

Jerusalem, (DPA) Israel’s President Shimon Peres tasked Benjamin Netanyahu Friday with forming a new government, ending speculation which had persisted since Israel’s inconclusive general election last week.

Although Netanyahu’s hardline Likud Party had won only 27 of the 120 Knesset seats (Israeli parliament) at stake in the election, one fewer than won by the centrist Kadima party of Tzipi Livni, he is seen as having the best chances of forming a governing coalition.

Consultations Peres had held with Knesset factions after the Feb 10 elections revealed that Netanyahu was recommended for the premiership by parties with a total of 65 legislators.

Livni, on the other hand, was endorsed only by the 28 Kadima legislators, after left-wing and Arab-Israeli factions told Peres they were not recommending anyone for the premiership.

Under Israeli law, Netanyahu has 28 days in which to form a coalition, although he can ask the president for a 14-day extension if needed.

Netanyahu has earlier said he was ready to form a coalition with the centrist Kadima party of his main rival Tzipi Livni.

Netanyahu was speaking after a meeting with Peres in an effort to build a grand coalition. Peres also met Friday with Livni, who was quoted by Haaretz newspaper as saying she did not rule out joining a Netanyahu-led coalition.
DPA

Slumdog Millionaire star Freida Pinto secretly married Rohan Antao in December 2007

Slumdog Millionaire star Freida Pinto secretly married Rohan Antao in December 2007 Several rumors has been circulating industry regarding dumping of Rohan Antao by her fiancé Slumdog Millionaire star Freida Pinto. New turn has taken place in Freida and Rohan’s story. It has been revealed that the couple had a secret wedding in Goa in December 2007.

According to person close to the couple, Rohan and Freida were extremely close and have several common friends. Both are 24 years old and were deeply in love with each other. They had decided that they would get married in Goa, which is Rohan’s hometown. They had booked a hotel for the wedding. Freida had given the designer just five days to make her gown as the wedding had to take place in late December 2007. Once the gown was almost ready, Freida also had a dress trial to which Rohan had accompanied her.

Freida said that she would be having a secret wedding as she didn’t want too many people to know about it.

The source added; “Rohan and Freida had decided to keep their marriage a secret till they felt ready to talk about it openly. They were together even when she completed shooting for Slumdog Millionaire. But once the film started making waves internationally, she decided to dump Rohan.”

But the fact is that nobody is aware of the present state of relationship between Rohan and Freida whereas Freida is still basking in success of the movie. According to friends of the couple, Rohan is still recovering from the shock of being dumped.

ROUNDUP: Leftists battle police near rightist march in Dresden

Dresden, Germany – Leftists battled Saturday with riot police escorting a march by far-right protesters in Dresden, Germany.

Much of the German city was destroyed and thousands of Germans burned to death by Allied firebomb raids late February 13 and early February 14, 1945. German neo-Nazis claim the Allies committed a war crime. Left-right clashes are common on the anniversary.

An estimated 6,000 far-right activists, some from outside Germany, marched through Dresden. They were cordoned off by police to prevent any brawling.

Eyewitnesses said several hundred leftists tried to attack the neo-Nazi participants, hurling bottles at the police lines and damaging parked cars. Several people were injured in the violence.

Separately, pacifist Germans took part in processions to both denounce the neo-Nazi threat and remember the city’s dead.

Many mainstream Germans say that the huge loss of life must be remembered as a warning that war does not pay. A rally called by major political parties to condemn right-wing exploitation of the issue attracted more than 10,000 people.

German Transport Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee, a Social Democrat, told the crowd, “We must say no to those anti-democrats.” Other speakers charged the rightists were trying to divert attention from the Holocaust by playing up Dresden’s torment.

Historians say the mass air raids by the US and British air forces on Dresden led to 25,000 deaths, mainly civilians.

A monument to the deaths was inaugurated Saturday on a city square, the Altmarkt. The inscription says, “The horrors of war that Germany sent out into the world came back to strike in our city.”

On Friday, the bell of the Frauenkirche, or Church of Our Lady, tolled in memory of the dead. The church collapsed two days after the raids. US and British donors helped pay to rebuild the church in a gesture of reconciliation. It reopened in 2006. (dpa)

Mass murder says Rudd as Australia hunts its arsonists

Mass murder says Rudd as Australia hunts its arsonists Sydney – To some, it’s just fun. To others, it’s psychopathic behaviour they can’t control. To Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, deliberately starting fires on scorching days in the wooded fringes of towns is nothing short of mass murder.

“There are no other words to describe it other than mass murder,” Rudd said, after the death toll in the nation’s worst-ever forest fires topped 100.

A report last month from the Australian Institute of Criminology stated that around half of forest fires are deliberately lit, in what is largely an Australian phenomenon.

The report’s author, Damon Muller, explained that few arsonists are caught. The average punishment, if convicted, is a year in jail.

Rebekah Doley, who specializes in the psychology of serial arsonists and who has interviewed 130 of them, says arson is a simple crime but perpetrators are complex.

“They also tend to be serial offenders and, in my experience, will not stop until caught,” she said.

Which means that those who lit this weekend’s fires, and learned that their handiwork had incinerated whole families inside their cars, will likely be at it again when the temperature rises and the winds pick up.

Kieren Walshe, deputy police chief in Victoria where 400 fires were burning on Saturday, doesn’t doubt that arsonists are at work.

“These things have to have some sort of human intervention,” he said. “They can’t start from the natural elements.”

One suggestion is to have a national register of convicted, or even suspected, arsonists and to vote through legislation that would allow them to be kept in custody on days like last Saturday when the temperature in Melbourne was 46 degrees Celsius and high winds were blowing though tinderbox forests. (dpa)

Satyam to announce long-term plan next week – chairman

The board of fraud-hit Satyam Computer Services Ltd will decide on a long-term action plan, including a possible sale, in the next 7 to 10 days, its chairman said on Monday.

Kiran Karnik, who was last week appointed by the government as the chairman of the Satyam board, told Reuters a clear picture would be available by the middle of next week.

Satyam has been battling for survival after founder and former chairman Ramalinga Raju disclosed last month that profits had been overstated for years in the country’s biggest corporate scandal.

The fund-starved outsourcer firm, whose clients include General Electric and Coca Cola, has borrowed 6 billion rupees ($123 million) from banks to meet short-term capital needs.

“Now the short-term crisis has been taken care of. Once the fire-fighting is over, everybody is curious to know where things are moving,” Karnik said.

“We will chart out a long-term roadmap in the next 7 to 10 days and make a recommendation to the government that may include all possibilities. The government has to decide.”

“Things will be clearer by the middle of next week.”

Top engineering firm Larsen & Toubro controls about 12 percent of Satyam and has not ruled out raising its stake, while diversified Indian business houses Spice Group and Hinduja Group have also shown interest.

The board has appointed Goldman Sachs and another Indian investment bank to find a strategic bidder for the company.

The Economic Times newspaper said earlier on Monday Satyam would trim its sales staff in overseas locations to help cut costs and to repay debts to creditors, but Karnik said they were not in a hurry to shed workforce.

“We are not in a hurry (to trim employees count). We’ll have to look at it,” he said. “Obviously there is a financial crisis. Cost-control measures are being taken.”

Meet the British ‘Barack Obama’

London, Jan 29 (ANI): A 29-year-old mortgage advisor in Britain is in demand these days – because he resembles US President Barack Obama.

After Obama’s historic win, Ryan Skeggs has been snapped up by a doubles agency, and is enjoying his instant popularity.

“I first started getting recognised when he was running against Hillary Clinton,” The Sun quoted him as saying.

“But since Obama came to power it’s gone crazy.

“I did some filming up in London for French TV.

“I was flanked by two guys dressed as Secret Service agents and people were scared to speak to me directly.

“They kept asking for permission to say something.

“I felt nervous at the start but then I thought, ‘Why don’t I just run with it.’ So I put on my Barack Obama accent and had fun.

“I had people ringing up their mums, saying ‘I’ve met the president,’” he added.

Skeggs, who lives in Stevenage, is also perfecting his ‘Obama voice’ since signing a deal with an agency last month.

He taped several speeches and sat at home repeating the lines to make himself seem even more convincing. He’s even worked on mimicking his mannerisms.

“I’ve never properly tried to speak in an American accent, except down the pub messing about,” said Skeggs.

“So I watched a few videos of Obama to work on it.

“He speaks in such a clear and precise way and at a lower octave.

“I’ve pretty much nailed it now. It’s so funny tricking people – I can’t get my head around it,” he added.

Skeggs landed his new double job after girlfriend Wendy sent off his snaps to fakefaces.co.uk . (ANI)

British government is told to publish cabinet documents on Iraq

British government is told to publish cabinet documents on Iraq London – The British government was Tuesday ordered to release the minutes of crucial cabinet meetings in the run-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

A tribunal set up to oversee the implementation of the Freedom of Information Act said the confidential documents should be released in the “public interest.”

The cabinet meetings on March 13 and March 17, 2003, led by ex-prime minister Tony Blair, are known to have considered the highly-controversial issue of whether the invasion was allowed under international law.

Ever since, there has been controversy over whether or not Blair was aware of a document raising concern about invading Iraq without a second United Nations (UN) resolution, and why that document was never circulated to the wider cabinet.

Advice from the then-Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, presented to the cabinet and published on March 17, unequivocally stated that military action against Iraq was legal.

But earlier, lengthier and more equivocal advice given to Blair on March 7 was eventually leaked in which concerns were raised about invading Iraq without a second UN resolution.

The government’s cabinet office now has 28 days to decide whether to appeal to the High Court against the ruling. “We are considering our response,” said a Downing Street spokesman. (dpa)

A relaxed, optimistic Alonso only frowns over Ferrari

A relaxed, optimistic Alonso only frowns over FerrariPortimao, Portugal – If his optimism and his coolness are anything to go by, Fernando Alonso has half a Formula 1 title – the third of his personal count – in his pocket already, even before the 2009 season starts on March 29 in Australia.

In southern Portugal, where the year’s first joint tests were being held until Thursday, only one word could take away the Spaniard’s smile: Ferrari.

“I’ve been having to answer that question for five years,” he complained at a press conference in the brand new Portimao circuit, when asked by a journalist.

No, he has nothing to say about Ferrari, to whom he has repeatedly been linked by rumours.

“Maybe if we win two or three races we can forget about Ferrari,” he said.

Alonso insists he is thinking about his team, Renault, and about the present, “not about 2010, 2011, 2012 or 2013.”

And the present looks rosy for the driver who won the Formula 1 world championship in 2005 and 2006.

“My goal is to win the drivers’ title and the constructors’ title,” he says of the upcoming season.

With a serious and challenging look on his face, the Spaniard says the new car can win races.

He is aware of the pressure that puts on him and on his whole team. However, Alonso does not “feel” that pressure these days – he is having fun in his job, and he is not afraid to say it.

“When you are waiting for your first title everything is more complicated, any mistake is more serious,” he says.

Following a very quiet winter holiday, in which he admitted that he “almost only ate, slept and rode a bicycle,” Alonso looks more relaxed than ever.

At age 27, he is one of the veterans in Formula 1.

“I had not thought about that, that’s true,” smiled the man who first rode a kart at age 3.

He is not too enthusiastic about the new wave of changes imposed by the motorsport federation FIA, but he knows the modifications are necessary.

“We have to accept them,” he admits.

However, he wants more continuity.

“Constant changes confuse spectators. It is as if in football you changed the offside rule every year.”

Of the criticism that has been poured on Renault’s new car, which many journalists in Portimao have termed “ugly,” Alonso stood up for designers.

“The new shapes are striking, that’s true, but it is a matter of getting used to them. When we see a photo of 2008 cars in three or four months, we are going to find them strange.”

However, the Spaniard stressed that drivers have no voice in the car’s look. They only help and express their views in tests, to explain how the vehicle behaves in turns, for example.

Alonso is only set to drive the new R29 in Portugal Wednesday and Thursday.

“They asked me and I opted not to drive on the first days, because there are always problems in the first days,” he joked, to journalists’ laughter.

He still does not know his new weapon too well, because it was his Brazilian team-mate Nelsinho Piquet who had to face the rain at Portimao Monday. Alonso only did a few laps on a bicycle.

However, the end of last season, with two race wins and more points than any other driver, gave the Spaniard “great confidence.”

“Halfway through the year nobody was counting on us,” he recalls.

For Alonso, “everything is possible” in the upcoming season, which he described as “one of the most open and hardest-fought” he has seen, with more teams and pilots fighting for the title.

If Alonso got upset when asked about Ferrari, he became thoughtful over a question about the retirement of Ron Dennis, his former boss at McLaren-Mercedes.

“We were never the best of friends, but I have great respect for him. It is difficult to do what he did, to stay at the top for so long.” (dpa)

Pedigree dogs have looks but no brain

Pedigree dogs have looks but no brain Keeping a high pedigree and good looking dog has become a style statement these days. This is quite evident when we see world celebrities like socialite Paris Hilton and pop diva Britney Spears, who are often photographed carrying “handbag dogs.”

However, a new study has suggested that pedigree dogs might look extremely cute and attractive, but when it comes to brains, they are extremely stupid as now they are being bred for looks and not for brains.

The study was carried out by researchers in Sweden, led by Kenth Svartberg of the University of Stockholm, who found strong evidence that breeding dogs for appearance has led to a decline in intelligence.

If adhered to the team, “The mental and physical agility of many pedigree breeds is being eroded as owners are now looking for docile, pretty pets to live in their homes.”

It was informed by the lead author Kenth Svartberg that the changes happened over the course of just a few generations. “Modern breeding practices are affecting the behaviour and mental abilities of pedigree breeds as well as their physical features,” he reported.

The researchers analyzed approximately 13,000 dogs on characteristics, such as sociability and curiosity, to help them rate 31 different breeds.

It was found by the team that the dogs, which were specially bred for shows had relatively low levels of all the characteristics mentioned above. Furthermore, the dogs which though were attractive had a really boring and introvert personality.

Svartberg said, “Perhaps the genes behind attractive looks could also be closely linked to those that cause fearfulness.”

Smooth collies, once a herding dog, and Rhodesian ridgebacks, which were used for hunting even dangerous game, were the worst-affected working breeds.