Robert Pattinson prefers local pub to red carpet!

Washington, March 25 (ANI): Robert Pattinson likes chilling in a local pub more than walking on the red carpet.

The ‘Twilight’ hunk claims that he isn’t too comfortable being famous.

“Although I like meeting fans and love the response from them. I’m far happier going down to my local pub, having a drink and sitting chatting to friends. That’s when I’m most relaxed,” CBS News quoted him as saying.

He added: “I didn’t go into acting because I wanted to be famous, I got into acting because I loved the creation and the making of good credible drama. Fame is just an extra added on.”

The actor also has no desires to indulge in partying or buying expensive things.

He said: “That’s not my scene. I’m more than happy to do the normal things and buy the things I bought before all this madness kicked off.”

The actor was amazed to see his snaps “buying underwear at my local store” on tabloids recently.

Referring to paparazzi, he said: “These guys must be hiding in the rails or something.” (ANI)

Kate Moss does not like being famous

London, Mar 13 (ANI): Supermodel Kate Moss has said she does not like being famous.

The beauty complains popularity intrudes her privacy.

“I don’t like being famous. It encroaches on your life. A lot,” the Daily Star quoted her as saying.

She added: “In fact, I’ve no idea why people are so interested in me. It makes me a bit uncomfortable talking about it actually.”

Moss also admitted she becomes a different person during photoshoot.

She said: “I’m not myself any more. I act out the desires of the stylist and the photographer. It’s not a trance-like state, it’s more of a feeling.” (ANI)

Satyameva Jayate | Meaning of Satyameva Jayate | Truth Alone Triumphs | National Emblem – India

Satyameva Jayate | Meaning of Satyameva Jayate | Truth Alone Triumphs | National Emblem – India

“Satyameva Jayate” (satyameva jayate सत्यमेव जयते) (Sanskrit: “Truth Alone Triumphs”) is the national motto of India. It is inscribed in Devanagari script at the base of the national emblem, which is an adaptation of the Lion Capital of Asoka at Sarnath, near Varanasi in the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. The origin of the motto is a well-known mantra 3.1.6 from the mundaka Upanishad . Full mantra as follows.

satyameva jayate nānṛtaṁ
satyena panthā vitato devayānaḥ |
yenā kramantyṛṣayo hyāptakāmā
yatra tat satyasya paramaṁ nidhānam ||

In devanaagri :

सत्यमेव जयते नानृतम् सत्येन पन्था विततो देवयानः । येनाक्रमत् मनुष्यो ह्यात्मकामो यत्र तत् सत्यस्य परं निधानं ॥

Meaning:

Truth alone triumphs; not falsehood.
Through truth the divine path is spread out by which
the sages whose desires have been completely fulfilled,
reach where that supreme treasure of Truth resides.

Source – Wikipedia

Abhishek Awasthi used me: Rakhi Sawant

Abhishek Awasthi used me: Rakhi Sawant

Rakhi Sawant who is known for her sharp tongue and her abrupt ways has admitted to being ‘used’ and also broken-hearted.

The lady who is the object of many men’s desires and the most talked-about bride-to-be thanks to her televised swayamvar that is currently going on on NDTV Imagine, says that her relationship with ex-boyfriend Abhishek Awasthi was deliberately broken by their own family members.

An admittedly heartbroken Rakhi places the blame on her own mother as well as Abhishek’s mother and domestic help for the relationship that lasted four years not resulting in marriage.

Rakhi is, however, also critical of Abhishek, who, she claims ‘used’ her as a stepping stone to make his base in the industry which is otherwise not welcoming of outsiders.

She insists that she used her contacts to establish him as a choreographer and as soon as his work was done, he dumped her and started dating Shradha Sharma.

This is yet another example that Rakhi quotes as evidence of being unlucky in love, another reason why she is looking for true love through the swayamvar.

Source -

http://movies.ndtv.com/movie_story.aspx?section=Movies&Slug=Abhishek%20used%20me:%20Rakhi%20Sawant&Id=ENTEN20090100863&keyword=television&subcatg=MOVIESINDIA

NC ready to lend ‘unconditional support’ to UPA: Omar

Srinagar, May 18 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister and National Conference (NC) leader Omar Abdullah on Monday said that his party was ready to lend ‘unconditional support’ to the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) Government at the Centre.

“Our support to the UPA is unconditional. We will not bargain for any thing or any post in Union Council of Ministers,” Omar told reporters here.

Asked whether the NC will get a cabinet berth, Omar said, his party had nothing to do with any post.

“We have played a part in the victory of the UPA. I have participated in the election campaign for the UPA in the country. Beyond it, we have not to ask for,” he added.

Omar also spoke about NC rebel Ghulam Hassan Khan, who was elected from the Ladakh parliamentary constituency as an Independent, saying Khan’s rejoining the party is something his party wanted.

“The return of Ghulam Hassan Khan is something that we wanted but it is not against the desires of the Congress. The high command of the Congress spoke to the NC President yesterday and expressed the desire that we do everything to bring Ghulam Hassan Khan back home. Ghulam Hassan Khan Sahab has unconditionally accepted the invitation of the National Conference and the Congress high command and come back to his home,” Omar said. (ANI)

Omar Abdullah lends “unconditional support” to UPA govt.

Srinagar, May 18 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Monday said the National Conference (NC) would provide “unconditional support” to the UPA Government.

“The return of Ghulam Hassan Khan is something that we wanted, but it is not against the desires of the Congress Party. The high command of the Congress Party spoke to the President of the NC and expressed the desire that we do everything to bring him back home,” Omar said

“Khan has unconditionally accepted the invitation of the NC and the Congress high command and come back to his home”, he added.

Khan, a senior leader of the NC from Ladakh, had rebelled to fight the Lok Sabha election as an independent candidate against the Congress’ P. Namgyal.

Khan defeated Namgyal by over 3,000 votes.

The NC had given the Ladakh constituency to the Congress under a seat sharing agreement between the two ruling partners in the state. Of the six Lok Sabha constituencies in the state, the two parties contested from three each.

While the NC won all the three seats, the Congress lost Ladakh but won two seats from Jammu region. (ANI)

Omar Abdullah lends “unconditional support” to UPA govt.

Srinagar, May 18 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Monday said the National Conference (NC) would provide “unconditional support” to the UPA Government.

“The return of Ghulam Hassan Khan is something that we wanted, but it is not against the desires of the Congress Party. The high command of the Congress Party spoke to the President of the NC and expressed the desire that we do everything to bring him back home,” Omar said

“Khan has unconditionally accepted the invitation of the NC and the Congress high command and come back to his home”, he added.

Khan, a senior leader of the NC from Ladakh, had rebelled to fight the Lok Sabha election as an independent candidate against the Congress’ P. Namgyal.

Khan defeated Namgyal by over 3,000 votes.

The NC had given the Ladakh constituency to the Congress under a seat sharing agreement between the two ruling partners in the state. Of the six Lok Sabha constituencies in the state, the two parties contested from three each.

While the NC won all the three seats, the Congress lost Ladakh but won two seats from Jammu region. (ANI)

US rules out sending troops to Pak to assist in offensive against Taliban

Washington, May 2 (ANI): The United States has ruled out sending troops to Pakistan to lend support to the country’s ongoing military offensive against the Taliban and other extremists groups in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

US Senator and Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee John Kerry has made it clear that Washington would not send its troops on Pakistani soil.

Kerry said America can however, send troops for training, if Pakistan desires so.

“We’re not going to send troops by any significant numbers of any kind to Pakistan. We may have some people training or helping if that’s something they decide they want,” The News quoted Kerry, as saying.

He also asked Islamabad to develop an indigenous strategy to counter the ‘existential’ threat that the country is presently facing.

“It can’t be an American-driven policy. It can’t have an American imprint or footprint. This really has to be homegrown and that’s what we’re really working with Pakistanis to achieve,” Kerry said.

He added that Pakistan will have to show strength against the extremists to assert their democratic values, and assure the international community that it has the will to root out the problem which is posing danger not only to the country, but also to the entire region including the United States and Europe.

“This is not our battle, in a sense. Pakistan, the outcome, is going to be determined by Pakistanis themselves making a choice about whether or not they’re going to stand up to the Taliban and assert their democratic values,” Kerry said. (ANI)

How ‘angel’ and ‘devil’ brain areas interact while exercising self-control

Washington, May 1 (ANI): When on diet, skipping a favourite calorie-laden dessert can take a whole lot of self-control – an ability that comes easier to some people than others. Now, US scientists have identified an “angel” centre in the brain which holds back another “devil” area to stop individuals giving in to temptation.

Scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have uncovered differences in the brains of people who are able to exercise self-control versus those who find it almost impossible.

The key in the research is, while everyone uses the same single area of the brain to make these sorts of value-laden decisions, a second brain region modulates the activity of the first region in people with good self-control, allowing them to weigh more abstract factors like healthiness – in addition to basic desires such as taste to make a better overall choice.

The study has been published in the May 1 issue of the journal Science.

“A very basic question in economics, psychology, and even religion, is why some people can exercise self-control but others cannot,” notes Antonio Rangel, a Caltech associate professor of economics and the paper’s principal investigator.

“From the perspective of modern neuroscience, the question becomes, ‘What is special about the circuitry of brains that can exercise good behavioral self-control?’ This paper studies this question in the context of dieting decisions and provides an important insight,” he added.

That insight was the result of an innovative experiment: A group of volunteers- all self-reported dieters- were shown photos of 50 foods, including everything from Snickers bars to Jello to cauliflower. The participants were asked to rate each of the foods based on how good they thought that food would taste. Afterwards, they were shown the same slides again and asked to rate each of the foods based on its supposed health benefits.

From those ratings, the researchers selected an “index food” for each volunteer – a food that fell about in the middle of the pack in terms of tastiness and supposed health benefits.

The participant was then shown the 50 items one final time and was asked to choose between it and the index item. (To keep the choosers “honest” without forcing them to eat 50 different foods in one sitting, the researchers would randomly select a number corresponding to one of the slides, and the participant would have to eat whichever food had been chosen at that point.)

All three viewings of the slides were done with the participant inside an MRI scanner, so that the blood-oxygen level dependent signal (a proxy for neuronal activity) in specific areas of the brain could be measured.

After all the choices had been made, the researchers were able to pick out 19 volunteers who showed a significant amount of dietary self-control in their choices, picking mostly healthy foods, regardless of taste. They were also able to identify 18 additional volunteers who showed very little self-control, picking what they believed to be the tastier food most of the time, regardless of its nutritional value.

When they looked at the brain scans of the participants, researchers found significant differences in the brain activity of the self-control group as compared to the non-self-controllers.

Earlier studies have shown that value-based decisions are reflected in the activity of a region in the brain called the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, or vmPFC.

If activity in the vmPFC goes down, explains Todd Hare, a postdoctoral scholar in neuroeconomics and the first author on the Science paper, “it means the person is probably going to say no to that item; if it goes up, they’re likely to choose that item.”

In the non-self-controllers, Rangel notes, the vmPFC seemed to only take the taste of the food into consideration in making a decision.

“In the case of good self-controllers, however, another area of the brain-called the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [DLPFC]–becomes active, and modulates the basic value signals so that the self-controllers can also incorporate health considerations into their decisions,” he explains. (ANI)

LTTE ready to negotiate permanent cease-fire

Colombo, Apr.14 (ANI): Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tiger rebels have said that they are ready to negotiate a permanent ceasefire with government forces.

In a statement reported by the BBC, the rebels said they were prepared to open political talks to halt decades of bloodshed.

The government announced a unilateral two-day halt to the fighting beginning Monday, to allow the civilians trapped in the conflict zone to leave.

The Tigers said the two-day truce was an attempt by the authorities to deceive the international community.

In a statement, the rebels said they were ready for an internationally supervised truce and that such a ceasefire should also contain a base for political solutions.

“The LTTE [Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam] has for long been requesting a permanent ceasefire encompassing sensible military and political essence. This, the LTTE still reiterates. Such a ceasefire should also contain a base for political negotiations,” the statement said.

“The LTTE desires that it should also create a conducive climate for a permanent political resolution to the national question of the Tamils in a peaceful way. The LTTE is ready to comply without any conditions to a ceasefire as described above,” it added.

The statement came on the second day of the truce announced by the government. (ANI)

Taiwan’s inflation drops to 0.15 per cent in March

Taipei – Taiwan’s year-on-year inflation rate contracted for the second consecutive month to 0.15 per cent in March, due mainly to the fall in oil prices, the government’s statistics agency said Monday.

“Compared with the same month last year, oil product prices in March dropped considerably, resulting in the general fall of consumer prices,” said Wu Chao-ming, a spokesman of the Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics.

Wu cited reduced demand due to global downturn as another major factor affecting consumers’ desires to buy, thus resulting in the drop of prices on the island.

Duffy vows never to endorse another product

Washington, Mar 28 (ANI): Welsh singer-songwriter Duffy has vowed that she will never endorse another product again, after her TV commercial for Diet Coke was criticised by U.K. campaigners over road safety fears.

Duffy, 24, who is currently promoting the low-calorie beverage in a European advertising campaign, is seen riding a bicycle through dark streets without a helmet or reflective gear.

The singer was criticised for the promo by officials at the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents, after it debuted last month.

“Unfortunately, advertisers do forget sometimes to make sure they are showing safe and legal behaviour when someone is using the road in an advert,” Contactmusic quoted the officials as saying.

And now the star has pledged not to market any other brands, and to focus solely on her music instead.

“I have only got 100 per cent to give and all of that goes towards being creative, so I can’t really open the doors to all the other things,” she said.

“I have so many desires creatively, but I have to tread carefully that I also don’t sell myself out personally.

“What you see with me is what you get. I just put my whole energy into the creative side,” she added. (ANI)

Brit barmaid’s medical condition makes her demand sex while she’s asleep

London, Mar 22 (ANI): Haley Batty, a British barmaid, is suffering from a medical condition that makes her demand sex while she is asleep.

Haley, a barmaid from Barnsley, South Yorks can’t help pestering her boyfriends for sex from bedtime till dawn.

However, she’s asleep all the time-and never remembers a thing in the morning.

And the exhausted lads all do a runnner because they can’t keep up with her dozing desires.

She said that a string of lovers have found her sexsomnia a big turn-off.

“I can have sex three or four times a night if the guys have the stamina, but in the morning I won’t know anything about it,” News of the World quoted her, as saying.

“My last boyfriend went along with it the first couple of times, but then he said it just felt peculiar being groped by someone who was asleep and dumped me,” she added.

She says her behaviour is a recognised medical condition.

“I discovered the name for it, sexsomnia. It’s like a form of sleepwalking, only you don’t sleepwalk, you have sex,” she said. (ANI)

Supermarkets in Gujarat village

Illol (Gujarat), Jan 27 (ANI): The villagers in Gujarat who are normally engaged into agricultural activities or work as labourers, have turned entrepreneurs with their maiden supermarkets like Hearty Mart.
Illol, a small village in Himmat Nagar district of Gujarat, has set an example on improving rural economy in the state.
The initiative was taken by Nadeem Jafri, a Ahmedabad entrepreneur who started setting up franchises of ‘Hearty Mart’ with an aim to satisfy the desires and demands of the rural population as provided in the urban areas.

“We have brought the concept to the villages. We had initially identified that in a village, if an entrepreneur wants to do something in an organised way, he would shift from village to a city. That is how he would leave his place. We thought why not bring in a concept wherein they do it at their doorstep. We started a supermarket there. We did a small research and found out what kind of merchandise the villagers would want. On the basis of that we created a brand called ‘Heart Mart’,” said Nadeem Jafri.

33 -year- old Mehdi Shavadi, who owns the Hearty Mart outlet in Illol, seems happy with his investment of Rs six hundred thousanda in Hearty Mart. Mehdi found this entrepreneurial opportunity more exciting than his previous rural jobs.

“It has been more than one and half years since I started the business. I am getting good returns from the business,” said Shavadi.

According to Shavadi, sometimes they have a better sale than the urban outlets. People in rural areas are improving their lifestyle as they are educated and working. People here are more curious for every new brand in the market like people in urban area.

“From ‘Hearty Mart’ we get all the benefits. Those who are illiterate they might feel uncomfortable while going to different shops. But with the opening of this mart, one can get everything under one roof,” said Tahira, a customer.

While India is caught in the global slowdown, per capita income has increased steadily in the rural areas following the strong growth in farm sector and increased public spending in rural areas. Embattled corporates see rural India, an obvious way of beating the slowdown blues. By Ami Sharma (ANI)