Tim Paine is heir-apparent to Haddin, says Harrison

Melbourne, Sep 18 (ANI): Tasmanian Cricket Association chairman Tony Harrison has said that Tim Paine’s match-winning one-day century for Australia against England should make all cricket followers aware of his class and potential.

“Wicketkeeper batsman Tim Paine’s first international one-day century scored against England overnight and his outstanding form behind the stumps have clearly stamped him as the heir-apparent Australian wicketkeeper,” Harrison said.

“Tim has easily fitted into international cricket and looks extremely comfortable in the Australian team,” he said.

Harrison said Paine was now clearly Australia’s second wicketkeeper behind Test incumbent Brad Haddin.

“But I am confident he can and will take the next step,” The Australian quoted Harrison, as saying.

Paine scored 111 runs giving Australia a 111-run victory over England in the penultimate match of their one-day series at Trent Bridge.

Australian selector David Boon today said that Paine was staking a claim for selection as Australia’s wicketkeeper for the domestic summer.

“It will be very important for him to continue to show this form and confidence through to the last game in England and then in the Champions Trophy,” Boon told ABC radio.

“Who knows? If he comes back to Australia and has a strong start to the domestic season his future is in his hands basically.” (ANI)

Macca says The Beatles became victims of success

Washington, Sep 2 (ANI): Brit singer Sir Paul McCartney has in an exclusive interview spoken out about the final days of ‘The Beatles’, and insisted that the group became victims of their own success when businessman Allen Klein took over their financial affairs.

According to music magazine Mojo, McCartney said that he and his bandmates struggled to come to terms with all the business decisions they were suddenly forced to make as they were recording their final album ‘Abbey Road’.

The fight between them over cash and contracts really became a huge burden.

“We were musicians, we were kids from Liverpool, we’d gone to grammar schools, we’d done Hamburg – we kind of knew all that,” Contactmusic quoted him as saying.

“But the idea that you were going to get this money and someone was going to take it off you…

“I think we all just thought, ‘You get the money, you put it in a bank, and it gradually gets bigger,’ and you say, ‘Thank you very much, and you live happily ever after.’ Then you suddenly get with accountants and they say, ‘No, you can’t just sit there’.

“Then there’s tax, and some business person is on a raid – it was a huge upheaval,” he said.

McCartney also admitted that the group’s business woes were poured into their new songs.

“George (Harrison) would write Piggies, and I knew exactly what he was talking about, and he wrote Taxman when we first found out about the tax system,” he said.

The rift between the group eventually led to a court battle before the band broke up, with many fans blaming Klein for contributing to the group’s split.

McCartney refused to be drawn into talking about Klein, but hinted that he still had not forgiven the businessman for things that would remain unspoken.

“I don’t want to speak ill of the dead,” he added.

Klein passed away in New York earlier this summer, after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. (ANI)

Pak only ‘orchestrating terrorism’ by blaming India for every terror attack: Editorial

Islamabad, June 19 (ANI): While terror strikes across Pakistan continues unabated, authorities have not spared a single opportunity to blame India for creating havoc inside Pakistan, but an editorial carried out in Pakistan’s leading daily highlights the fact that Islamabad must introspect on its own deeds before putting the blame on its neighbour.

Recently, Lahore police nabbed one Zubair alias Naik Muhammad, allegedly involved in the terrorist attack on the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team.

Zubair is a member of the Punjab Taliban, an offshoot of the banned terror organisation Lashkar-e Jhangvi, which has strong ties with Al Qaeda, the editorial said.

While announcing the arrest of Zubair, and his nefarious links with several militant groups, the Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) of Lahore, Pervaiz Rathore, forgot that it was him who had held India responsible for the terror strike on the islanders immediately after the brazen incident on March 3, it added.

How many times we have seen Pakistan denying links with extremists, or providing safe haven to terrorist organizations? Innumerable, the editorial opined.

However, Pakistan, by denying the world known fact, is actually orchestrating terrorism, which is now even threatening its own sovereignty, it went on to add.

It feared that what was really disturbing was the involvement of militias based in South Punjab in different terror acts.

“Mumbai was attacked from South Punjab. Most of the suicide-bombers have been from this region which is characterised by large feudal holdings in the countryside and extreme poverty in the cities,” the editorial said.

It quoted the famous US writer, Selig Harrison, as also having raised fears about the increasing threat perception emanating from the region which stretches from Jhang to Bahawalpur, and is dotted with madrassas.

“The danger of an Islamist takeover of Pakistan is real. It comes from a proliferating network of heavily armed Islamist militias in the Punjab heartland and major cities, directed by Lashkar-e-Toiba, a close ally of Al Qaeda, which staged the terrorist attack last November in Mumbai,” said Harrison.

Apart from the madrassas, which are categorised by the people as jihadi and non-jihadi, there are mosques that supply fighters and suicide-bombers to the Taliban and Al Qaeda, the editorial said.

The trend had started during the Taliban rule in Kabul in the 1990s and has continued after the establishment of Lal Masjid as an entrepôt of warriors moving between Pakistan and Afghanistan, the editorial concluded. (ANI)

US should support Pashtun demands to merge NWFP, FATA: Expert

Washington, May 12 (ANI): The United States should support Pashtun demands to merge Pakistan’s NWFP and FATA, and follow it up by a consolidation of those areas and Pashtun enclaves in Baluchistan and the Punjab into a single unified “Pashtunkhwa” province that enjoys the autonomy envisaged in the inoperative 1973 Pakistan constitution, feels a US expert on South Asian affairs.

In an article for the Washington Post, Selig Harrison, the author of the report “Pakistan: The State of the Union,” based on a six-month study of ethnic tensions in Pakistan, says: “To American eyes, the struggle raging in Pakistan with the Taliban is about religious fanaticism. But in Pakistan it is about an explosive fusion of Islamist zeal and simmering ethnic tensions that have been exacerbated by U.S. pressures for military action against the Taliban and its al-Qaida allies.”

Therefore, he says there is a need to understand the ethnic dimension of the conflict if Washington wants to evolve a successful strategy for separating the Taliban from al-Qaida and stabilizing multiethnic Pakistan politically.

He also is critical of sending a Punjabi-dominant Pakistani army to an area that is entirely Pashtun.

“Sending Punjabi soldiers into Pashtun territory to fight jihadists pushes the country ever closer to an ethnically defined civil war, strengthening Pashtun sentiment for an independent “Pashtunistan” that would embrace 41 million people in big chunks of Pakistan and Afghanistan,” he warns.

“While army leaders fear the long-term dangers of a Taliban link-up with Islamist forces in the heartland of Pakistan, they are more worried about what they see as the looming danger of Pashtun separatism,” he adds.

So how should the Obama administration proceed?

Militarily, Harrison says the United States should lower its profile by ending air strikes and politically, U.S. policy should be revised to demonstrate that America supports the Pashtun desire for a stronger position in relation to the Punjabi-dominated government in Islamabad.

The Pashtuns in FATA treasure their long-standing autonomy and do not like to be ruled by Islamabad. Conventional wisdom suggests that either Islamist or Pashtun identity will eventually triumph, but it is equally plausible that the result could be an “Islamic Pashtunistan.” (ANI)

Beatles’ Harrison forged bandmates’ signatures to please dying fan

London, May 2 (ANI): Late Beatles member George Harrison is said to have once forged the signatures of other band members, just to make a dying fan’s wish come true.

Harrison forged the signatures of John Lennon, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr on photos sent to leukaemia victim Ann Bartlett, 16.

Ann and a pal, living in Barnet, North London, in the mid 1960s, had given the drawings of their idols to a neighbour, who happened to be the group’s dentist.

Harrison, who died of cancer in 2001, is thought to have realised he could not get all the signatures in time and so copied them himself.

“I’d heard in London that George was the master forger of the group,” the Sun quoted Ann’s dad Harry, now in Rickinghall, Norfolk, as saying.

And yesterday the two black-and-white pictures fetched 1,300 pounds to boost research into the disease.

“It adds a certain something and it’s actually quite nice,” Andrew Bullock, of auctioneers Keys in Aylsham, added. (ANI)

Temple in Turkey sheds light on so-called ‘Dark Age’

Toronto, April 16 (ANI): A remarkably well-preserved monumental temple in Turkey, believed to be constructed during the time of King Solomon in the 10th/9th-centuries BC, is shedding light on the so-called Dark Age.

Uncovered by the University of Toronto’s Tayinat Archaeological Project (TAP) in the summer of 2008, the discovery casts doubt upon the traditional view that the transition from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age was violent, sudden and culturally disruptive.

Ancient sources, such as the Homeric epics and the Hebrew Bible, depict an era of widespread famine, ethnic conflict and population movement, most famously including the migrations of the Sea Peoples (or biblical Philistines) and the Israelites.

This is thought to have precipitated a prolonged Dark Age marked by cultural decline and ethnic strife during the early centuries of the Iron Age.

But, recent discoveries – including the Tayinat excavations – have revealed that some ruling dynasties survived the collapse of the great Bronze Age powers.

“Our ongoing excavations have not only begun to uncover extensive remains from this Dark Age, but the emerging archaeological picture suggests that during this period Tayinat was the capital of a powerful kingdom, the ‘Land of Palastin’,” said Timothy Harrison, professor of Near Eastern Archaeology at the University of Toronto and the director of the project.

“Intriguingly, the early Iron Age settlement at Tayinat shows evidence of strong cultural connections, if not the direct presence of foreign settlers, from the Aegean world, the traditional homeland of the Sea Peoples,” he added.

Excavations uncovered the temple’s southern approach, which once faced a broad stone-paved courtyard, and consisted of a monumental staircase and porticoed-entrance, supported by a large, ornately carved basalt column base.

In addition, fragments of monumental stelae – stone slabs created for religious or other commemorative purposes – carved in Luwian (an extinct language once spoken in what is now Turkey) hieroglyphic script, were found.

They are thought to have once stood on stone platforms in the courtyard.

“The building’s central room was burned in an intense fire. It was filled with heavily charred brick and wood, as well as a substantial quantity of bronze metal, including riveted pieces and carved ivory fragments – clearly the remains of furniture or wall fixings. Fragments of gold and silver foil were also found along with the carved eye inlay from a human figure,” said Harrison.

The temple’s inner sanctuary will be the focus of the 2009 field season which begins on July 1. (ANI)

Beatles to release back catalogue of music through website

London, Mar 15 (ANI): The Beatles are reportedly looking at releasing their back catalogue of music through their own website.

The group’s surviving bandmembers, Sir Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, and the estates of the late John Lennon and George Harrison, were negotiating with Apple about an iTunes release.

However, Harrison’s musician son Dhani told Blender magazine that the offer is not satisfactory and the group may go elsewhere.

“We’re losing money every day. So what do you do? You have to have your own delivery system, or you have to do a good deal with Steve Jobs. But he says that a download is worth 99 cents, and we disagree,” the Daily Express quoted him, as saying. (ANI)

Oklahoma police officers pulls up a man over anti-Obama sign

Oklahoma (US), Feb.20 (ANI): Police officers stopped an Oklahoma City motorist, Chip Harrison, and confiscated a sign on his car that appeared to slight President Barack Obama.

The officers reportedly told Harrison that the US Secret Service “could construe this as a threat against President Obama.”

The sign, which read “Abort Obama Not the Unborn,” was returned to Harrison later that day, according to NewsOK.com.

Police spokesman Steve McCool said the sign was taken in error, and Oklahoma City residents should not be worried that their First Amendment rights will be violated.

Harrison told the officers that in his opinion the words “Abort Obama” meant to impeach him. He told the officers he does not believe in abortion because he is a Christian.

Harrison was stopped on westbound Interstate 240 at 8:45 a.m. on February 12, according to the police report.

Harrison was asked if he would like to file a complaint. He said he was not sure but would take the paperwork, just in case. But his run-in with the law wasn’t over yet.

“The Secret Service called and said they were at my house,” Harrison said. fter talking to his attorney, Harrison went home where he met the Secret Service.

“When I was on my way there, the Secret Service called me and said they weren’t going to ransack my house or anything … they just wanted to (walk through the house) and make sure I wasn’t a part of any hate groups.”

Harrison said he invited the Secret Service agents into the house and they were “very cordial.”

He said they interviewed him for about 30 minutes and then left, not finding any evidence Harrison was a threat to the president.

Harrison said he feels his First Amendment rights were violated. ANI)

Second ICC Broadcaster and Sponsor Forum ends in Dubai

Dubai, Feb.11 (ANI): The second annual two-day ICC Broadcaster and Sponsor Forum was held in Dubai this week.

The forum brought together all ICC’s major commercial partners – ESPN STAR Sports, Reliance Mobile, LG Electronics, Pepsico, Yahoo!, Emirates Airline and Reebok – as well as the ICC’s main suppliers and service providers.

The theme of the forum was partnerships and ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat told the meeting that it was incumbent on the ICC to forge successful partnerships with the commercial sector.

“Financially, we depend on our commercial partners. That is no secret,” said Mr Lorgat. “We need to optimise our revenues from our events and other properties in order to develop the game around the world and ensure the future well-being of cricket.

“We feel we offer good value for the product that we have on offer. Cricket is arguably the world’s second most popular team sport after soccer and it can certainly boast one of the most passionate and loyal fan-bases.

“Cricket is unique in that it now has three viable formats of the game regularly being played at international level, each with its own style, support base and history. This provides great variation for players, spectators, sponsors and broadcasters to find their niche.

“However, we can never hope to optimise the revenues from this great game without a healthy partnership with the business and broadcast sectors.

“As with all good relationships, there will be ups and downs but whatever problem is put before us, whatever challenge we face, we will work hard to make sure the relationship works because it means too much to the future health and well-being of the game. Failure is not an option,” he added.

The forum heard presentations from SuperSport’s chief executive Imtiaz Patel, assistant vice-president, syndication of ESPN STAR Sports Tom Harrison, Sanjay Behl, head of brand and marketing at Reliance Communications, Nitin Mathur, director – marketing, Yahoo! and Depender Redhu of LG Electronics among others.

Harrison said: “This forum was a very useful event as it enables ICC’s principle investors to air ideas and concerns with respect to ICC events.” (ANI)

A piano gave uniqueness to the Beatles’ Hard Day”s Night”s opening chord

Washington, A Dalhousie University mathematician has a mystery as to why the opening chord to The Beatles’ “A Hard Day”s Night” is completely different than anything found in the literature about the song to date.

Jason Brown’s work attains significance as no one quite knew exactly what chord Harrison was playing for 40 years.

He has found that there was a piano among Harrison’s 12-string Rickenbacker, John Lennon’s six-string guitar and Paul McCartney’s bass guitar, and that they collectively accounted for the problematic frequencies.

According to him, it was George Martin, the Beatles producer, who added a piano chord that included an F note, which is impossible to play with the other notes on the guitar.

Brown has revealed that he used a mathematical calculation known as Fourier transform to solve the Beatles’ riddle, inspired by reading news coverage about the song’s
40th anniversary.

He says that the process allowed him to decompose the sound into its original frequencies using computer software, and parse out which notes were on the record.

“Music and math are not really that far apart. They’ve found that children that listen to music do better at math, because math and music both use the brain in similar ways. The best music is analytical and pattern-filled and mathematics has a lot of aesthetics to it. They complement each other well,” he says.

Brown may have become the first mathematician to have his work published in Guitar Player magazine, on the back of his findings, which have garnered international attention. (ANI)