Chinese prostitute falls for her trafficker’s brother

New Delhi, Aug. 19 (ANI): A Chinese woman, who was sold and then smuggled to a different location by a woman trafficker, fell for the latter’s brother and stayed with him for more than 12 years.

Luo Yulian, a resident in Zhenyuan county, Guizhou province, was sold and smuggled to Xuwen county, Guangdong province, by a woman named Pan Nianmei in October 1996.

Luo Yulian later met Pan Nianmei’s brother Pan Nianyou, who was also involved in trafficking prostitutes, and had an affair with him, reports the China Daily.hen the police caught Pan Nianyou, who is listed as a wanted criminal, they were surprised that Luo still stayed with him. (ANI)

Meet the male cockerel whose insatiable sex drive killed its exhausted mate!

London, July 9 (ANI): A cockerel named Elvis has come to be known as a “ladykiller” after his hen’s death from exhaustion, which believably was a result of her inability to keep up with her mate’s sexual appetite.

The cockerel, who used to have four hens vying for his attention, was left with only Berol to keep his libido satisfied after three of the lot died.

According to reports, Berol had to be put to sleep after becoming exhausted by Elvis’s constant demands.

One-year-old Elvis’ owner Katherine Cooke, who works as a nurse at Buckley House veterinary surgery in Hucknall, Nottinghamshire, is now searching for a new home and hen harem for the cockerel.

“Elvis is a young, fit cockerel and he wants what all cockerels want, a new harem – a new group of ladies,” the Telegraph quoted Katherine, 32, as saying.

“He very handsome and is a stereotypical cockerel like the one off the Kellogg’s boxes. He is quite the bachelor.

“He has had a troubled life. He used to live with four lady friends but unfortunately rats got in to their coop one night and there was a mass murder and three of them died. Berol was certainly then the centre of his attention,” she added.

She presently keeps Elvis in a coop at a horse’s stables in nearby Ravenshead.

“Elvis is very, very noisy. I want to try and find a new home but it’s quite difficult because I don’t want him to get an Asbo,” she said. (ANI)

Head examiner suspended in Pak after bread found wrapped in exam answer sheets

Islamabad, July 5 (ANI): Following the bizarre incident of intermediate examination answer sheets being used as bread wrappers coming to light, the Balochistan Education Department has suspended the head examiner and examiner.

The Balochistan Intermediate and Secondary Education (BISE) chairman, Dr Ghulam Hussain said that both the officials have also been served show-cause notices for the scandal.

It may be noted that a bread-maker was found selling bread wrapped in the intermediate examinations answer sheets in Jan Muhammad Road in Quetta two days ago.

The intermediate exams were held in May, and the results are still awaited.hen enquired, the bread maker said that a man, who claimed to own a paper recycling business had sold the answer sheets to him at the rate of nine rupees per kilogram, The News reports.

Sources said that answer sheets were of Islamic studies and had Quranic verses written all over.

Meanwhile, the Provincial Education Minister, Shafiq Ahmed has said that students, who had appeared in the intermediate examination, need not worry.

“The board has a complete list of their marks preserved with it,” Ahmed said. (ANI)

Parents more `worried about social activities in India than protecting dead baby’s health

Sydney, May 5 (ANI): A Homeopath and his wife were more concerned with their social activities during a visit to India than their baby daughter’s health, a Sydney jury has been told.

Prosecuting lawyer Mark Tedeschi told the NSW Supreme Court that Thomas Sam, 42, and his wife, Manju Sam, 36, were responsible for the manslaughter of their nine-month-old daughter, Gloria Thomas, in Sydney in May 2002.
Though both have pleaded not guilty to the charge, they are accused of failing to get conventional medical help for their daughter, who was born in July 2001 and suffered severe eczema in the last five months of her life, reports the Daily Telegraph.
Tedeschi said that in February 2002, Manju Sam took Gloria to a Sydney paediatrician, who prescribed medication. hen told she was going to India with the baby to see her family, the specialist became very upset, saying “it was cruel to do that to Gloria,” Tedeschi said.
He alleged Manju Sam had travelled to India partly for citizenship reasons and partly because she was not coping with Gloria and wanted help from her family.

He said Manju Sam arrived in India on February 23, and her husband joined her in April, when his brother was getting married.

“The crown case is that you will conclude that the two parents were almost totally fixated on their social obligations, visiting people and travelling around, to the exclusion of any concern about Gloria’s deteriorating state of health,” Tedeschi told the court. (ANI)

Hen gives up on life after romance with rooster ends!

New Delhi, April 29 (ANI): A hen, in Longchang county, Sichuan province, has given up the desire to live ever since its romance with a rooster came to end.

Zhou Huiying got a rooster to give company to his hen in January. hey lived happily and shared food with one another.

However, after complaints about the rooster’s crowing, Zhou had to kill it, reports the China Daily.

Since then, the hen has been trying to kill itself by running into the wall and has refused to eat.

“It used to lay an egg every day, but it stopped since the cock was killed. Every time I talked to it, the hen would eat something for a few days but it always feel sad about the dead cock,” Zhou said. (ANI)

Croatian hens lay Easter egg curios

Zagreb – A pair of Croatian hens have laid two very special eggs in time for Easter, local media reported Thursday.

The first, a hen called Mara from the town of Oriol, near the border with Serbia, astonished her owners by laying an egg weighing a whopping 100 grammes.

Her owners say Mara, who herself weighs four kilogrammes, has a reputation for laying double-yoked eggs, but this time has surpassed herself.

“So far she laid six or seven eggs with two yolks. This egg must have three yolks, but we’re not sure. We’ll keep it for Easter,” Mara’s proud owner said. It is expected to take pride of place on their Easter table.

Another hen, also named Mara, from the village Vinjani Donji some 50 kilometres from Split, has laid a “double egg” – two separate eggs connected in the middle.

That egg, or eggs, will be dyed special colours to celebrate Easter, a European tradition, and kept for display in future years.(dpa)

Eggs sales double over Easter in Hungary, producers still worried

Budapest – Demand for eggs is set to outstrip supply in Hungary as millions are being bought in the run up to Easter, a local financial paper reported on Tuesday.

The Hungarian Poultry Produce Council estimates that around 100 million eggs per week – or ten for every Hungarian – will be bought in the run up to Easter.

This is roughly double the normal level of consumption, already among the highest in the world at around 300 eggs per Hungarian per year.

Hungarians still prefer hen’s eggs to factory-made chocolate Easter eggs.

As in many countries in Central and Eastern Europe, they are hand painted with colourful and often amazingly intricate designs.

However, it is not all good news for the Hungarian egg trade.

“This year domestic producers can barely meet demand, what with several plants having closed recently and many producers giving up,” said council secretary Peter Foldi.

Foldi told the business daily Napi Gazdasag that he expects many more Hungarian producers to quit in coming months amid pressure from cheap imports, especially from Poland.

Furthermore, the European Union’s “Laying Hen Directive” must be implemented in all member states by 2012, outlawing factory farms where thousands of chickens are kept in batteries of tiny cages

Lineker wants to pin his ears back

London, Feb.24 (ANI): Ex-England football star Gary Lineker wants to have his ears pinned back.

The Match of the Day host has revealed that his ears have been the butt of jokes for years.hen asked if there was anything about himself he didn’t like, The Mirror quoted Lineker, 48, as saying: “My ears. They’ve been ridiculed for much of my life. But they are very good comedy attributes, which is important for certain commercials I’ve done.”

“I’m thinking of getting them pinned back but I just can’t do it because I think I’d lose part of me,” he added.

Lineker also said that he was totally in love with his fianc‚e Danielle Bux, 29, and plans to marry her in Italy this August. (ANI)

Nagaland plays host to second Open Futsal Tournament

Kohima, Feb 20 (ANI): Nagaland capital Kohima recently played host to the second Open Futsal Tournament 2009, the first of its kind tournament in the region.

The game is played on basketball-sized courts, both indoors and outdoors, and without the use of sidewalls.

For the second consecutive year, the Excel United Club organised the Futsal tournament in the state with 12 teams from Kohima and Peren district participating. The event lasted for five days.

“This Futsal was organised last year also by the Excel United Club. This year also, we have organized it for the second time. Futsal is a new game for all of us in the state of Nagaland. Futsal has its origin in South America and ahs slowly gained in popularity,” said Xavier Rusta, a member of the club.

The Naga Boys Club clinched the title with an 8-2 win over Legend Lads in the final.

A cash prize of rupees 15,000 was awarded to the winning team and rupees 10,000 and rupees 5000 to the first runners-up and second runners-up respectively.

Individual prizes were also given to the best player and highest scorer of the tournament.

Residents feel that Nagaland has many talented Futsal players, and believe the game can bring peace to the insurgent-hit state.

Overwhelmed with the huge response, the organizing committee now hopes to organize more Fustal tournaments in the years to come.

Brazil continues to be the Futsal hub of the world. The game is now played, under the auspices of FIFA, all over the world.

The origin of Futsal can be traced back to Montevideo in South America’s Uruguay, hen Juan Carlos Ceriani devised a five-a-side version of soccer for youth competition in YMCA in 1930. By Vibhou Ganguly (ANI)

McConaughey introduces reggae star who sparked record label idea

Washington, Feb 14 (ANI): American actor Matthew McConaughey made a special guest appearance on late night TV in America on February 12 to introduce the first music act signed to his record label.

McConaughey had signed on reggae star Mishka, who was discovered by Oasis’ former boss Alan McGee, to his ‘Just Keep Livin’ label in 2006, and he made the surprise appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! hen the actor first heard Mishka’s music during a trip to Jamaica in 2000, he was very eager to meet him.

“It really turned me on and moved me and made a lot of sense to me… and I wanted to hear more of it,” Contactmusic quoted him as saying.

“I went looking for this guy (but) I couldn’t find an album, I couldn’t find him, I called record companies (and) no one knew where he was,” he stated.

The actor eventually met the musician in Ireland four years later, when Mishka was supporting reggae greats Sly and Robbie at a Dublin gig.

“He didn’t know who I was but I knew him from his music… We became friends over the phone for about a year and then… we started working together,” he said.

“The day that we decided to work together he was saying, like, ‘How can we do this…?’ I got off the phone and called my lawyer and I said, ‘I’d like to start a record label.’ I called Mishka back and said, ‘Man, do you wanna come and sign with Just Keep Livin’ Records? Let’s make this official and go play and have some fun and make some great music’,” he added.

Mishka’s Just Keep Livin’ debut album, ‘Above The Bones’, is released in the U.S. on February 17. (ANI)

Scientists identify protein that may help understand Alzheimer’s disease

Washington, February 6 (ANI): Scientists at UC Santa Barbara say that a protein called BAG2 offers a chance to better understand Alzheimer’s disease, and identify new drug targets.

In a study paper published in the Journal of Neuroscience, the researchers have revealed that they will soon begin experiments to find out how these proteins work with mice.

The scientists have also described important activities of BAG2 in cleaning up brain cells in the paper.

The protein tau is normally found in brain cells, but it has yet to be determined why it clumps into tangles in people with Alzheimer’s disease.

Senior author Kenneth S. Kosik, co-director of UCSB’s Neuroscience Research Institute, and Harriman Chair in Neuroscience, have been involved in the study of neurons that develop neurofibrillary tangles, one of the hallmarks of the disease, since he was a postdoctoral fellow.

“Early on in my career, we were one of several labs to discover that tau was in the neurofibrillary tangles,” said Kosik.

The researchers have revealed that they recently started studying BAG2 to understand how it might be involved in the removal of tangled tau.

“It turns out that when you put this protein into the cell, it clears away the damaged tau very nicely,” said Kosik.

The team have thus far noticed that BAG2 does not clear away all the tau. It instead goes for the damaged tau protein and removes it, they add. hen tau accumulates in a neurofibrillary tangle, the cell can’t get rid of it.

“All cells including neurons have an elaborate, sophisticated, elegant system for disposing of proteins. Proteins have a certain turnover; sometimes they get damaged. The cell has its own trash can called the proteosome, and damaged proteins are deposited there,” said Kosik.

“We’ve done this experiment many ways. We’ve discovered a bit about how BAG2 works. We’ve turned it on to remove tau. We’ve turned it off to increase tau. We’ve really done a lot of manipulations using cell culture. So BAG2 is a new player, a new protein that may be a good target for study in the research of Alzheimer’s disease.

“There is nothing about a drug or a treatment in any of these findings; however, the first step in fighting any illness is finding what you want to target the drug to. This is a protein that is involved in neurofibrillary tangles, so now we have a new target for drug discovery. This is not a drug or a treatment, just a new target. The new target is BAG2.” Kosik is looking forward to studying BAG2 in mice,” added Kosik.

The researcher says that calls contain all these proteins, but they can go awry. Their levels can be off, or they may malfunction in another way. The same normal protein can begin to malfunction.

“It may be that BAG2 is not doing its job right; it may be that BAG2 is overwhelmed, because sometimes tau is building up, and there is not enough BAG2 there. We cannot conclude from this that BAG2 is the fundamental problem in the disease state. It is only a possible target that can help us find our way out of the disease,” said Kosik. (ANI)