No more romantic leads for Michael Douglas

London, September 13 (ANI): Actor Michael Douglas has said that he no longer gets offers to play romantic-lead in movies.

“No love-interest stuff for me now,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

The ‘Basic Instinct’ star spoke about his character in new courtroom drama ‘Beyond a Reasonable Doubt.’

He said: “I play the bad guy, the rough old villain. My character is that duplicitous meanie I somehow specialise in.”

Douglas and wife/actress Catherine Zeta Jones recently moved from Bermuda to an apartment in New York, to make it easier to pursue his film career. (ANI)

510-year-old church in Newfoundland may be New World’s oldest Christian site

Ottawa, September 7 (ANI): In a new project, a team of archeologists is planning to search for the remains of a 510-year-old church on the western shore of Conception Bay, Newfoundland, which may be the oldest Christian site in the New World.

According to a report in the National Post, the project is aimed at adding to a string of recent discoveries about explorer John Cabot’s history-making voyages to Canada in the late 15th century.

The recent emergence of new evidence about Cabot’s voyages, including potentially “revolutionary” findings by the late British historian Alwyn Ruddock, has renewed interest in England’s earliest New World ventures during the reign of King Henry VII.

Canwest News Service recently revealed a researcher’s discovery of a 1499 letter in which Henry VII himself describes a previously unknown expedition to Canada headed by William Weston, a Bristol merchant who is finally emerging – five centuries after his death – as a key backer of Cabot’s quest to establish an English foothold in North America.

The king’s letter also contained the earliest known use of the phrase “new founde land” to describe Canada’s easternmost province, which Cabot is believed to have reached in June 1497 – the first European landfall in North America since the age of the Vikings.

Bizarrely, the recent spate of revelations from the dawning days of Canadian history follows Prof. Ruddock’s order – carried out by the executors of her will after she died in 2005 — that her unpublished research be destroyed.

But, through a project headed by University of Bristol historian Evan Jones, Prof. Pope and other scholars are combing through a small collection of Prof. Ruddock documents that survived destruction and may point the way to fresh discoveries – including the suspected Catholic mission at Carbonear.

In the outline for a book she never completed, Prof. Ruddock claimed to have found documents detailing the establishment of a church at Carbonear.

Historians generally believe Cabot perished during the voyage, and little was accomplished by any of the ships involved in the expedition.

But Prof. Ruddock’s sketchy references to a New World church built as early as 1498 has electrified Prof. Jones and other researchers.

“If she were correct, this would be the first European Christian settlement in North America, with the church Prof. Ruddock mentions being the first built on the continent,” said Jones. (ANI)

Clinton meets Obama, discusses release of two American journalists

Washington, Aug.19 (ANI): Former U.S. President Bill Clinton went to the White House on Tuesday and briefed incumbent Barack Obama and his top aides about his recent trip to North Korea, which resulted in the release of two American women journalists-Laura Ling and Euna Lee.

According to the New York Times, the 40-minute session took place in the White House Situation Room. Before the meeting, Clinton spoke to the president by phone and briefed his national security adviser, Gen. James L. Jones.

The paper said that the meeting was rich in symbolism. The president invited Clinton to the Oval Office to talk further.

The White House said little about what the men discussed, beyond noting that Obama had wanted to thank Clinton for winning the release of Ling and Lee.

The paper also revealed that Clinton’s visit to North Korea would not have materialized had not been for the role played by veteran North Korean hand and intelligence officer, Joseph R. DeTrani.

DeTrani is the government’s senior officer responsible for collecting and analyzing intelligence on North Korea. His efforts to pave the way for Clinton’s visit offer a glimpse into how the administration was forced to use unorthodox methods to overcome the lack of formal communications between Washington and Pyongyang.

The visit was arranged under a veil of secrecy with the help of De Trani, who has spent much of his career trying to unlock the mysteries of North Korea.

His role in the whole episode allowed Clinton to land in Pyongyang on August 4 to win the release of two imprisoned American journalists.

Clinton was determined not to extend a public-relations coup to North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il, who feted him over a long dinner that night, even proposing to stay up afterward.Kim was flanked by two longtime aides – a surprise to Americans who had suspected that both men had been pushed aside – and he gave no hint that North Korea was in the throes of a succession struggle, despite the widespread questions over how long he might live.

Kim expressed a desire for better relations with the United States. De Traini and John Podesta, a trusted adviser to him and Obama, assisted Clinton.

The details about Mr. Clinton’s visit came from interviews with multiple government officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Before taking the job of North Korea mission manager in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in 2006, DeTrani served in the State Department as the special envoy to the six-party talks with North Korea, holding the rank of ambassador.

In that job, he got to know key North Korean officials, including Kim Kye-gwan, the chief nuclear negotiator, who greeted Clinton. DeTrani also worked with David Straub, a former head of the State Department’s Korea desk, who was a member of Clinton’s delegation.

More than anything else, Clinton’s visit served to clear up some of the shadows surrounding Kim Jong-il’s health.

The former American president did not engage in a substantive discussion about North Korea’s nuclear program. Nor did the North Korean leader give Clinton any indication that his nation would relinquish its nuclear ambitions – a condition the United States has set for resuming negotiations, officials said. (ANI)

US planning new strategy to reduce tensions with Pak over drone issue

Islamabad, July 15 (ANI): The United States is working out a new strategy to reduce tensions with Pakistan over the drone strikes.

The Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Paul Jones, told the US Congress recently, that Washington is planning to broaden its public relations initiatives in Pakistan to enable it to understand the US tactics.

Jones highlighted that ‘strategic communications’ were the most important part of US tactics in Pakistan, The Daily Times reports.

He added the US is planning to increase financial assistance to Pakistan “quite significantly” in order to help Islamabad build its own communications strategy.

“Such programmes will help people understand what the goals of the Pakistani government and the international community are, and how they are helping the country of Pakistan,” an article on the website Eurasiatnet quoted Jones, as saying.

Some US experts opine that the Pentagon is relying ‘too much’ on the drones to quell militancy from Pakistan’s tribal region, but also highlighted that a better information strategy could help deescalate the tension substantially.

“Drone strikes excite visceral opposition across a broad spectrum of Pakistani opinion. The persistence of these attacks on Pakistani territory offends people’s deepest sensibilities, alienates them from their government, and contributes to Pakistan’s instability,” Chief Executive Officer of a defense think-tank, Centre for a New American Security, Nathaniel Fick said.

“Currently, strikes from unmanned aircraft are carried out in a virtual vacuum, without concerted information campaigns or an equally robust strategy to engage the people,” Fick added. (ANI)

US asks Pak to publicly accept its ‘tacit approval’ to drone strikes

Washington, July 11 (ANI): The United States has asked Pakistan to publicly accept its tacit approval to the drone strikes being carried out in its ‘lawless’ tribal region along the Afghan border, as its consistent denial on the issue is creating new tensions with Washington.

According to The Dawn, the Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Carl Levin, told a Congressional hearing recently that the attacks would not have taken place without the ‘tacit approval’ of the Pakistani leadership, so it was wrong on Islamabad’s part to blame the US for the missile hits.

“For them to look the other way or to give us the green light privately and then to attack us publicly leaves us, it seems to me, at a very severe disadvantage and loss with the Pakistani people,” said Senator Levin.

Officials said that despite Pakistan’s double faced attitude on the issue, the US is working to develop a new strategy to reduce stirring tension between both the countries.

US Deputy Special Representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Paul Jones told the panel that Washington was developing new strategies to quell the tension.

He refused to furbish much details of the strategy, but added that strategic communications were an important part of it.

“The United States plans to ‘increase quite significantly’ aid to Pakistan to help the government with its own communications strategy,” said Jones.

Pakistan has been criticizing the Obama administration for the drone strikes against the insursents in the tribal areas, saying that the attacks are proving ‘counterproductive’ in its war on terror, as they had killed far more civilians than militants.

Official Pakistani sources claimed that since 2006, the drones have killed 700 civilians and only 14 militants. (ANI)

Islamic fundamentalists jailed for trying to set ablaze publisher’s house in London

London, July 8 (ANI): Three Islamic fundamentalists have been jailed for an arson attack on the home of a London-based publisher who planned to publish a novel about the Prophet Muhammad and his child bride.

Fundamentalists doused the door of Martin Rynja’s home with diesel and set ablaze after discovering that he intended to publish Sherry Jones’s novel The Jewel of Medina, an “offensive” book about the prophet, The Times reports.

The attack on the home of Rynja has been compared to the campaign against the publication of Salmon Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses.

The arson was led by Ali Beheshti, who was photographed three years ago at a London protest with his baby daughter dressed in a pink bonnet bearing the slogan “I love al-Qaeda”.

Undercover police followed Beheshti and the other attackers for several weeks and saw them monitoring the publisher and trying to avoid detection by changing their clothes.

Beheshti, 41, and Abrar Mirza, 23, admitted conspiracy to commit arson, being reckless as to whether life was endangered. Abbas Taj, 30, was convicted of the same offence at Croydon Crown Court in May.

Justice Rafferty, sitting at the Royal Courts of Justice, sentenced each of them to four and a half years in jail, saying: “If you choose to live in this country, you live by its rules.”

The judge described Rynja as “a principled” man who had “exercised critical judgment on a literary work and stood up to be counted, knowing that publishing it put him at risk”.

Rynja’s publishing company, Gibson Square Books, bought the rights to the novel after Random House dropped plans to publish it, fearing “acts of violence”.

Jones, an American author, had insisted that her book was respectful towards Islam and Rynja said he felt that its publication was part of a liberal democracy.

Andrew Hall, QC, said in mitigation for Beheshti that the arson attack was “an act of protest born of the publication of a book felt by him and other Muslims to be disrespectful, provocative and offensive.

“He wishes me to say now, publicly, that he considers his conduct to have been misguided, disproportionate and counter-productive,” he added. (ANI)

Cardiff will be hell for Aussies, says Simon Jones

Glamorgan, July 7(ANI): England fast bowler Simon Jones has warned the Australian squad to prepare for five horrendous days at Cardiff, where the first test match of the Ashes series will begin on Wednesday.

Jones, one of England’s 2005 Ashes heroes, said that the crowd at Glamorgan’s 10 million pounds Swalec stadium will be supporting the England team.

“It will be an amazing crowd. The Welsh crowd are passionate about cricket and they back you to the hilt. The Aussies better look out because they are going to get some stick,” The Sun quoted Jones, as saying.

“In Oz they get on your back, so it will be nice to get them back,” he added. (ANI)

First Ashes Test may not go the distance, feels ex-player Dean Jones

Melbourne, July 7 (ANI): If former Australian Test cricketer dean Jones is to be believed, the first Test in Cardiff will probably end before five days.

According to Jones, it is a new pitch with a crusty surface and is likely to turn from day one.

“I firmly believe that whoever wins the toss will bat and win the first Test. This is an untried pitch and it will be England’s only chance of winning a Test during this hot summer,” The Age quoted Jones, as saying.

He also believed that England’s chances of winning the Ashes rested on the shoulders of Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, and to some extent on captain Andrew Strauss.

He said that KP and Strauss were battle-hardened batters with 16 and 17 Test hundreds respectively, while Flintoff was averaging 31 with the bat, and was also an outstanding bowler and fielder when on song.

The rest of the squad, he said, was above average. He, however, did not think much of wicketkeeper Matt Prior’s abilities, both in front and behind the stumps. (ANI)

Quincy Jones won’t attend Jacko’s funeral

Washington, July 1 (ANI): Quincy Jones has vowed not to attend Michael Jackson’s funeral, as he’s sure he won’t be able to cope with the sadness.

The legendary music producer, who was the brains behind the King Of Pop’s biggest hit albums, ‘Thriller’, ‘Off The Wall’ and ‘BAD’, is still grieving after the sudden death of his pal.

Following Jackson’s death, Jones said, “I’ve lost my little brother today and part of my soul has gone with him.”

And now the producer is refusing to go to Jackson’s funeral – because he fears he won’t be able to handle the grief.

“I won’t go to any more funerals as long as I live. I can’t handle it,” Contactmusic quoted Jones as saying. (ANI)

Buddhist monk performs once-in-a-life religious ceremony in Himachal

Kinnaur (Himachal Pradesh), June 29 (ANI): Gigmed Choekyi Syingey, a revered Buddhist monk performed the unique religious ‘Chakrasamvara Abhisheka’ ceremony in Himachal Pradesh on Sunday.

Syingey who is believed to be eighth reincarnation of Yulgyula Rinpoche performed the ceremony at Drugtharpa Choeiling Buddhist monastery, situated at Tashigang in Kinnaur district.

In the ceremony, Yulgyula Rinpoche imparted religious teachings according to Drukpa Kagyud school of Buddhism to the devotees. This religious ceremony is performed once in a life wearing rare ornamental dress.

Hundreds of Buddhists from different parts of the country assembled to take the blessings and teachings from the priest.

Devotees described the experience as a proud moment for Buddhists.

“He (Yulgula Rinpoche) performs this ceremony once in his life wearing the rare ornamental dress. This is for the last time that he is performing this ceremony. This is a proud moment for all the Buddhists in the world,” said Gyalu Lama, a Buddhist monk.

Some foreign tourists also visited the monastery during the ceremony.

Edward Jones, a tourist from Germany who has been to different parts of India considered himself lucky to be the part of the ceremony.

“Today we are in Tashigang. I am very lucky to be here and part of this ceremony. And we are looking forward to it very much,” said Jones.

Drukpa Kagyud is an independent branch of Kagyu school of Buddhism. Within Drugpa school of thought there are further sub schools, most notably the eastern Kham tradition and middle Drukpa school which prospered in Ladakh and surrounding regions. (ANI)

Fake Internet stories claim Jeff Goldblum, Harrison Ford to be dead

New York, June 26 (ANI): While news websites are constantly running stories of Michael Jackson’s and Farrah Fawcett’s death, internet pranksters have posted fake stories of the deaths of two more celebrities on the same day-’Jurassic Park’ actor Jeff Goldblum and ‘Indiana Jones’ star Harrison Ford.

However, the rumours of Goldblum and Ford’s untimely deaths actually turned out to be false, and were found to be well-known Internet pranks that once made similar claims of Tom Hanks and Tom Cruise.

“Reports that Jeff Goldblum has passed away are completely untrue. He is fine and in Los Angeles,” the New York Daily News quoted the actor’s publicist as saying in a statement Thursday night.

Snopes.com has reported that these stories are automatically generated with fake scenarios via prank websites, where users simply plug in any name – which in this case were Goldblum and Ford.

The fake stories suggested that Goldblum fell to his death while filming a movie in New Zealand.

On the other hand, Internet goons falsely claimed that Ford disappeared while on a boat in the French Riviera. (ANI)

Friends and fans ‘devastated’ by Jacko’s sudden death

London, June 26 (ANI): King of Pop Michael Jackson’s sudden death on Thursday has left his friends and fans absolutely devastated.

The 50-year-old singer is said to have died after suffering a heart attack at his home in Los Angeles.

“Like the whole world I’m absolutely devastated and lost for words because everyone expected him to come to London for the concerts,” Sky News quoted his friend Uri Geller, the self-proclaimed psychic, as saying.

“He was in good health, he was rehearsing, dancing , practising for the shows in England. I am shocked. I cannot – I do not want to – believe what I’m hearing or seeing,” Geller added.

Another pal and former PR representative Jonathan Morrish said: “I worked with him for over 25 years. It was a complete privilege.”

“I last saw him when he was last in London, which was for the World Music Awards, and he was his usual, lovely gentlemanly self.

“He was fine (health-wise). You don’t get to the top of the tree like he did without being incredibly strong – mentally and physically,” Morrish added.

Music legend Quincy Jones, who produced Jackson’s legendary “Thriller” album, said: “I am absolutely devastated at this tragic and unexpected news.

“To this day, the music we created together on Off The Wall, Thriller and Bad is played in every corner of the world and the reason for that is because he had it all…talent, grace, professionalism and dedication.

“He was the consummate entertainer and his contributions and legacy will be felt upon the world forever.

“I’ve lost my little brother today, and part of my soul has gone with him,” Jones added.

Actor Ashton Kutcher has posted a message on his Twitter blog: “RIP. Sending love and light to family and friend but especially his kids.” (ANI)

Standard and Poor’s launches Canadian sharia-compliant index

Ottawa (Canada), May 28 (ANI): Standard and Poor’s is launching a Canadian stock index to give investors who follow Islamic law a guide to the country’s equity market.

According to the Globe and Mail, the index can be used as a benchmark or model for funds created to invest in Canada in a manner that is compliant with Islamic law.

The S and P/TSX 60 Shariah TXSI-I includes the biggest stocks in Canada that Islamic investors are allowed to invest in, which means no banks, no pork producers, no entertainment companies and no gambling. It also means no investment-management companies.

As a result, almost 80 per cent of the index is comprised of energy and mining companies.

It’s the second such index in the country, following on the heels of the Dow Jones Islamic Market Canada Index. For S and P, it’s one of more than 50 Shariah indexes around the world. (ANI)

Zeta-Jones stars in mini film for Lux shampoo

London, May 26 (ANI): Hollywood actress Catherine Zeta Jones has featured in a 7-minute Lux shampoo advert, which astonishingly also includes a motorcycle chase.

Catherine portrays a lab technician, who steals a “youth-enhancing elixir” in the advert.

She later washes her hair with it and shows off the results at a swanky party after which she and her handsome accomplice are rumbled by security and flee on the motorbike.

Though the advert for Lux’s new shampoo ‘Alchemy’, has been filmed in English, it has subtitles.

The shampoo bosses are of the opinion that featuring a renowned celebrity like Catherine will lift up the sales of their product.

“By getting into the world of movies, rather than just having movie stars in our ads, which our competitors do too, we can draw consumers closer to the brand,” The Daily Star quoted Unilever executive Enzo Devoto, as saying.

“When you’re watching a movie and on comes an advertisement trying to hard-sell a product, it’s pretty much interrupting your entertainment. Our project is completely different,” Enzo added.

Meanwhile the hyped advert has already appeared on the Internet. (ANI)

Women find ‘feminine-looking’ men most attractive!

London, May 22 (ANI): Women have a soft corner for feminine-looking men, suggests a new study, which found that ladies find males with higher arched eyebrows, smaller jaws and large eyes most attractive.

In the University of Aberdeen study, led by Dr Ben Jones, from the Face Research Laboratory, 449 women were shown a series of images of men’s faces that had been manipulated.

Some were made to look more feminine, while others were made to appear more masculine, reports The Daily Express.

The study’s volunteers were then asked to pick which men they would chose for a long-term relationship.

Three-quarters of them chose the more feminine-looking men and preferred those who were looking directly at the camera.

Jones said: “Women perceive feminine men as honest, kind and even as good parents.

“So it makes good sense that women find these caring and sharing men attractive when thinking about a long-term partner.” (ANI)

Steve Jones gets hot and heavy with Hayden Panettiere

London, May 19 (ANI): Welsh television presenter Steve Jones was spotted getting hot and heavy with actress Hayden Panettiere recently.

Jones, 32, and 19-year-old Panettiere were on Elton John’s fella David Furnish’s yacht, moored in Cannes, on May 18, reports the Sun.

The T4 presenter, who has dated stars from Pamela Anderson to Halle Berry, seems to keep up his playboy ways, as he got steamy with the Heroes star.

The pair was joined on deck by Furnish, as John was not in town for the city’s film festival. (ANI)

Catherine Zeta-Jones being treated for sinus problems

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Welsh actress Catherine Zeta-Jones has revealed that she has been visiting the hospital on the tropical island where she stays for treatment of her sinus problem.

Zeta-Jones, 39, has also been nursing her husband Michael Douglas after he recently underwent knee replacement surgery.

The actress, who has to make daily trips to the hospital for her own ailments, has nothing but praise for the staff there.

“I have been at the hospital for so many days with my sinus problems and I must say they have done a good job. I’m telling you, I have been there every day for the last four weeks, but now I feel fine,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying. (ANI)

Canada reports first case of pigs catching swine flu from humans

Ottawa (Canada), May 3 (ANI): The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has come out with an outstanding revelation that a farm hand has infected pigs at an Alberta farm with the swine flu virus.

The Canadian Press quoted Canada’s top veterinary officer, Brian Evans and the country’s chief public health officer, David Butler-Jones, as saying in Ottawa that the farmhand who travelled to Mexico fell ill upon his return, and apparently infected the pigs with the H1N1 influenza virus.

It’s believed to be the first known case of pigs catching the swine flu virus from humans.

The farm worker returned to Canada from Mexico on April 12 and had contact with the pigs two days later.

About 220 pigs in the herd of 2,200 began showing signs of the flu on April 24, said Evans.

All of the pigs are recovering or have recovered and the farm worker has also recovered, he added.

“So far, basically what we’re seeing in the pig is the same strain as we see in the humans. The concern is that if it’s circulating in a pig herd, that any other humans that come onto the farm might be exposed and be at risk,” David Butler-Jones said.

Public health officials and others are trying to intercept incoming workers at food lines and churches in hopes of stemming the spread of deadly swine flu.

The virus has shown no signs of mutation when passing from human to pig, Evans said.

“At this point in time, the issue of this being a human virus, having been introduced to the pigs, and the characterization of this virus, shows it is still that virus. There’s been no adaptation identified through the transfer from humans to pigs at this time,” he said.

The World Health Organization has insisted there is no evidence that pigs are passing the virus to humans, or that eating pork products poses an infection risk. (ANI)