Laser technology creates new forms of metal and enhances aircraft performance

Washington, July 16 (ANI): A team of scientists is using laser light technology to create new forms of metal and enhance aircraft performance.

The laser light technology is being used by AFOSR (Air Force Office of Scientific Research) funded researchers at the University of Rochester to help the military create new forms of metal that may guide, attract and repel liquids and cool small electronic devices.

Dr. Chunlei Guo and his team of researchers for the project discovered a way to transform a shiny piece of metal into one that is pitch black, not by paint, but by using incredibly intense bursts of laser light.

The black metal created, absorbs all radiation that shines upon it.

“With the creation of the black metal, an entirely new class of material becomes available to us, which may open up a whole new horizon for various applications,” said Guo.

“To do this, we looked at the reverse process of light absorption or light radiation and transformed the incandescent lamp into a bulb that glows twice as brightly as a regular light source, while consuming the same amount of energy,” Guo added.

The key to creating this super-filament is an ultra-brief, ultra-intense beam of light called a femtosecond laser pulse.

The laser burst lasts only a few quadrillionths of a second.

That intense blast forces the surface of the metal to form nano-structures and micro-structures that dramatically alter how efficiently light can radiate from the filament.

In addition to increasing the brightness of a bulb, Guo’s process can be used to tune the color of the light as well.

In addition to this research, Guo and his team have been working on creating technology that may enable the Air Force to create an additional kind of metal.

They are able to do this by using the femtosecond laser once again to alter the surface of metal and create unique nano- and micro-scale structures on the metal.

The unique nano-structures which are created from the laser affect the way liquid molecules interact with metal molecules.

The liquid spreads out over the metal because the nano-structures attach themselves to the liquid’s molecules more readily than the liquid’s molecules bond to each other.

The end result is the formation of a new kind of metal that can cool the plane’s electronic brain and heat pumps and allow the craft to retain dominance over any enemy that is also in flight. (ANI)

Ambekar Village least developed in Uttar Pradesh

Pandeypur (Uttar Pradesh), July 13 (ANI): Pandeypur village has been declared Ambedkar village in Uttar Pradesh that entitles it to additional government funds for development, but it remains abandoned and underdeveloped.

Residents in Pandeypur village of Uttar Pradesh’s Kanpur district are compelled to lead a miserable life, which sans basic infrastructure; roads, electricity and water supply for many years.

People here lament the indifference of local authorities towards them and hold them responsible for villagers’ pitiable condition prevailing here.

Due to absence of a connecting road, villagers are forced to use a railway bridge, the only means to cross a water channel, which has led to many accidents.

“The biggest issue is that of electricity, we do not have roads, and there is a school building that was constructed six months ago, but there are no teachers there, no officers have ever come here,” said Shreedhar, a villager.

As the school has no teachers, most children of school going age can be seen loitering around and also the nearest school is many kilometres away. Besides, children have to go all the way to school everyday; and are forced to study in lamplight, in absence of electricity.

“We have to start early in the morning to reach school, we often reach late. There is no electricity so we can’t study at night; we use an oil lamp to study at night,” said Asha, local.

Even the hospital is four kilometres away, and the patients have to be carried to the hospital due to lack of conveyance and roads.

Then villagers allege that no one is ready to do anything for them. By Mahender Mishra (ANI)

Iran’s 4 salt mummies placed in vacuum chamber for preservation

Tehran, May 12 (ANI): Iran’s four saltmen, unique salt mummies, have been placed in one of the most advanced display cases in the world, in an attempt to maintain and preserve them.

According to Payvand Iran News, the vacuum chamber in Zanjan, where the mummies have been kept, can precisely control humidity and airflow and is provided with a nitrogen-rich mixture deadly to known bacteria and mold.

Iranian, British, German and Austrian researchers declared air and humidity the main enemies of salt mummies at the 2nd International Seminar on the Archeology and Pathology of Saltmen in October, 2007.

The experts examined the saltmen’s condition to make the final decision on carrying out further studies on the Chehrabad salt mine, where the saltmen were found.

The Chehrabad Salt Mine is located in the Hamzehlou region of Zanjan province in northwestern Iran.

The saltmen, also known as the Iranian salt mummies, were accidentally discovered by miners in 1993.

Three of the saltmen date to the Parthian (247 BCE – 224 CE) and the Sassanid (224 – 651 CE) eras, while all other human remains discovered at the site go back to the Achaemenid Dynasty (550 – 330 BCE).

Artifacts have been discovered alongside the skeletons, including leather shoes, a leather bag, a terracotta lamp and two cow horns, most of which remain intact.

Salt at the mine worked to preserve the artifacts, as well as the internal organs of the salt men themselves.

Fingernails and hair have also been found undamaged, which will enable scientific testing to be carried out that could reveal further clues about these ancient people. (ANI)

Physicists create world’s smallest incandescent lamp

Washington, May 7 (ANI): A team from the UCLA (University of California Los Angeles) Department of Physics and Astronomy has created the world’s smallest incandescent lamp.

The team that developed the lamp was led by Chris Regan, a member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA, and includes Yuwei Fan, Scott Singer and Ray Bergstrom.

The UCLA team is using their tiny lamp to study physicist Max Planck’s black-body radiation law, which was derived in 1900 using principles now understood to be native to both theories.

The incandescent lamp utilizes a filament made from a single carbon nanotube that is only 100 atoms wide.

To the unaided eye, the filament is completely invisible when the lamp is off, but it appears as tiny point of light when the lamp is turned on.

Even with the best optical microscope, it is only just possible to resolve the nanotube’s non-zero length.

To image the filament’s true structure, the team uses an electron microscope capable of atomic resolution.

With less than 20 million atoms, the nanotube filament is both large enough to apply the statistical assumptions of thermodynamics and small enough to be considered as a molecular – that is, quantum mechanical – system.

“Because both the topic (black-body radiation) and the size scale (nano) are on the boundary between the two theories, we think this is a very promising system to explore,” Regan said.

“The carbon nanotube that is used as the lamp filament is ideal for their purposes because of its smallness and extraordinary temperature stability,” he added.

The UCLA research team’s light bulb is very similar to Thomas Edison’s, except that their filament is 100,000 times narrower and 10,000 times shorter, for a total volume only one one-hundred-trillionth that of Edison’s. (ANI)

Barkat Sidhu keeping the joy of Sufi singing alive

Patiala, April 20 (ANI): Barkat Sidhu, an exponent of the Patiala gharana, is a sufi singer whose soul-stirring voice moves the listeners with the poetry of timeless poets like Bulleh Shah and Shah Hussain Farid.

Sidhu’s rendition of Sufi poets’ compositions touches listeners’ heart.

“I had keen interest in music since my childhood. The Punjab state was not well developed at that time. I spent my childhood in my maternal home in Shahpur. I used to go to various villages to sing `Qawalis’. There was no electricity in the villages and people used to light `diyas’ – or small earthen lamps. One person used to carry that lamp and we took a round of the village singing Malki-Keema, Heer-Ranjha, Laila-Majnu, Sassi-Punnu, Shirin-Fariyad,” said Barkat Sidhu, the Sufi Singer.
Sidhu tells that he started singing sufi songs as a child. He takes pride while sharing that his family is descendant of the Sikh Guru, Guru Nanak Dev’s friend and a noted musician Bhai Mardana.

“I love to sing sufi songs and Shabad Kirtan (hymns). I faced a lot of difficulties in my life but I never accepted defeat. God helped me and with Guru’s grace, I continued singing sufi songs. A number of sufi singers came after me, who are very rich and own huge property and have money. There were instances when I came back empty handed after my performances. But continued with Sufi singing only and I also urge others to take it up,” says Barkat Sidhu.
Sidhu speaks with a philosophical mind when he says the awards are a sign of respect and love of the people. But when it comes to survival, everything becomes meaningless. One cannot compromise with hunger. An artist should be given some money along with the awards. It is very important to have money to fulfill the needs of the family. By Karan Kapoor (ANI)

Swiss architect Zumthor wins coveted Pritzker

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, a designer who spurns the limelight while creating a handful of meticulously crafted buildings at his alpine retreat, won his profession’s top honor on Sunday, the Pritzker Architecture Prize.

Zumthor, 65, becomes the third native of Switzerland to receive what is sometimes described as the architecture world’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize.

Many of Zumthor’s works dot the mountainous canton where he has lived and worked for the past 30 years, including his best-known project, Therme Vals. The luxury spa, which opened in 1996 after a decade of work, consists of 60,000 precision-cut quartzite stone slabs built into a hillside surrounded by soaring peaks.

A pair of works in Germany evoke a similar spirituality: the Kolumba art museum in Cologne and an austere chapel on a nearby farm. In Austria, he designed the lakefront Kunsthaus Bregenz museum, which looks like a lamp from the outside.

But Zumthor has no completed projects in either the United States or Britain. And he eschews large commercial buildings and high-priced vanity projects.

“If I ever do a mountain lodge for a wealthy person, for him it’s just a mountain lodge, and for me it will be three years out of my life. So I have to be careful,” Zumthor told Reuters.

The scarcity of his oeuvre, and the years of work that he puts into each project, has made him something of a hero in an industry where celebrity architects win headlines and lucrative commissions for what he described as “beautiful images.”

“I’m more about the real stuff, about substance,” Zumthor said. “That’s why I take a little bit longer.”

Indeed, he spent a decade transforming a bombed-out church into Kolumba, the Art Museum of the Cologne Archdiocese. It was finished in 2007, the same year he completed the Brother Klaus Field Chapel for a couple in Mechernich, Germany. The tiny building consists of a concrete shell layered over a conical tent of 112 tree trunks that were later dried out and removed, leaving a blackened interior.

‘COMMANDING PRESENCE’

The Pritzker Prize was established in 1979 by the Pritzker family, the Chicago-based clan that owns the Hyatt hotel chain, as a means of honoring a living architect whose built works, among other things, produce “consistent and significant contributions to humanity.”

The inaugural winner was American Philip Johnson. Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, the designers of Beijing’s Olympic Stadium, shared the prize in 2001. Last year’s winner was Jean Nouvel of France.

The prize — a bronze medallion and $100,000 — is handed out at a different location each year. The ceremony for Zumthor will take place in Argentina on May 29, at the legislative palace of the Buenos Aires City Council.

“His buildings have a commanding presence, yet they prove the power of judicious intervention, showing us again and again that modesty in approach and boldness in overall result are not mutually exclusive,” read the citation from the eight-person Pritzker jury of international architects and arts patrons.

Zumthor is based in the village of Haldenstein, in the canton of Graubuenden, a world away from the hectic pace and lifestyle of architects such as Britain’s Norman Foster or Dutchman Rem Koolhaas, both Pritzker laureates.

He is often described in complimentary terms as reclusive or an outsider. Zumthor countered that publicity was important, but he was disinclined to put out a press release “as soon as I make two walls and a roof.

“I say, let’s wait a little. Let’s do some work, and the buildings should speak for themselves. That’s how I am.”

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Gandhi’s idol worshipped at Orissa temple

ROURKELA (ORISSA): Mahatma Gandhi is revered all over the country, but people at a sleepy little village off Sambalpur town in Orissa remember him
in a very special way – by worshipping his idol in a temple.

The temple at Bhatra village attracts people of all religions and castes who offer their obeisance to the idol of Gandhiji sitting under the Tricolour.

Pramod Kumar, president of the Gandhi temple development committee, said the temple symbolizes communal amity among the people in western Orissa.

”People of all faiths from different parts of Orissa, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand come to Gandhi temple which promotes peace and communal harmony,” he said.

The temple’s head priest, Kalia Bagh, a Dalit, said followers of Gandhi read out the teachings and writings of Gandhiji after arati in the morning and evening.

The temple was the brain-child, Abhimanyu Kumar, an ex-MLA. The 85-year-old Kumar recalled, ”We were not allowed entry into temples at the village and elsewhere condemned as we are as untouchables. So in 1971 after I became an MLA the idea of construction of a temple dedicated to the man who abolished untouchability struck me.”

The bronze statue of Gandhi was sculpted by students of the Khalikote Art College in Ganjam district, Kumar said expressing his gratitude to the then revenue minister of Orissa, Brajamohan Mohanty, for granting Rs 5000 towards meeting the cost of the statue.

The local villagers not only offered money, but also lent a hand in the construction and the temple was inaugurated by the then chief minister of Orissa, Nandini Satpathy, with much fanfare on April 11, 1974.

On Gandhi Jayanti, Martyrs Day, Republic Day and Independence Day a large number of followers throng the temple to celebrate. Dalit youths after offering prayers take a vow to “shun violence and liquor”.

”We get peace when we perform prayer in the Gandhi temple chanting Hare-Rama-Hare-Krishna,” said Jitendra Raiguru, a local resident.

With no financial support from either government or any organisation, the management occasionally faces problems in running the temple, but the 150-odd Dalit families of the village see to it that the lamp does not go off.

Lamp’s new WAG makes her England debut

London, Apr. 3 (ANI): Frank Lampard’s sexy new babe, Saskia Boxford, has made her debut as an official England WAG when she watched him play for his country against Ukraine.

Boxford joined the line-up of wives and girlfriends led by Victoria Beckham and Abbey Clancy at Wembley on Wednesday.

And fellow fans were stunned by her amazing resemblance to Lamps’ former lover Elen Rives, reports the Daily Express.

The star and Spanish model Elen, 30, were together for seven years before their split earlier this year.

But it seems he really has drawn a line under their relationship after inviting Saskia, 23, to the Ukraine match.

Dressed in tight jeans, snakeskin heels and sunglasses, she looked every inch a glamorous WAG.

Over the last two weeks ex-model Saskia has been seen on string of dates with Frank, 30.

But his spokesman denied they are an item.

“She wasn’t Frank’s guest, but she is very friendly with some of his friends,” he said. (ANI)

British police clash with G20 protesters

Police clashed with demonstrators gathered around the Bank of England in the heart of London’s financial centre on Wednesday during a day of protest against the G20 summit.

Riot police staged baton charges to try to disperse several hundred people protesting against a financial system they said had robbed the poor to benefit the rich.

Demonstrators earlier attacked a nearby branch of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), shattering three windows.

Rescued by the government in October, RBS and former boss Fred Goodwin, who controversially refused to give up a pension of 700,000 ($1 million), became lightning rods for public anger in Britain over banker excess blamed for the financial crisis.

During the protests one man died after he collapsed and stopped breathing. Police said they tried to resuscitate him but that they came under a hail of bottles. The man was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital where he was pronounced dead.

A police source said it was likely the man died from a medical condition but that a post-mortem was needed.

The protests in London’s City financial area coincided with a G20 meeting of the world’s leading and emerging economies.

Protesters hurled paint bombs and bottles, chanting: “Our streets! Our banks!”

RBS said in a statement it was “aware of the violence” outside its branch and “had already taken the precautionary step” of closing central City branches.

As dusk fell, police charged a hard core of anti-capitalist demonstrators in an attempt to disperse them before nightfall. Bottles flew through the air towards police lines and police on horseback stood by ready to intervene.

Some protesters set fire to an effigy of a banker hanging from a lamp post.

Police brought out dogs as they tried to channel the few hundred remaining protesters through the narrow streets surrounding the classical, stone-clad Bank of England.

Police said 63 protesters had been arrested by late evening and at least one officer was taken to hospital for treatment, although he was not believed to be seriously hurt.

Some 4,000 protesters had thronged outside the central bank. A Gucci store nearby was closed and had emptied its windows.

Demonstrations were planned for Thursday at the venue in east London where world leaders will discuss plans to fight the financial crisis, police said.

HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE

During Wednesday’s protests, demonstrators marched behind models of the “four horsemen of the apocalypse” representing financial crimes, war, climate change and homelessness.

Some threw eggs at police and chanted, “Build a bonfire, put the bankers on the top”. Others shouted “Jump” and “Shame on you” at financial sector workers watching the march from office block windows.

“I am angry at the hubris of the government, the hubris of the bankers,” said Jean Noble, a 60-year-old from Blackburn in northern England.

“I am here on behalf of the poor, those who are not going to now get their pension or who have lost their houses while these fat cats keep their bonuses, hide their money in tax havens and go and live where nobody can touch them.”

A smaller demonstration against Britain’s military role in Iraq and Afghanistan attracted several hundred people in Trafalgar Square, not far from parliament.

The protests, which brought together anti-capitalists, environmentalists, anti-war campaigners and others, were meant to mark what demonstrators called “Financial Fools’ Day” — a reference to April Fool’s Day which falls on April 1.

Police stopped a military-style armoured vehicle with the word “RIOT” printed on the front and a police spokesman said its 11 occupants were arrested for having fake police uniforms.

Specially-abled in Ladakh turn waste into wealth

Leh, Mar 29 (ANI): A group of disabled people in Ladakh displayed their creative talents by turning waste material into useful products of daily use.

More then 200 disabled people are involved in turning waste into craft, thanks to the initiative of People’s Action Group for Inclusion and Rights (PAGIR), a voluntary organisation.

“We were given basic training last year in the art of making pillow covers, sweet boxes, file covers and pen stands from waste papers and old clothes,” said Tsering Gurmet, a disabled artisan.

These disabled artisans use waste material to make products like wall-hangings, pen stands, lamp shades, paper bags and also use waste cloth to make pillow covers, table cloth and bags.

“People think that disabled people cannot do anything. Even the society has similar views. So in order to change such views and for the benefit of disabled people, we have initiated this work. We also wish to work for entire Ladakh region by selling these products in the market,” said Mohammed Iqbal, President PAGIR.

PAGIR was founded in 2006 to highlight the issues and rights of the disabled persons in Ladakh region.

As per the 2001 census, over 21 million people in India are suffering from one or the other kind of disability. This is equivalent to 2.1 per cent of the population.

Among the total disabled in the country, 12.6 million are males and 9.3 million are females.

Among the five types of disabilities on which data has been collected, visual disability at 48.5 per cent emerges in the top category. Others in this category are movement of limbs (27.9 per cent), mental (10.3 per cent), speech (7.5 per cent), and hearing (5.8 per cent).

Across the country, the highest number of disabled has been reported from Uttar Pradesh (3.6 million).

The other states with higher concentration of disabled persons are Bihar (1.9 million), West Bengal (1.8million), Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra (1.6 million each). By Jigmet Vangchuk (ANI)

Kerala men dress up as women to offer prayers in Kottankulangara temple

Kollam (Kerala), Mar 26 (ANI): In a bizarre festival in Kerala, men take the guise of women and carry lamps to offer prayers at temple.

Popularly known as ‘Kottankulangara Chamayavillanku’, the festival is held at the Kottankulangara temple in Chavara, near Kerala’s Kollam district. The men pay their obeisance to the Goddess Bhagavathy, the deity of the temple.

The 19-day long festival occurs during March – April each year.

The last two days of the festival witness hundreds of men wearing sarees, churidars and skirts with heavy make-up. Fulfilling the festival tradition, they carry a lamp having five lights mounted on a long wooden rod.

The men come to the revered temple to seek blessings and express gratitude to the goddess for the favours received.

“This is the first time that I have come here… I was facing some problems -job problems, study problems, but I got the opportunity now. I am very comfortable here, it’s very nice. My friends are also very happy. The atmosphere is very inspiring…this is beyond our imagination,” said a jubilant Trisha, a participant in the local festivities.

There are many stories about the origin of the festival but the most popular version says that a group of boys, who used to herd cows, would playfully dress up as girls and offer flowers and a coconut dish called ‘kottan’ to a stone.

On a fateful day, Goddess Bhagavathy appeared before one of the boys. Subsequently, a temple came up and the ritual of men dressing up as women to offer prayers to the goddess got under way.

According to the local residents, the stone, regarded as the temple deity has been growing in size over the years. By K.S Ashik (ANI)

Angry wife bites off cheating hubby’s willy!

London, Mar 24 (ANI): A Russian woman has bitten off her hubby’s manhood after she woke up to find him in a compromising position with her best friend.

Katya Kharitovonova, 36, now faces two years in jail for the wounds she inflicted on her hubby Mikhail, 40, and his lover Liza Dmitriyeva, 33.

The Russian couple had gone for a walk when they met Dmitriyeva and invited her home for a meal. After they had eaten they sat watching HG Wells’ movie The War of the Worlds, but Katya fell asleep.

“Liza started stroking my hair and legs, and then it went further,” the Sun quoted Mikhail as telling a court near Moscow.

The exchange between the two was however not one sided as Mikhail responded to Dmitriyeva’s fondling.

“I kissed Mikhail’s lips. He didn’t resist, and then I kissed him more,” she admitted.

When Katya woke up and found her husband half naked and her best friend performing a sex act on him, she picked up a floor lamp and hit her best friend over the head with it, and then bit her husband’s willy off.

“I saw blood spurting out of Liza’s mouth and then felt a sharp pain. I don’t remember what happened next, I was unconscious,” Mikhail, who was too drunk to dodge his wife’s advances, said.

However when she realised how severe the wounds were, Katya called an ambulance and the pair were taken to casualty at a nearby hospital.

Dmitriyeva suffered severe concussion while Mikhail’s willy had to be stitched back together.

Judges told Katya, who faces jail in a labour camp, that she had no right to act in such a violent manner despite the provocation by her husband and best friend. (ANI)

Scientists use ‘rogue’ laser waves to build better light sources

Washington, March 6 (ANI): Scientists are putting rogue laser waves to work in order to produce brighter, more stable white light sources, a breakthrough in optics that may pave the way for better clocks, faster cameras, and more powerful radar and communications technologies.

The rogue waves of light, rare and explosive flare-ups that are mathematically similar to their oceanic counterparts, have been developed by a group of researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

Rogue bursts of light were first spotted a year ago during the generation of a special kind of radiation called supercontinuum (SC).

SC light is created by shooting laser pulses into crystals and optical fibers.

Like the incandescent bulb in a lamp, it shines with a white light that spans an extremely broad spectrum. But unlike a bulb’s soft diffuse glow, SC light maintains the brightness and directionality of a laser beam.

This makes it suitable for a wide variety of applications – a fact recognized by the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physics, awarded in part to scientists who used SC light to measure atomic transitions with extraordinary accuracy.

Despite more than 40 years of research, SC light has proven to be difficult to control and prone to instability.

Though rogue waves are not the cause of this instability, the UCLA researchers suspected that a better understanding of how noise in SC light triggers rogue waves could improve their control of this bright white light.

Rogue waves occur randomly in SC light and are so short-lived that the team had to employ a new technique just to spot them.

By tinkering with the initial laser pulses used to create SC light, Solli and his team discovered how to reproduce the rogue waves, harness them, and put them to work.

His results demonstrate that a weak burst of light, broadcast at the perfect “tickle spot,” produces a rogue wave on demand.

Instead of disrupting things, it stabilizes SC light, reducing fluctuations by at least 90 percent. The seed wave also decreases the amount of energy needed to produce a supercontinuum by 25 percent.

This new-and-improved white light could help to push forward a range of technologies.

Solli and Bahram Jalali are developing time-stretching devices that slow down electrical signals; such devices could be used in new optical analog-to-digital converters 1,000 times faster than current electronic versions.

These converters could help to overcome the current conversion-rate bottleneck that holds back advanced radar and communication technologies.

Stabilized SC light could also be used to create super-fast cameras for laboratory use or incorporated into optical clockworks. (ANI)

England celebrates exit of Oz batting bruiser Haydos

London, Jan.15 (ANI): As the English squad continues to struggle with sudden departures from their own ranks, sports blogs and newspapers are celebrating the exit of one of Australia’s all time batting greats – opener Mathew Hayden.

Speculation is rife that Phil Jaques or Phillip Hughes would take Hayden’s place, but “neither will give England’s opening bowlers quite so many sleepless nights as Hayden – Australia’s ship has lost its figurehead,” declared London’s Telegraph.
The Times branded Hayden the last great survivor of the team that menaced Britain for the best part of two decades, “a fearsome opener who has left Australia with big shoes to fill”.

Welsh county Glamorgan was the first British side to flag the possibility of a “coup” signing of the burly Queenslander if he was available for a full season.

“If he was available all season, without a shadow of doubt we would have to have a serious look at that,” manager Matthew Maynard said.

But most blogs or media outlets simply described the relief ahead of the Ashes tour that, with Warne, Gilchrist and McGrath also gone, the intimidation of England was over.

Sportsblog likened Hayden’s mark at the crease to a rottweiler urinating on a lamp post.

“He was the very epitome of the Australian way of playing the game; with swagger, self-conviction and an absolute refusal to retreat from either confrontation or the pursuit of excellence,” the blog wrote.

Another blogger described watching Hayden coming out to bat as being like watching a bouncer about to start his shift at the door.

“Ominous, and meaning business, they will do their job, someone may get hurt, then they’ll go home,” it said.

In New Delhi, India’s swashbuckling opener Virender Sehwag saluted Hayden, saying he had not seen an “attacking batsman of his calibre”.

“His absence will be felt just as the retirement of Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath was.”

Sehwag, who has two Test triple centuries to his credit, said he was amazed by Hayden’s consistency over the past few years.

“In the last eight years he has scored more than 20 centuries,” he said.

“You can be sure that Australia will not be able to unearth an opener who can hit 20 centuries in the next eight years. I have played eight years and managed only 15,” he said. (ANI)

Chinese monk kills priest before committing suicide in Taiwan

Taipei – A Chinese monk visiting Taiwan with a Chinese Buddhist delegation has committed suicide after killing another member of the delegation, police said Wednesday.

The murder took place at the Forte Hotel in Hsinchu, western Taiwan, where the six-member delegation was staying, a duty officer from the Hsinchu Police Bureau told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

The delegation from the Ling Gu Temple in Nanjing, eastern China, arrived in Taiwan Monday for a six-day visit at the invitation of the Chuan Chuang Culture and Education Foundation.

They checked into the Forte Hotel Tuesday.

When foundation members arrived at the hotel about 8 am Wednesday to pick up the delegation for the day tour, they found priest Jing Ran, 38, lying in a pool of blood on his bed, while Quan Ru, a 53-year-old monk, had committed suicide by jumping from the rooftop of the 12-storey hotel, police said.

An initial investigation showed that Quan Ru had lost his entry permit and was chided by Jing Ran, triggering a quarrel.

Late Tuesday night or early Wednesday morning, Quan Ru broke into Jing Ran’s room and hit him on the head with a table lamp, before leaping from the rooftop.

“The monk killed the priest while the priest was sleeping. No one knew it until the Chuan Chuang Foundation people came to pick up the delegation shortly before 8 am,” the hotel’s press officer told dpa, asking not to be named.

In Quan Ru’s pocket, police found a note saying, “Call police to arrest me, then I can die in peace.”

Members of the Chinese delegation said Quan Ru had recently been promoted to become director of the Ling Gu Temple.

They said Quan Ru held a grudge against Jing Ran as he had often argued with him over how to run the temple. (dpa)

Novel cut-price device could prevent blindness

London, Jan 02 (ANI): A retired surgeon has invented a new device made from waste wood and plastic which may help to prevent millions of people going blind.

Roger Armour, 74, is the inventor of the reasonable device, which can remarkably detect cataracts and other harmful eye problems.

According to Armour, the best thing about the creation is that it is very low-priced, and can help people in the third world countries.

The inventor said he made his prototype, called a slit lamp, on the kitchen table.

“It is remarkably good,” Sky News quoted Armour, as saying.

“I”m delighted because I have seen so much suffering from awful eye diseases. I hope this instrument will help people in poor countries,” he added.

A slit lamp is used in any High Street eye test. The patient rests their chin on a bar, while the optician shines a light into their eyes and examines them through a special lens. But the equipment costs around 10,000 pounds.

Armour made his version for 5 pounds, plus the cost of a camera to record images. For the creation, he used a torch, a pocket magnifying glass, lolly sticks and part of a plastic toothbrush.

Dr. Roger patented his invention and is currently looking for a manufacturer. (ANI)

BBC told to cut down on fat cats’ hefty pay packages

BBC told to cut down on fat cats’ hefty pay packagesLondon, The British government is learnt to have urged the BBC to end the culture of “fat cat” pay for top presenters, else it would risk a cut in its 3.4 billion-pounds-a-year of public funding.

According to official figures, the BBC’s top 50 highest paid executives earn up to 14.3 million pounds a year between them, with 50 managers earning more than 190,000 pounds last year. Director-General Mark Thompson gets a package of 816,000 pounds per annum.

According to timesonline. com, the country’s Culture Secretary Andy Burnham has issued a warning that the seven-figure contracts given to stars such as Jonathan Ross are “undermining licence fee payers’ confidence” in the broadcaster.

Burnham is understood to have told BBC Sir Michael Lyons that the Corporation needed to show “sensitivity and an awareness of where the public are”, added the report.

Ministers believe the recession has fuelled hostility to the elite presenters who are insulated from the economic downturn.

Ross, who is currently on an 18 million-pound three-year contract, was last week suspended without pay for three months over obscene telephone calls made to Andrew Sachs, the Fawlty Towers actor, during a Radio 2 show. The row puts BBC chiefs in an awkward position. They are keen to hang on to Ross, but they cannot renegotiate his salary until his contract comes up for renewal next year.

The Corporation faces a political backlash after the lewd phone call scandal involving Ross and Russell Brand. The row led to Brand quitting the BBC and also claimed the scalp of Lesley Douglas, controller of Radio 2.

Ross (47) is planning to “reinvent” himself during his enforced absence and will have to curb the lewd behaviour that has made him such a controversial figure. “He’ll come back as a different act,” said a source.

Sir Michael Parkinson, the veteran chat show host, attributed Ross’s behaviour to a “fit of madness”. He said: “Jonathan should have more oil in his lamp, frankly – more sense. He’s very good at his job but he’s given to fits of madness now and again and I think he had one on this occasion.”

A source close to Burnham said: “Andy is by instinct a friend of the BBC and would not dream of undermining its operational independence. But if it is going to make a case for the licence fee, the BBC needs to show a certain sensitivity and an awareness of where the public are. He believes it will be harder to argue the BBC’s corner unless it is seen to be tackling the salary culture.” (ANI)