”Maybe later” is the phrase most hectic parents use to delay kids’ play request

London, May 20 (ANI): The phrase that today’s hectic parents use most often in response to their kids’ request to play with them is: “Maybe later”, revealed a new study.

Researchers found that, despite children being parents” ”main priority”, 80 per cent admit they don”t devote enough time to them.

In fact, the report found working parents spend less than an hour a day giving their kids one-to-one attention – with the average child getting just 36 minutes with their mother or father.

Children”s responses to the survey painted a similar picture, claiming parents are too preoccupied with working, tidying and checking emails to address their needs.

The study of 3,000 working parents and their children by car insurance provider Admiral found that almost eight out of ten children said they were fed up of being parked in front of the television instead of being entertained.

The trend also showed adults are parenting ”remotely” from their laptops or kitchen sink and continually promising their attention ”later”.

””The generation of ”Maybe Later” kids shows a worrying trend of parents not spending as much time as they should with their children,” the Telegraph quoted James Carnduff of Admiral, which conducted the research as part of its Family Journeys campaign, as saying.

””Parents admit their children aren”t getting enough of their attention, and children are also feeling the impact of this, desperate for their parents to spend more time with them.

””We live in ever busier times with many parents taking work home with them once they leave the office, but it seems this is having a negative effect on the relationship they have with their children.

””Parents need to remember that playing with your kids is a great way to relieve stress and forget about work.

””The responses from the children we asked show that parents can”t get away with simply sticking their children in front of the TV as that”s simply no replacement for quality time,” he added.

The research also found on top of a normal full time working week, busy parents log onto their emails as soon as they get home from work at least four nights a week.

And at least one of the two parents misses dinner twice a week due to working late.

When at home, 70 per cent of mums and dads admit they spend much of their spare time cooking and cleaning rather than playing with their children.

And 56 per cent often find themselves promising to play with their children after they have finished a bit of work, checked their emails or completed household chores.

But kids are fed up with being treated like second best.

Two thirds said mum and dad are always saying they”ll help with homework or play ”later”.

Six in ten children said they wished their parents worked less and 55 per cent wished they would leave the cleaning until after they went to bed.

Sixty eight per cent said they would like it if their parents had more time to play with them.

””Trying to balance work and home life can be difficult in modern society, but simple things like going on trips as a family can be easy and fun, and don”t need to cost a lot of money,” said Carnduff.

””We”re encouraging families to take more trips out together; these family memories are the things our kids remember from their childhood.

””Saying ”maybe later” to children needs to become a thing of the past for parents, as the results of our survey show that the nation”s children are well and truly fed up,” he added. (ANI)

Real-life ‘Juliets’ answering ‘Romeos’ letters get a reel makeover

London, May 11 (ANI): New film ”Letters to Juliet” is based on folks who reply to letters written to Shakespeare’s fictional heroine by lovelorn ‘Romeos’ across the world.

The volunteers, in Italy, who respond to sack load of letters written by people seeking advice on relationship, are popularly known as “Juliet”s Secretaries”.

The tradition has continued for the past half a century. The scribes work in an upstairs office overlooking the Verona balcony on which Juliet supposedly stood, when Romeo wooed her.

“Almost all of the letters contain the phrase, ”Juliet, I can only tell you. Only you can help me. Even if she is a literary figure, she has become real,” the Telegraph quoted Giovanna Tamassia, who has been working as ‘Juliet’s secretary’ for past 16 years, as saying.

The new film, starring Vanessa Redgrave and Amanda Seyfried, has been inspired by these volunteers.

The plot revolves around a young American tourist, Seyfried, who meets the volunteers who respond to the letters.

The film will hit screens in the UK on June 9. (ANI)

Twitter Gate: Congress will take action against Tharoor at the appropriate time: Tewari

New Delhi, Sep.18 (ANI): The Congress party on Friday said it would take appropriate action against Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor for his “cattle class” comments through the medium of Twitter at the appropriate time.

Addressing a party news conference in the capital, Congress spokesman Manish Tewari said: “We will take appropriate action (against Mr. Tharoor) at the appropriate time.

Tewari further said that action against Tharoor was not ruled out.

He also justified Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot’s statement on Thursday seeking Tharoor’s resignation for what he called “irresponsible” comments on the social networking site Twitter.

“It was unfortunate and unbecoming on his part to make such comments. In my view he should tender his resignation as Minister,” Gehlot had said.

“To make such irreverent comments is all the more despicable when one is holding a responsible position as that of the Minister of State for External Affairs,” Gehlot told journalists at his official residence here after a “Roza Iftar” party on Thursday evening.

Gehlot had termed Tharoor’s references posted on the site such as “cattle class” and “holy cows” as unacceptable in Indian politics.

Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan also said Tharoor had no right to continue in the Union Cabinet.

“I believe that in a democracy, people are God. To refer to them as ‘cattle’ is an insult to them. And I believe that such a person has no right to be a Union minister,” he told reporters.

Tharoor, who is on an official visit to Liberia, had earlier apologized through the Twitter medium, saying he was “sorry” for hurting any sentiments and that his words had been misunderstood.

“To those hurt by the belief that my repeating the phrase showed contempt: sorry. It’s a silly expression, but means no disrespect to economy travellers, only to airlines for herding us in like cattle. Many have misunderstood,” Tharoor said.

The minister said that he had learned belatedly of the fuss “over my tweet and pointed out that the phrase “cattle class” was used in the query, which he just repeated. (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)

Cheryl Cole becomes new face of L’Oreal Paris

London, Aug 27 (ANI): X Factor judge Cheryl Cole has become the new face of L’Oreal after bagging a lucrative deal from the French cosmetics and beauty products brand.

Cole will lead the L’Oreal campaign in the UK and she will start with promoting a hair product called Elvive Full Restore 5.

Sky News quoted Cole as saying: “I have always loved the brand and have always wanted to say the iconic phrase: ‘Because you’re worth it’, so to be given that opportunity is absolutely amazing.”

L’Oreal executives believe roping in the star would enhance the popularity of their products.

Gayle Tait, L’Oreal Paris general manager said: “Cheryl is a glamorous, stylish and talented young woman whose warmth and charm has captivated the nation and helped to establish her as an inspiration to women throughout the UK.” (ANI)

When Obama’s newest catchphrase ‘wee weed up’ left the press puzzled

London, August 22 (ANI): U.S. President Barack Obama left the national media struggling to get the meaning of his newest catchphrase “wee weed up”, which he uttered at a healthcare forum with Democratic party activists in Washington on Friday.

He spokes these words while comparing his recent negative press coverage with similarly dire predictions made during his run for President.

“There’s something about August going into September where everybody in Washington gets all wee weed up. I don’t know what it is. But that’s what happens,” Times Online quoted him as having said.

Obama’s words left the press puzzled.

“I don’t know what that means,” wrote Mike Memoli, of the Real Clear Politics website.

“Is this some Chicago phrase I don’t know about?” asked the conservative blogger Michelle Malkin.

Moments after Obama had made that remark, Time Magazine’s Michael Scherer tweeted: “Obama just said ‘wee wee’.”

There also came an interpretation from the Weekly Standard’s Mary Catherine Ham, who said: “My little brothers often wee-weed up the pool in August.”

Sam Youngman, of The Hill newspaper, wondered when the conservatives questioning the validity of Obama’s birth certificate would “start saying that ‘wee-weed up’ is an old Kenyan Muslim saying?”

The debate finally ended with the White House spokesman Robert Gibbs shedding some light on the phrase during a press briefing.

He said: “(Wee weed up is) when people just get all nervous for no particular reason”.

He added: “Bed wetting would be the more consumer-friendly version.” (ANI)

‘Frenemy’, ‘staycations’ and ‘vlog’ enter Merriam-Webster’s dictionary

Melbourne, July 10 (ANI): Don’t know what people mean when they use words like ‘frenemy’, ‘staycations’, ‘flash mob’ and ‘vlog’? Well, now you can look for these words in a dictionary.

About 100 new words, which reflect the current English language, have reportedly been added to the Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary.

And many of these additions include ‘locavore’(which is used to describe someone who only eats locally-grown food), ‘vlog’ (a video-blog’s new name) and ‘frenemy’ (a person who acts like a friend but is really an enemy).ther words that have made it to the dictionary are ‘flash mob’, which is a group of people who go to a designated public place for some sort of action; and ‘staycation’, where someone takes leave from work but stays at home for the duration.

John Morse, the president and publisher of the dictionary company, said that many of the latest additions were linked to technology and the environment.

The phrase ‘green-collar’, which describes someone who works to protect the natural environment, will be placed with more traditional working definitions like that of ‘white-collar’ and ‘blue-collar’ in the dictionary.

“These are not new words in the language, by any means. These really are words now likely to show up in The New York Times, in The Wall Street Journal,” News.com.au quoted Morse as saying.

He claimed that that when words were quite commonly used in conversations, it was hard for the dictionary to ignore them. (ANI)

Positive self-statements do more harm than good

Washington, July 4 (ANI): While self-help books are considered to boost a person’s moral, a piece of research now suggests that positive self-statements in such books may actually leave people with low self-esteem and feeling worse about themselves.

Psychologists Joanne V. Wood and John W. Lee from the University of Waterloo, and W.Q. Elaine Perunovic from the University of New Brunswick, found that individuals with low self-esteem actually felt worse about themselves after repeating positive self-statements.

In the study, the researchers asked participants with low self-esteem and high self-esteem to repeat the self-help book phrase “I am a lovable person.”

Then the psychologists measured the participants’ moods, and their momentary feelings about themselves.

It was found that the individuals with low self-esteem felt worse after repeating the positive self-statement, compared to another low self-esteem group who did not repeat the self-statement.

The individuals with high self-esteem felt better after repeating the positive self-statement, but only slightly.

In a follow-up study, the psychologists allowed the participants to list negative self-thoughts along with positive self-thoughts.

Surprisingly, they found that moods of the participants with low self-esteem fared better when they were allowed to have negative thoughts than when they were asked to focus exclusively on affirmative thoughts.

The psychologists suggested that, like overly positive praise, unreasonably positive self-statements, such as “I accept myself completely,” could provoke contradictory thoughts in individuals with low self-esteem.

Such negative thoughts can overwhelm the positive thoughts, and if people are instructed to focus exclusively on positive thoughts, they may find negative thoughts to be especially discouraging.

The authors concluded: “Repeating positive self-statements may benefit certain people [such as individuals with high self-esteem] but backfire for the very people who need them the most.”

The study has been published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. (ANI)

Wearing nude Posh Spice t-shirt in Dubai may land you in jail!

New York, July 3 (ANI): A Lebanese national was reportedly jailed in Dubai for wearing T-shirt showing Victoria Beckham in the nude.

According to the Telegraph, Raffi Nernekian, whose brother says he bought the shirt during a visit to New York, got into an argument with a local over the shirt and was jailed for a month for “offending public decency.”

The skin cancer awareness T-shirt features a naked Beckham, who is discreetly hidden by the phrase “Protect the skin your in,” reports the New York Daily News.

Nernekian works for a brand manager for local agents of designer Marc Jacobs, who designed the shirts benefiting a cancer research program at New York University. (ANI)

Carla Bruni strokes Nicolas Sarkozy’s bum in public

London, May 20 (ANI): French First Lady Carla Bruni left hubby Nicolas Sarkozy red faced when she groped his backside during a press conference.

The former model and singer was being filmed in the Elysee Palace for a magazine when the President walked in, reports the Mirror.

Soon afterwards, Bruni was stroking Sarkozy’s backside, pecking his cheek, and even whispering in his ear: “Bon courage, chou chou.”

“Chou” is the French for cabbage, and the phrase used by young lovers means: “Be brave, my little darling.”

The 41-year-old beauty was seen constantly staring the French President during the Paris interview, but the Sarkozy, 54, tried to discourage her. (ANI)

Clinton suggests that Pak, Afghanistan holding ‘breakthrough’ talks

Washington, May 7 (ANI): US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has suggested that Afghanistan and Pakistan are holding “breakthrough” talks at the White House, where President Barack Obama is in the midst of two days of bilateral meetings and then a trilateral talk with President Hamid Karzai and President Asif Ali Zardari.

“I think the takeaway is that this process is producing some very promising early signs,” Clinton told reporters at the White House on Wednesday afternoon.

“The level of cooperation between the governments of the two countries is increasing. The confidence-building that is necessary for this relationship to turn into tangible cooperation is moving forward,” she said.

“And I think today’s series of meetings is another step along that road. Being able to say democratically elected president of Pakistan is not a common phrase. And I think it’s imperative that we support President Zardari and work with him, as he extends the reach of the government, not only on security, as essential as that is, but also on the range of needs of the Pakistani people,” she added.

“With President Karzai, it was a very future-oriented conversation. We talked about the necessity to take real, concrete actions to make the kind of progress that Afghanistan desperately needs to see, to really deliver for the people of the country,” she said.

How about getting Pakistan to stand down in its decades-long conflict with India, the secretary was asked. (ANI)

English food writer Nigella Lawson could have been an MI5 spy

London, May 6 (ANI): English food writer Nigella Lawson could have become a spy because she was once approached by British security agency M15 as a student.

A new espionage book titled ‘Inside British Intelligence’ reveals that Nigella had turned down the agency’s offer on the advice of her father, Nigel Lawson, who was then Chancellor of The Exchequer.

Gordon Thomas writes in the book that Nigella was approached to join the secret service because she was a former pupil of Elizabeth Manningham-Buller who went on to become director general of MI5. After Oxford (Elizabeth) taught at the exclusive Queen’s Gate school in London. Her pupils included the future television chef Nigella Lawson,” the Telegraph quoted Thomas as writing.

According to The Daily Mail, the book also talks about the way Nigella’s father warned her to “steer clear of the intelligence people”.

“Instead Nigella went on to become a journalist before finding fame as a cooker writer and TV chef,” writes Thomas.

According to him, the secret services targeted Oxford and Cambridge in the early 80s to take advantage of the students who had received free higher education through the Labour Government.

“Shrewd MI5 recruiters appealed to the patriotism of those they approached and the phrase ‘do it for king and country’ was often a clincher. Joining the security service would not match the financial terms that industry and the banking world offered but the job would be far more interesting that study balance sheets,” Thomas writes in the book. (ANI)

Q and A: T-shirt politics, Thailand’s color-coded agitators

(Reuters) – The founder of Thailand’s “yellow shirt” protest movement, which was behind the week-long occupation of Bangkok’s main airports late last year, was shot and wounded early on Friday, a spokesman for his movement said.

Sondhi Limthongkul’s People’s Alliance for Democracy was not involved in the country’s latest bout of political violence when red-shirted supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra laid siege and faced off with a new group wearing dark blue T-shirts.

Here are some questions and answers about the main extra-parliamentary groups and the different colors they have adopted for their activists on the street.

WHAT DO THE RED SHIRTS WANT?

Supporters of ousted leader Thaksin, they want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to resign and the holding of new elections, which they would be well placed to win.

The “red-shirts” invaded the venue of an Asian summit in the resort town of Pattaya last weekend forcing the cancellation of the meeting.

The protests ended on Tuesday when the activists, who had been occupying the grounds of Government House, surrendered to the hundreds of troops surrounding the building, the main office of Abhisit.

Their action echoed the tactics of Sondhi’s anti-Thaksin “yellow shirts,” who occupied it for several months last year.

WHO ARE THE YELLOW SHIRTS?

The yellow shirts of the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) were not involved in recent clashes but were gearing up to join in if the red shirts looked like winning.

The PAD is an extra-parliamentary group of royalists, academics, former military people and Bangkok’s middle classes united in their loathing of Thaksin, a former telecoms billionaire who draws his support from the rural poor.

The PAD’s color honors Thailand’s revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej — many Thais wear yellow on Mondays, the day on which the king was born.

Last year, when a pro-Thaksin government was in power, yellow-tinged protests — involving another siege of Government House that lasted for months — turned ugly and a state of emergency was enforced for a couple of weeks in September.

Their most audacious and disruptive action was the storming of Bangkok’s two main airports in late November, stranding up to 250,000 foreign tourists and cutting the country’s main international link for over a week.

The yellow shirts ended their protests in December, claiming victory when the constitutional court disqualified the pro-Thaksin prime minister for electoral fraud.

WHO ARE THE NEW MOB IN BLUE SHIRTS RISE

Last week in Pattaya, a new group wearing dark blue T-shirts bearing the phrase “Protect the Institution” — thought to be a reference to the monarchy — clashed with the red shirts.

The identity and aims of the masked men in blue shirts armed with sticks, clubs and iron rods remain unclear. Red shirts have accused them of being a militia of pro-government thugs, perhaps affiliated to the military. The government denies this.

WHAT’S BENEATH THE SHIRTS?

A deeply divided country, which has seen 18 coups since it became a constitutional monarchy in 1932.

Thailand has been in a state of political crisis on or off since late 2005, when the streets protests that eventually helped oust Thaksin began.

For a TIMELINE of the turmoil click on

The media-friendly color coding has kept the groups in the public eye and brings back memories of revolutions in Eastern Europe — Ukraine’s 2004-2005 “Orange Revolution,” for example — although those places never had such a color clash.

(Writing by Gillian Murdoch; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

David Duchovny, Tea Leoni get matching wedding ring tattoos

Washington, Apr 16 (ANI): Hollywood actors David Duchovny and Tea Leoni have decided to strengthen their love for one another by getting matching wedding ring tattoos.

The two had in October last year announced the end of their 11-year marriage, after Duchovny, 48, underwent a spell in rehab to treat sex addiction.

But it now seems that they have solved their differences, following their vacation together in March on the Caribbean island of Mustique.

“I hate wearing the metal because I bang it everywhere and hurt myself. We made a compromise and I said, ‘If I get a tattoo, can I take the ring off?’ She liked it and went out and got one for herself,” Contactmusic quoted Duchovny as telling Star magazine.

Duchovny, however, has decided to keep mum about what the tattoo means.

“It’s a phrase we say to each other but I don’t actually tell anybody. It’s AYSF. It stands for something,” he added. (ANI)

BJP takes GJM support, but Gorkhaland missing from manifesto

When Jaswant Singh arrives in Darjeeling on April 7, he may have to face a few unpleasant questions as the carefully crafted words of the BJP manifesto do not pledge the formation of Gorkhaland, which was a precondition for the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha’s support. But the BJP has mentioned some sort of a status for the agitation.

Though the word “Gorkhaland” or the phrase “separate state for Gorkhas” did not feature in the manifesto, what featured was the BJP’s favour towards the formation of smaller states and its assurance to sympathetically and appropriately consider the long-pending demands of the Gorkhas. However, not all are willing to buy this logic in the Hills.

Madan Tamang, All India Gorkha League president, said, “Delhi’s jugglery of words will not work this time. If they can specify Telengana, why not a separate state for Gorkhas? Why not a clear-cut support to our statehood demand?.

You cannot fool all people all time.” The AIGL will confirm its poll stand after a Central Committee meeting on April 5.

The Communist Party of Revolutionary Marxist (CPRM) decided to play it safe. “We have not seen the manifesto yet,” said R.B. Rai, general secretary.

“The BJP has clearly announced its support for the formation of smaller states and also has assured to examine and consider the long pending demand of the Gorkhas. Gorkhaland is a more than 100-year-old demand, and the BJP did agree to look into the demand,” said Roshan Giri, GJM general secretary told HT over phone from Delhi.

The kicking buffalo and other rustic tales

IT HAS been a challenging afternoon at the vet’s. The patient is obstinate.

Dr Ranvir Prasad (26) is prodding the genitals of a buffalo with a rusted 10-year-old castrator, and the animal has already kicked him once from under the rickety, box-like enclosure where farm animals are tied during examinations. “The Punjab government expects its White Revolution to be managed by doctors with rusted instruments,” says Prasad, with a grimace, using the phrase often used to describe the dairy boom.

“Punjab produces 51.33 million tonnes of milk every year and #8230; 10 per cent of the country’s total production,” says Prasad, who works in Deon village in Bhatinda district, 300 kilometres west of the state capital of Chandigarh. “And yet this is all we get – outdated tools and medicines past their expiry date.

” The two-room veterinary hospital is a snapshot of a larger rot setting in across the state’s countryside, perceived in the rest of the country as the kingdom of the farmer and milk. In some ways, it is.

Agriculture and livestock are the heart of Punjab’s economy – 60 per cent of the state’s population of 2.44 crore are either farmers, dairy farmers or livestock breeders. “But the government’s policies are anti-people and anti-animal,” says the vet, dusting off his hands.

Irrigation and farmer subsidies are still a priority area in India’s granary, 40 years after the Green Revolution and White Revolution made agriculture and dairy farming profitable again. But medical care for the animals behind the turnaround remains rudimentary at best – although millions of lives are connected to livestock.

There are 90 million heads of livestock in Punjab, serviced by just 1,500 veterinary hospitals and 2,500 dispensaries – that’s one facility per 22,500 animals. Over 50 per cent of the 680 veterinary positions in the state are vacant.

And most of the animal hospitals in the state are ill-equipped. “Look around you,” says Prasad, gesturing at the 800-square-foot facility.

“Is this a hospital?” There is no X-ray machine. In three years, Prasad says he has received supplies twice – both were small batches of antibiotics.

He is the only government vet for Deon’s 1,500 cows, 1,000 buffaloes and myriad herds of goats and sheep. The result: Infertility, low milk yield and death.

There is an average of two cattle deaths daily in Deon – many of them caused by quacks who have rushed in to fill the gap left by the government. The only college of veterinary science sees about 120 graduate every year.

Over 50 per cent flee the state, most seeking employment abroad. In Bhatinda city, Prasad’s batchmates are on one of their periodic protests.

“My clinic is in the heart of Bhatinda city, but I last got supplies eight months ago,” says Dr Charanjit Sarangal (31). “Every election season sees more promises, but never any action.

” In 2006, says Sarangal, Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Badal, then in the Opposition, met state vets during a fast unto death and promised all would be well when they returned to power. “The Akali Dal returned to power in 2007, but that promise has not been kept,” says Sarangal.

“Utility bills for the hospitals are not paid. So many doctors have given up and now have side-businesses to supplement their income.

” Back at Deon, Prasad lists his monthly expenses: “Out of Rs 26,000 per month, I give Rs 5,000 to the pharmacist, Rs 2,260 to the Class IV staff and spend about Rs 1,000 on water and electricity bills. The government has not paid these dues in years.

” What he’s left with is barely two-thirds of his salary. So he’s become a part-time insurance agent.

Joe Biden’s daughter’s ‘cocaine snorting video’ up for sale

New York, March 29 (ANI): U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden may have to face shame after a video of his daughter allegedly snorting cocaine has been put for sale, according to online reports.

The footage was said to have been recorded by his daughter Ashley’s friend and reportedly showed the social worker taking three lines of coke rolled in a dollar bill at a bash.

According to Radaronline.com, the alleged video of the 27-year-old has raked up offers up to as much as 250,000 dollars, reports the New York Daily News.

A Washington D.C. attorney was also purported to be “brokering any deals” regarding its purchase.

Interestingly, her father has long advocated anti-drug laws, and even penned the phrase “Drug Czar” in 1982. (ANI)

Heidi Klum ‘clueless’ about size zero

London, Mar 21 (ANI): While the whole world is debating on “Size Zero”, there’s one person who is completely bemused by the whole concept -supermodel Heidi Klum.

The 35-year-old stunner, who lives in America with her children and British singer husband Seal, says she can’t get her head around what the “phrase” means.

“A size zero?” The Daily Express quoted her, as saying.

The statuesque German catwalk queen, who once gave skinny Victoria Beckham a year’s supply of cupcakes for her birthday, added: “I’ve never heard of that. That didn’t exist when I was growing up. When did that start? What does it mean?” (ANI)

Jackie Mason in racism row after calling Obama a ‘schvartze’

Washington, Mar 16 (ANI): Veteran comedian Jackie Mason has come under fire for calling U.S. President Barack Obama a ‘schvartze’, a controversial Yiddish phrase used to describe black people that is allegedly a racist slur.

The comment came during a performance at Feinstein in New York.

At least one member of the audience walked out after Mason called Obama a ‘schwartza’.

The 72-year-old’s use of the word has sparked a row over whether it’s an offensive term – but the comedian is refusing to back down.

“I’m an old Jew. I was raised in a Jewish family where ‘schwartza’ was used. It’s not a demeaning word and I’m not going to defend myself,” Contactmusic quoted Mason, as telling TMZ.com.

“Chris Rock has told a lot more jokes about whites than I have against blacks. What about the demeaning words blacks say about Jews?

“If it’s a racist society, the white people are the ones being persecuted because they have to defend themselves,” he added. (ANI)

Cricket not quintessentially English after all

London, Mar.1 (ANI): Cricket is not quintessentially English after all, a new Australian research has claimed.

According to the research, north European immigrants imported the game to England in the 14th century, and that it was first resisted by the local population.
The claim challenges the traditional theory that the sport evolved from children’s games played in England since Anglo-Saxon times.

The Telegraph quotes Paul Campbell, of the department of English and theatre at the Australian National University, in Canberra, as saying that he has uncovered a reference to the sport in a 1533 poem, attributed to John Skelton, a popular poet and playwright of the day, in which he links it to immigrants from Flanders, in modern day Belgium, France and Holland.

In the work, “The Image of Ipocrisie” – much of which is a diatribe against parts of the Church – Skelton also appears to rail against the Flemish weavers who settled in southern and eastern England from the 14th century, labelling them dismissively as “kings of crekettes”.

In what appears to be a call for the weavers to be driven out of England, Skelton writes:

“O lorde of Ipocrites/Nowe shut vpp your wickettes/And clape to your clickettes!/A! Farewell, kings of crekettes!”

The poem is the earliest known reference to the sport and adds weight to claims that the weavers brought the game over with them and played it on fields close to where they tended their sheep, using shepherd’s crooks – or curved sticks – as bats to strike a ball.

It was uncovered by Campbell following a search of historical archives, in which he looked for variations of the early ways in which the word cricket was spelt.

A German academic, who first established that the word has its linguistic origins in Flemish, guided Campbell.

Dr Heiner Gillmeister, of the department of English at the University of Bonn, suggests the term cricket has its roots in the Flemish phrase “met de krik ketsen”, or “to chase with a curved stick”.

He goes on to suggest that the origins of hockey goals and the wickets in cricket were in imitation of chivalric games, in which a knight on horseback guarded a narrow passage or opening.

It had previously been thought that the first written reference to cricket was in 1589, when it was mentioned during a court case in Guildford, Surrey, in which a certain John Derick – possible from the Flemish name Hendrik – recalled that as a young man at the Royal Grammar School “he and diverse of his fellowes did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies”.

But the new finding is the most conclusive proof that the sport – as well as the word itself – was foreign in origin.

Skelton’s poem is contained in a collection published by The Ballad Society in 1868. (ANI)