Zia, Yahya and Ayub should be exhumed and hanged like Cromwell: PML-N leader

Karachi, Sep.11 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Javed Hashmi has said that all dictators including General Ayub Khan, General Yahya Khan and General Zia-ul-Haq should be tried and their bodies should be exhumed and hanged.

Talking to media persons at the Karachi Airport, Hashmi said the autocratic rulers should be treated in the same way the British treated Oliver Cromwell in 1661 to prevent the emergence of any dictator in future.

“The judiciary should try all the people in the country who had violated the constitution,” The Daily Times quoted Hashmi, as saying.

Oliver Cromwell’s, an English military and political leader,body was exhumed from Westminster Abbey, and was subjected to the ritual of a posthumous execution.

Symbolically, this took place on 30 January 1661 the same date that Charles I was executed. His body was hanged in chains at Tyburn. Finally, his disintegrated body was thrown into a pit, while his severed head was displayed on a pole outside Westminster Hall until 1685.

Afterwards the head changed hands several times, including the sale in 1814 to a man named Josiah Henry Wilkinson, before eventually being buried in the grounds of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 1960.(ANI)

Force India, Fisichella on pole position for Belgian Grand Prix

Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium), Aug 29(ANI): Formula One Racing team Force India, which is backed by liquor baron Vijay Mallya, on Saturday claimed the pole position in qualifying session for Sunday’s Belgian Grand Prix, as Giancarlo Fisichella exhibited an incredible performance to come on top.

It was Force India team’s first-ever pole and the fourth for Fisichella, as he recorded a remarkable qualifying time with a lap of 1 minute, 46.308 seconds to start the Belgian Grand Prix at the front of the grid.

“It’s unbelievable. I didn’t expect to be on pole. It’s amazing. It’s fantastic. I’m so happy. Pole position! Is it true?,” Fisichella said.

“I need to thank the team because they did a fantastic job. I’m really, really happy – and really confident for tomorrow!,” he added.

Meanwhile, Toyota driver Jarno Trulli will start second and BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld will start third following a qualifying session that produced many surprises.

Force India has recently introduced a series of updates to Fisichella and Adrian Sutil’s cars, which showed signs of improvement at last weekend’s European Grand Prix, where both drivers ran well. (ANI)

Natives of Kyonsa in Sikkim to promote pillow fighting, pole climbing

Kyonsa (Sikkim), Aug 27(ANI): The local residents of Kyonsa region in Sikkim gathered in huge numbers on Thursday to take part in an event to promote their age-old rural game of bamboo pole climbing and pillow fighting.

The locals shouted and cheered as the participants climbed bamboo poles and battered each other in pillow fights – reviving a practice that is slowly dying in the face of modern sports like soccer and volleyball.

“Our main aim is to preserve this old system of sports. Nowadays, we mainly focus on sports like football, archery and volleyball but our aim is to keep this traditional style of sports alive in our rural areas and entertain the public on such an occasion,” said Sonam Bhutia, General Secretary of Kyonsa Samaj Organizing Committee.

Sonam further said this was also a way of preserving their identity and by promoting this form of sport in the rural areas, the youth will learn more about their own traditions and not be swayed by modern sports such as football.

“Such rural sports encourage us and bring out the best in the all the villages who come from different areas. Here people come and gather for an occasion like this one. In this way we can preserve our age old sports which our earlier generations have been playing from a very long time,” said Anand Lepcha, a local.

The event was also marked by some spectacular dance performances. (ANI)

Largest lake on Saturn’s moon Titan found to be as smooth as a mirror

London, August 22 (ANI): A new study has shown that the largest lake on Saturn’s moon Titan is as smooth as a mirror, varying in height by less than 3 millimeters, and good enough for skipping rocks on it.

According to a report in New Scientist, the find, based on new radar observations, adds to a deluge of evidence that the moon’s lakes are indeed filled with liquid, rather than dried mud.

“Unless you actually poured concrete and spread it really, really smoothly, you’d never see something like that on Earth,” said team member Howard Zebker of Stanford University.

Astronomers have waffled on whether Saturn’s largest moon is dry or wet, but the bulk of the evidence points to liquid lakes.

The radar on the Cassini spacecraft, which arrived at Saturn in 2004, turned up dark splotches at Titan’s poles.

The darkness in radar indicates those regions are very smooth, like the signal expected from the surface of a liquid lake.

Spectral data also showed that the apparent lakes seem to be filled with methane and ethane, which would be liquid on Titan’s frigid surface, and “geomorphologically, they just look like lakes,” Zebker said.

But, previous radar observations viewed the apparent lakes at an angle, and therefore did not see bright radar glints reflected back from their surface, leaving open the possibility that the features were dry lake beds or patches of soot.

Now, researchers report seeing just that signal.

In December last year, Cassini pointed its radar straight down over Titan’s largest lake, Ontario Lacus, which spans 235 kilometres at the moon’s south pole.

The reflected signal was so strong, it maxed out the probe’s receiver.

The radar echoes revealed a surface covering thousands of square metres whose height varies by less than 3 millimetres – 10 times as flat as previous measurements were able to reveal.

“It’s very hard to imagine a solid surface that is smooth on the order of millimeters,” lead author Lauren Wye of Stanford told New Scientist.

This provides strong evidence that the lake is currently liquid, not dried mud.

“If you’ve ever walked outside and seen an area on the ground where there’s mud and the water dries up, even that is pretty flat – but you get cracks in the mud and pieces that curl up,” Zebker said. “You never see anything as smooth as what we’re inferring for Titan’s surface,” he added.

Confirming the presence of liquid on Titan adds to the long list of similarities between Titan and Earth. (ANI)

Black Eyed Peas break US chart record

London, Aug 21 (ANI): American hip-hop group the Black Eyed Peas have broken a US chart record by notching up 20 weeks on top of the singles countdown.

The band’s song ‘I Gotta Feeling’ has claimed an eighth week at number one, following 12 weeks at pole position with ‘Boom Boom Pow’.

The record beats Usher, who held the number one spot for 19 weeks in 2004 with Yeah! and Burn.

“It is amazing to know that these songs have connected with so many people,” the BBC quoted Black Eyed Peas frontwoman Fergie as saying.

She also added that it was what had “kept them alive for so long”.

“With this kind of success your ego wants to take all the credit,” fellow Black Eyed Peas member Will.i.am said.

“But your heart reminds your soul that it was your heart that had you slaving and creating in the studio making the music.

“In the fight between heart and ego my heart always wins,” he added. (ANI)

Lord Shiva devotees carrying 54-feet long Kanwar draw people in Patna

Patna, July 15 (ANI): A group of Kanwarias or, the devotees of Lord Shiva, are drawing wide public attention for carrying a 54-feet long Kanwar or, a wooden carrier fitted with water pots on both ends of the pole, in Patna city.

Hundreds of thousands of devotees take arduous on-foot religious journey to express their devotion for Lord Shiva in the Hindu month of Shravan or Monsoon month (mid June to July).

This group, however, is a fascinating everyone’s attention, as members of the group enjoy their time dancing and chanting praises of Lord Shiva.

The lanes and by-lanes of the city reverberating with the chants of the devotees and hundreds of people gather to watch them, as the group moves on.

Normally, as per the ritual, a devotee is expected to carry one Kanwar, the pole carrying two water pots on behalf of his family. But, this time, it is 18 people carrying this 54 feet long ‘Kanwar’ wishing for the well-being of their families and all people.

“Our only aim is to pray for well being of the people. We are praying for rains, to deal with the drought. People should be happy. Our farms should be green again, so that we can earn our living,” said Vinod Kumar, one of the Kanwarias carrying the 54-feet Kanwar.

These Kanwarias are set to traverse hundreds of kilometres to reach the holy town of Baidyanath.

The pilgrimage continues through the whole of Shravan month of Hindu calendar (July-August) for 30 days and is considered the longest fair of the world, drawing a lot of devotees from abroad.

The devotees with this unique ‘kanwar’ believe that this is just another way of showing their faith in Shiva and praying for good rains.

Devouts believe, offering sacred water to Lord Shiva during the month will fulfill their wishes. By Ajay Kumar (ANI)

Sacha Baron Cohen crashes Bruno screening in New York

London, Jul 13 (ANI): Brit comedian Sacha Baron Cohen gave cinemagoers watching the New York screening of Bruno more than they bargained for, when he gatecrashed the movie.

Cohen, 37, stunned fans when he stormed into Times Square’s AMC Empire cinema as his gay Austrian fashionista creation, dressed in a silver uniform and revealing red thong.

According to the Daily Express, the actor high-fived revellers and knocked glasses off people’s faces, before jumping on to a podium and treating the audience to an x-rated pole dance.

Along with his performance, Cohen also added a few comments, in the way his character Bruno does.

“Let’s hope that this film realises its full global potential! Let’s hope it doesn’t have like a really promising start and then peter out like swine flu did! Let’s hope that, like herpes, this film continues to infect all of you,” the New York Post quoted him as saying.

“It’s like a Benetton ad in here. New York City, the cultural melting pot. You’ve even got black guys here. I’m a chocoholic,” he added. (ANI)

Cosmic ‘whips’ may be detected with gravitational waves

London, July 6 (ANI): A new research has determined that cosmic ‘whips’, which are topological defects in space-time larger than the observable universe, can be detected with the help of gravitational waves.

Many theories predict the existence of cosmic strings.

They say that space-time should have universe-sized snags called ‘cosmic strings’ running across it, but none have yet been found.

That could be because they broke into a tangle of smaller strings and beads soon after the big bang, say scientists.

The imprint of their extremely high gravity was expected to be seen in the cosmic microwave background – the radiation left over from the big bang – or as gravitational lenses that bend distant light towards us.

But, no convincing evidence has been seen.

Ben Shlaer of Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, and colleagues, told New Scientist that the lack of evidence could be because the strings were unstable and split into smaller and smaller pieces soon after they formed.

The first strings could have been gigantic closed loops or extremely large fragments that terminated in “beads”.

These beads would have been so-called monopoles – analogous to a magnet’s north or south pole without its partner.

As the strings broke, the team’s analysis shows that their split ends would have been capped off by more monopoles, eventually leading to a universe filled with fragmented strings with beads at their ends.

In an infant universe, these high-tension strings would have been whipping around, accelerating the massive beads to relativistic speeds.

These would have generated tight beams of gravitational waves, which could still be traveling through space-time.

“It’s possible that if you wait long enough, one of those highly focused bursts would hit the Earth, and that would cause one of our gravitational wave detectors to chirp,” said Shlaer.

The first cosmic strings were unstable and split into small pieces capped by monopoles.

Those detectors include the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Observatory, which is currently being upgraded, and the upcoming Laser Interferometer Space Antenna.

“The possible frequency range of the waves is exceptionally large, “raising the hope of detection” of cosmic strings,” said theoretical physicist Henry Tye at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. (ANI)

Chimps can learn to make their own tools watching video demos

London, July 1 (ANI): St Andrews University researchers in Scotland have shown that chimpanzees can be learn how to make their own tools by watching demonstrations on video.

For this work, the researchers trained a chimpanzee to make a long pole for prizing out-of-reach fruit from a tree, and then filmed the animal constructing the handy tool from a variety of different parts.

They say that watching a video of the feat, other chimps were also able to make their own similar tools.

Elizabeth Price, who led the study at the university’s School of Psychology, said that she wanted to discover whether chimps could learn to make a tool from separate parts after watching other animals use materials to improve their lives.

She pointed out that some birds are able to use twigs to pull grubs out of hiding places, and monkeys have been known to strip leaves from branches to fish for termites.

According to her, the findings of her study are “the first evidence that chimpanzees can socially learn how to construct tools,” and show that the animals are more intelligent than previously thought.

“It is very exciting as we didn’t know chimps could do this,” the Scotsman quoted her as saying.

“You could say the videos were like Blue Peter and ‘Here’s one I made earlier’.

“The chimps really needed to see the full instructional video to learn how to make the long tool and gain the reward.

“Most of those who didn’t watch the video, couldn’t make the tool,” she added.

Along with Professor Andrew Whiten of St Andrews University, Elizabeth led an international team of primate experts to uncover the remarkable learning feats of the chimpanzees.

The researchers presented chimpanzees in a primate centre at the University of Texas with a grape that was just out of reach.

They showed some chimps a video of another chimpanzee expertly slotting one stick into another to create a rake, and then using the tool to get the fruit.

Others were shown a shorter video showing a chimpanzee using a ready-made tool.

The researchers found chimpanzees that watched the full video demonstration were able to copy what they saw, and make the tools themselves.

In a follow-up test, since the grapes were put within reach, the use of a longer tool was unnecessary.

The researchers observed that the chimps that had learnt the skill by watching the full video persisted in making the rake, which in the new scenario was more awkward to use.

However, a few individual chimps that had watched the shorter video still managed to make a tool, did not do so when the grape was close enough to reach without help.

Elizabeth said: “These results are important not only because they provide the first evidence that chimpanzees can socially learn how to construct tools, but also because they suggest that social learning can have a potent effect on how an individual approaches related problems later.”

Based on the observations made during the study, she came to the conclusion that learning from others can lead to a less flexible approach to novel situations.

She and her colleagues are now planning to discover the extent to which our own species is vulnerable to a similar effect, by looking at children’s abilities.

Elizabeth added: “Social learning plays a major role in the spread of complex technologies in humans.”

The research has been published in the online edition of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

The list of 10 bizarre things that students leave behind

London, Jun 25 (ANI): A list of bizarre things that British students leave behind in their rooms includes snakes and white rabbits among other things.

The audit carried out by British student accommodation provider Unite has revealed that trophy traffic cones and road signs are no longer the must-have collectibles.

Instead, students are leaving behind a more eclectic group of items when they leave their digs at the end of the year, and pets were among the unusual items left behind.

Unite found a pair of budgies, a six-foot snake, and a white rabbit that had been left behind by their owners.

Among the other items left behind were frozen chicken feet, an inflatable pool, which was filled with water, a scuba diving suit and a pole-dancing pole.

The most common items left behind were mobile phone chargers (24 per cent), while almost one in five (19 per cent) of the items found were text books and one in ten (11 per cent) were iPods.

“After a year of working hard and playing hard, it is no surprise that students forget to pack everything at the end of term – and what they leave behind never fails to surprise us,” the Telegraph quoted Nathan Goddard, Unite sales and marketing director, as saying.

“From the risque to the ridiculous, we often wonder how these items make it into their rooms in the first place,” he added.

Unite, which has properties in 23 UK cities and towns said it tries to reunite students with their belongings.

Unclaimed items are donated to charity or recycled and all pets are found a good home.

The 10 most bizarre items:

1. A six-foot snake.

2. Pole dancing pole.

3. Life-size skeleton.

4. Pair of budgies.

5. Giant white pet rabbit.

6. 10ft inflatable outdoor pool filled with water.

7. Frozen chicken feet.

8. A whip and a copy of the Kama Sutra.

9. Scuba diving suit with air tank and flippers.

10. Full-size air hockey table. (ANI)

Saturn’s moon Enceladus may host a salty ocean

London, June 25 (ANI): A new research by European scientists has provided evidence that an enormous plume of water spurts in giant jets from the south pole of Saturn’s moon Enceladus is fed by a salty ocean, a discovery that may have implications for the search for extraterrestrial life.

The Cassini spacecraft made a surprising discovery about Saturn’s sixth largest moon, Enceladus, on its exploration of the giant ringed planet in 2005.

Enceladus ejects water vapor, gas and tiny grains of ice into space hundreds of kilometers above the moon’s surface.

Enceladus orbits in Saturn’s outermost “E” ring. It is one of only three outer solar system bodies that produce active eruptions of dust and vapor.

Moreover, aside from the Earth, Mars, and Jupiter’s moon Europa, it is one of the only places in the solar system for which astronomers have direct evidence of the presence of water.

New understanding of how this plume is produced was revealed in 2008 by Juergen Schmidt of the University of Potsdam, Germany, and Nikolai Brilliantov of the University of Leicester, and colleagues.

They explained how the water vapor jets are blasted out much faster than the dust particles. To work their theory required that Enceladus has an ocean of liquid water below its surface.

The same team, working with Frank Postberg of the University of Heidelberg and the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, in Heidelberg, has now found the direct experimental evidence for the presence of this ocean, which was previously lacking.

Current theories of satellite formation suggest that should a moon have a deep liquid ocean in contact with the body’s rocky core, for many millions of years, then it should be a salty ocean.

The team now reports the detection of sodium salts among the dust ejected in the Enceladus plume.

Postberg and colleagues have studied data from the Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA) onboard the Cassini spacecraft and have combined this data with laboratory experiments.

They have shown that the icy grains in the Enceladus plume contain substantial quantities of sodium salts, hinting at the salty ocean deep below.

The theory, proposed by Brilliantov and Schmidt, has allowed the team to relate the detected salt in the CDA with the likely concentration in the water vapor above the ocean, which proves the consistency of the experimental data.

The results of the study imply that the concentration of sodium chloride in the ocean can be as high as that of Earth’s oceans and is about 0.1-0.3 moles of salt per kilogram of water. (ANI)

NASA’s Moon mission successfully completes lunar maneuver

Washington, June 24 (ANI): NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, or LCROSS, successfully completed its most significant early mission milestone on June 23 with a lunar swingby and calibration of its science instruments.

The satellite will search for water ice in a permanently shadowed crater at the moon’s south pole.

With the assist of the moon’s gravity, LCROSS and its attached Centaur booster rocket successfully entered into polar Earth orbit at 6:20 a.m. PDT on June 23.

The maneuver puts the spacecraft and Centaur on course for a pair of impacts near the moon’s south pole on October 9.

“The successful completion of the LCROSS swingby proves the science instruments are functioning as expected. It is a testament to the hard work and dedication of the entire team,” said Dan Andrews, LCROSS project manager at NASA’s Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, California.

“We are elated at the results from the maneuver and eagerly anticipate the impacts in early October,” he added.

During its swing by the moon, the spacecraft’s instruments were turned on and calibrated by scanning three sites on the lunar surface.

These sites were the craters Mendeleev, Goddard C and Giordano Bruno. They were selected because they offer a variety of terrain types, compositions and illumination conditions.

The spacecraft also scanned the lunar horizon to confirm its instruments are aligned in preparation for observing the Centaur’s debris plume.

“Each instrument returned good data that the science team will spend the next few weeks analyzing,” said Anthony Colaprete, LCROSS project scientist at Ames.

“These data will ensure we are as prepared as possible for monitoring and interpreting data we receive during impact,” he added.

LCROSS and its attached Centaur upper stage rocket are now in a long, looping polar orbit around Earth and the moon.

Each orbit will be roughly perpendicular to the moon’s orbit around Earth and take about 37 days to complete.

Before impact, the spacecraft and Centaur will make approximately three orbits.

LCROSS and the Centaur separately will collide with the moon at approximately 7:30 a.m. EDT on October 9, creating a pair of debris plumes that will be analyzed for the presence of water ice or water vapor, hydrocarbons and hydrated materials.

The spacecraft and Centaur are targeted to impact the moon’s south pole near the Cabeus region.

The exact target crater will be identified 30 days before impact, after considering information collected by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and observatories on Earth. (ANI)

Brooke Hogan polishing pole-dancing skills

London, June 19 (ANI): Brooke Hogan can certainly earn big bucks for a talent other than singing-pole dancing.

In an episode of her reality show ‘Brooke Knows Best’, the singer, her mother Linda and a pal have been shown while polishing their pole dancing skills.

The episode will show Brooke getting quickly at ease with the pole, as she displayed some raunchy moves pretty fast.

Brooke is the daughter of wrestling legend Hulk Hogan.

Her new album ‘The Redemption’ will be releasing next week.

According to British tabloid The Sun, her record has described it as a “pop wonderland with up-beat, sexy dance rhythms and hip-hop influences, all overlaid with Brooke’s signature voice.” (ANI)

Heather Graham finds stripping ‘inspiring’

London, May 29 (ANI): Actress Heather Graham finds stripping “inspiring”, and wants women to do the sexy act so that they feel good about themselves.

The stunner, who plays an exotic dancer in new comedy The Hangover, has confessed that her pole dancing preparation was easy because she’s had lessons before.

Graham hooked up with actress and stripper teacher Sheila Kelley for pole dancing classes, reports The Daily Express.

She reveals, “I had taken this female empowerment class and Sheila Kelley came in and talked about her classes. I had actually taken her classes because my friend taught one of them. She worked at the Mayor’s office and quit her job to become a pole-dancing instructor.

“For this film I went back and took some refresher courses. It’s a dance class but they teach you pole dancing moves and it reminded me how great it is… It’s for any kind of woman, women of all different ages and sizes.

“As a woman, it’s inspiring because any woman can feel sexy and you’re cheering each other on. You’re not doing it for like, ‘Oh, just give me a tip.’ Usually people wear shorts and a tank top or a bra and you just cheer each other on. You’re doing it to feel good about yourself and see other women feel good about themselves.” (ANI)

Coke pulls TV ad where women are seen as sexual toys for men

Melbourne, May 4 (ANI): Global soft drink giant Coca Cola has been forced to withdraw a television advertisement that suggests women should be available for sex whenever men want it.

According to a Herald Sun report, the Advertising Standards Bureau found the advertisement inappropriate, especially when children were watching television.

It was the second embarrassment in a month for Coke after it had to correct health claims in print ads featuring actor Kerry Armstrong.

The latest controversy erupted over a Coke Zero ad, titled “Break up as it should be”.

In the ad, a “hero” man who is breaking up with his girlfriend at a roadside cafe is suddenly surrounded by pole dancers.

His dumped girlfriend acknowledges the man doesn’t want to be with just one woman, then offers: “Just call me when you want to have fun.”

A series of complaints to the advertising watchdog argued the ad degraded women and promoted casual sex for men.

But Coke said the production, aimed at young men, was “an exaggerated look at a very common fantasy” and designed to be light-hearted and tongue-in-cheek.

“We certainly did not mean to cause offence,” Coke said in a statement to the bureau.

Coca-Cola spokesman Kelly Brooks said the company had taken complaints from the community very seriously and withdrawn the ad several weeks ago. (ANI)

Trulli leads Toyota double to clinch Bahrain GP pole

Sakhir, Bahrain – Jarno Trulli clinched pole position ahead of team-mate Timo Glock in a first Toyota one-two in qualifying Saturday for Sunday’s Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix. Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel, the winner in Shanghai last week, was third, ahead of Brawn GP’s Jenson Button, the overall leader.

World champion Lewis Hamilton provided a boost for McLaren-Mercedes with fifth place to start in the third row alongside Brawn GP’s Rubens Barrichello.

There was also improvement for Ferrari, still without a point this season, who had Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen eighth and 10th respectively.

Renault’s Fernando Alonso was seventh ahead of Massa, with Nico Rosberg in a Williams ninth, ahead of Raikkonen.

With the temperature at 38 degrees Celsius at the Bahrain International Circuit, Trulli clocked 1 minute 33.431 seconds to edge Germany’s Glock by 0.281 seconds for his fourth pole position and his first since the US Grand Prix in 2005.

“This is a great result for the team,” said the 34-year-old Italian, whose only Grand Prix victory came for Renault at Monaco in 2004.

“We have worked very hard for this, and I’m very happy. I feel very comfortable ahead of tomorrow’s race.”

Toyota, who have never won a Grand Prix, filled the first row in qualifying for the first time and earned their first pole since Ralf Schumacher was qualifying fastest at Suzuka, Japan in October 2005.

Glock said he was satisfied despite just being edged to what would have been a first pole.

“I was quite happy during qualifying. But then I made one mistake, although I don’t think it would have been good enough for pole. Jarno was just too good today,” he said.

BMW Sauber’s Robert Kubica and Nick Heidfeld meanwhile both failed to make the third and final qualifying stage as the team’s disappointing season continued, while Red Bull’s Mark Webber was a casualty in the first qualifying round.

The Australian – second in Shanghai last week – was held up by Germany’s Adrian Sutil in a Force India, and will start 19th in the 20-car field.

Button leads overall going into the fourth race of the season. The Briton, who won the opening two races in Australia and Malaysia and finished third in China, has 21 points, six ahead of team-mate Barrichello of Brazil.

Vettel and Glock both have 10 points, Webber is on 9.5 and Trulli on 8.5.

Brawn GP lead the constructors’ championship on 36 points, with Red Bull on 19.5 and Toyota on 18.5.(dpa)

Secret to Britney Spears’ fit body – pole dancing!

London, May 1 (ANI): The secret behind Britney Spears’ fit body has been revealed – pole dancing.

The 27-year-old star has installed an eight-foot metal pole in her 1,100 pound-a-night penthouse suite at London’s posh Dorchester hotel, when her Circus world tour begins its UK leg.

“Britney has a huge fan base in the UK and really wants her shows here to be a hit,” the Mirror quoted a source as saying.

“Pole-dancing is an excellent cardio and fat-burning workout, and Britney has had private classes in her studio gym in LA.

“She wants to keep up her exercise regime on tour. Luckily, the hotel was happy to accommodate her needs.

“She can swing around her pole while watching TV or listening to music. Climbing up it requires real core strength. It really is hard work.

“In addition, she’ll have a treadmill and stepper brought to her suite, as well as a sit-up machine. By the time Britney takes to the stage, her six-pack of old will be back!” the source added. (ANI)

Toyota and BMW looking for progress at Bahrain GP

Hamburg – The Toyota and BMW-Sauber Formula One teams are looking to challenge at the front of the grid in this weekend’s Bahrain Grand Prix in Sakhir after mixed starts to a so far unpredictable 2009 season.

Both teams will be hoping to leave the rain in Malaysia and China behind them and instead take on the challenge of heat and dust in the Arab Emirate.

Toyota will be the more confident of the two teams after Timo Glock managed a seventh-place finish in China on Sunday to lie fourth in the overall drivers’ standings, 11 points behind surprise leader Jenson Button of Brawn GP.

The German finished out of the points in ninth last year but is expecting better things this time around.

“Last year I was pretty unlucky in Bahrain because I had to back off with a small technical issue when I was sure I would score my first points for the team,” said Glock.

“But this season has started in a much better way compared to 2008 and I am confident I can continue to show that good performance.”

Toyota team-mate Jarno Trulli narrowly trails Glock in the overall standings but managed sixth in China, the same place he achieved last season in Bahrain.

“I am looking forward to racing in Bahrain after the tests we had there over the winter. Bahrain was the first chance I had to really test the TF109 in dry conditions and I knew immediately we had a competitive package, which has proved to be the case now the season has started,” said Trulli.

“In testing the car was strong in Bahrain so I have a good feeling for this weekend and I think we can be competitive.”

While Toyota can claim to have maintained competitiveness in China, it was another disappointing race for the fancied BMW outfit, with Nick Heidfeld only 12th, one place ahead of team-mate Robert Kubica.

BMW’s only points so far this season came in the rain-interrupted Malaysian GP, when Heidfeld finished second behind Button.

Kubica, who took his first career pole in Bahrain last season before finishing third in the race itself, said while he found the Bahrain circuit “not really challenging” he was still looking forward to racing there and finally getting some points on the board.

“The Bahrain International Circuit has a couple of long straights and three characteristically low-speed corners that require heavy braking,” said the Pole.

“Last year we performed quite well in Bahrain – after securing pole position in qualifying I managed to finish the race on the podium.”

BMW motorsport director Mario Theissen, meanwhile, said he hoped to bring the first major overseas stint of the season to a positive end before the F1 caravan moves to Europe for the Spanish GP.

“It also marks the end of the second set of back-to-back races within five weeks,” said Theissen.

“After our appearance in Shanghai we are now heading for another region that is important to BMW. For us as a manufacturer in the premium sector the Middle East is also a very significant market.” (dpa)

Billions of Pak taxpayers’ money misappropriated in 2005-06

Islamabad, Apr 16 (ANI): Pakistan’s Public Accounts Committee chief Nisar Ali Khan has said that the PAC had found a misappropriation of billions of rupees in 2005-06.

Taking part in a debate on the address of President Asif Ali Zardari to the joint session of parliament, Nisar said the PAC had dug out hundreds of cases in various government departments in which the nation’s money had been plundered.

He said a fountain, worth Rs 225 million, was installed in Karachi during Pervez Musharraf’s tenure, which consumed Rs 160,000 per day. Recently, the fountain had been stolen and millions of rupees of this poor nation had drained, he said.

The news quoted Nisar as saying that the fountain was ordered and inaugurated by former president Pervez Musharraf, but his signatures were not there on record.

Another important case was found in the Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDCL), which imported an LPG plant costing Rs 600 million.

Similarly, Nisar said, the PAC had learnt that Rs 4.8 billion were borrowed by the top echelon of the National Logistic Cell (NLC) from different banks and invested in stock markets. “This amount has totally vanished,” he said.

Nisar said it was astonishing to note that around 7,000 electricity poles were missing from the storerooms of Wapda. He said: “A single pole is so heavy that it requires a crane to be lifted; how could all these go missing?”

He said around 4,000 flats in Karachi were allocated on ownership basis to occupants in the previous term. He said these flats, according to an audit report, were worth Rs 500 billion.

Nisar said the PAC would reach out to all such people, who plundered the national wealth, irrespective of their posts and status. (ANI)

100-year-old tortoise gets fitness training in Vienna zoo

Vienna – Schurli, the giant tortoise, is the oldest inhabitant of the Vienna zoo. But despite his age of more than 100 years, the animal has started a fitness training programme.

The exercise regime is part of a research project conducted by scientists from the zoo and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem to learn about the animal’s visual and learning capabilities.

The male Seychelles giant tortoise is not the most animated creature, but when he notices his keeper Roland Halbauer approaching, he knows his training session is about to start.

Schurli lifts his 200 kilograms onto his sturdy legs and slowly moves towards his blue exercise ball, which is fixed to a long pole held by Halbauer.

As the shelled reptile gently pushes against the ball with his head, the trainer rewards him with an acoustic signal and a crunchy carrot.

The Vienna zoo, which is located in the park of the Habsburg’s imperial summer palace Schoenbrunn, also trains six additional giant tortoises.

“Many zoos are only now starting to train reptiles,” said Anton Weissenbacher, the zoo’s zoological director.

The additional movement adds variety to the animals’ life in captivity and helps them lead a more natural lifestyle.

“Giant tortoises normally cover several kilometres in order to get food,” Weissenbacher said.

In nature, the animals also take hours to reach shady spots to protect themselves from the sun.

The zoo keepers have found out that Schurli and his fellow tortoises can distinguish balls of different colours, although it is possible that they really react to different shades of brightness.

Israeli biologist Tamar Gutnick and Michael Kuba, a scientist at the zoo, have done research about these visual skills and have found out that the animals are able to comprehend new tasks.

Besides the tortoises, the keepers have started to train Caiman lizards, albeit for a different reason.

After one of the female olive-green creatures had taken to eating all the food of her fellow lizards, the animals are now being taught to react to balls so that they can be fed separately in the same terrarium. (dpa)