Coach says Bangladesh unlikely to make it to World Twenty20 Super Eight”s

St. Lucia (West Indies), May 4 (ANI): Bangladesh have virtually no chance of making the next stage of the Twenty20 World Cup tournament after Australia”s emphatic win against Pakistan here on Sunday.

Coach Jamie Siddons conceded as much ahead of his team’s match against the Australia in Barbados on Wednesday in the final Pool

Bangladesh would need to win by a huge margin to qualify for the Super Eights ahead of Pakistan, who the Australians defeated by 21 runs in the first game.

””I think it”s going to be near impossible for us to get through. It depends on the calculations – we”ll have to sit down and work all of that out in the next day or two and figure out how much we need to win by. It”s not going to be of any use winning and not have the right margin. We”re going to need a reasonable run rate, that”s for sure,”” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Siddons, as saying.

””If Australia score near 200 again, then forget it,”” added Siddons. (ANI)

New Zealand wary of Twenty20 opponents Zimbabwe

Wellington, May 4 (ANI): New Zealand is worried about their opponents Zimbabwe, who won against Australia and Pakistan in their own warm-up matches before a loss to Sri Lanka due to the Duckworth Lewis system in the Twenty20 World Cup.

New Zealand takes on Zimbabwe in their second competition match in Guyana tomorrow, and a win will assure them a spot in the final stages of the tournament, while a loss would not rule them out.

Black Caps captain Daniel Vettori said they were treating the game as a must-win and weren’t taking their opponents lightly.

“If you look at their warm ups games they were fantastic so we know we’re in for a fight. We have to go in their and own the game and we want to win it comprehensively and not worry about run rates,” Stuff.co.nz quoted Vettori, as saying.

If Zimbabwe wins against New Zealand then it would mean each team in Pool B had a win and a loss and the qualifying team would be chosen by run rate.

“There’s a little bit of familiarity but we know they’re a relatively new team for a lot of our guys. But they’ve got some performers who have done reasonably so I don’t think we can underestimate them but we”ve still got to go in thinking we can win,” Vettori said.

Vettori said Chigumbura’s batting in the middle order had been impressive and was the man they would target when he came in, Stuff.co.nz reports.

The right-hander smashed 49 from 35 balls in a warm-up against defending champions Pakistan around four days ago. (ANI)

Thorpe says he has no plans for competitive swimming again

Sydney, May 3 (ANI): Five-time Olympic swimming champion Ian Thorpe has shot down media reports that he will make a comeback to the sport in time for the 2012 London Olympics.

Thorpe, 27, retired from the pool in November 2006 after battling with motivational problems as well as illness and injury issues following the 2004 Athens Olympics.

Thorpe”s management team Grand Slam International released a statement today in which Thorpe denied News Ltd reports that Thorpe was eyeing a spot in Australia”s 4x100m relay at the London Games.

“I have no intention of returning to competitive swimming,” Thorpe said in the statement.

“My position at the media conference in 2006 announcing the discontinuation of my competitive swimming career has not changed. At that conference I said when asked about a return, that it was highly unlikely,” the Sydney Morning Herald further quoted him, as saying.

“I really do appreciate the well wishes regarding a possible return to competitive swimming.
“But as I have just said, it”s highly unlikely,” he said. (ANI)

Council calls for pool tenders

The Bega Valley Shire Council in the New South Wales South East is calling for tenders to run its public swimming pools.

The Council owns six pools in the Shire, but the Sapphire Aquatic Centre at Pambula is closed for upgrading.

Private companies operate the facilities, and the contracts for the other five pools are in their last year.

The Council’s Civil Assets Manager, Mark Canaider, says pools are important facilities in the community.

“The fact that a community our size can operate five or six swimming pools, albeit for summer, is an indication of just how important that particular recreational opportunity is to our community,” he said.

“I can assure you that council is very mindful of the role swimming plays in our broader community.”

Applications close April 14, and it is expected the contracts will be finalised in May.

For more, go to the South East News blog at http://bit.ly/dgL1SN

Petition mooted to boost hospital staffing

The former chairman of the Far West Area Health Service says unless more staff are employed at the local hospital, it will continue to have ongoing problems.

The hospital hydrotherapy pool was closed last week because of a lack of accredited physiotherapy staff to watch over clients.

Bill O’Neil says a shortage of trained physiotherapists has always been a problem in Broken Hill and will continue to be if something is not done about it.

“Until we get the powers to be to facilitate more people trained to be physiotherapists, we’re still going to have that same problem for years to come,” he said.

Fran McKinnon from the Broken Hill Health Council says she has raised the staffing issue with the Member for Murray Darling, John Williams.

“John’s been doing what he can, so we’ve got to decide whether it’s petition or deputations or whatever it is, we just need to force this issue through because it just has to happen,” she said.

“It’s just crazy that it be allowed to drag on.

“We’ll have to get to the stage where we get some petitions going and give John Williams a heap of petitions to take to Parliament and jump up and down on the Health Minister.”

Councillors urged to rethink road funding approach

The Shire of Cranbrook says Albany’s councillors need to be less aggressive when dealing with neighbouring shires over funding matters.

Shire president Doug Forrest says Albany’s councillors have threatened to go over the head of the Great Southern Regional Roads Group if they cannot secure a larger portion of state roads funding.

Albany currently gets 20 per cent of the $3.4 million pool available to the shires.

Mr Forrest says Albany needs to discuss its problems with Cranbrook and the other shires first before making threats.

“If you’re serious about communication with your neighbours, you don’t threaten them with legal action and threaten to sue them,” he said.

“You’d go and see them in good faith and give them an honest interpretation of what your position is and why you require more funding. You don’t go them and say, you’ve got a legal opinion that it’s unlawful to have a cap on funding and it should be discontinued.”

Mayor rallies for development funds

Bundaberg Regional Council says the Queensland Government needs to provide more funding assistance to build essential infrastructure.

A new $45 million grants program to help councils most in need will be available from July next year.

But Mayor Lorraine Pyefinch says the large size of the Bundaberg council means it will not be eligible for a share of that funding.

“If the Government is serious about supporting growth and development outside the south-east corner, then we need some assistance from the Government to achieve that,” she said.

“From our point of view, it’s the kind of funding that we need to see good, sustainable, managed growth in regional Queensland into the future.”

Councillor Pyefinch says without adequate Government funding, the council will not be able to build the necessary infrastructure to meet predicted growth.

“The pool of money available is very small when you’re looking at these large infrastructure projects,” she said.

“To have $45 million available is great but the feedback we’re getting at the moment is that councils our size really won’t qualify because that kind of money is going to be made available on a priority basis for the very small councils.”

Landslip threat forces gas tanks move

Landslips are affecting residents in three locations on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

The latest problem caused by the recent wet weather is below a service station on the Nambour connection road where a 15 metre-high retaining wall has collapsed.

Two large gas tanks near the edge of the slip have been removed.

Cracks began forming on five properties at Glen Con Court in Buderim last weekend where retaining walls collapsed and a pool was damaged.

Mooloolah residents are worried a large crack on the edge of Brandenburg Road may cause a retaining wall to collapse.

Yeppoon Hospital officially opens

The Premier has officially opened Yeppoon’s new 26-million dollar hospital.

The new facility has been taking patients since last month, and has an expanded emergency department and 22 in-patient beds.

Anna Bligh says Yeppoon now has one of the best hospitals for a town of its size and it allows for future growth.

“It has almost four times the number of emergency beds of the previous hospital, it has 22 inpatient beds, double the number of dental chairs,” she said.

“But it has extra room for further wings to be added in the future, as we see population grow in this very beautiful part of Queensland.

“It became operational on the 8th of February, just over five weeks ago.

“It has had 1047 patients through the emergency already and 124 patients have been admitted, and we’ve had more than 16-hundred outpatients sessions.

“So this community is using this service very well already and I think you can see how needed it was.”

Ms Bligh says the government is still negotiating with the Rockhampton Regional Council about funding for transforming the old hospital site on the Esplanade.

“We’re currently in discussions with the Rockhampton Regional Council to working through a process of demolition of the old hospital and then what exactly that open space would like like,” she said.

“I understand there are some discussions about a pool, that is the sort of thing that I’d certainly be interested in seeing a proposition put forward.

“This is something that we will work through systematically with the council.”

Acute accommodation crisis to ease

The Shire of Roebourne says the acute accommodation shortage in Karratha will ease with the awarding of a contract to build accommodation for 1,000 workers.

The State Government has selected the MAC Services Group to construct the workers camp which will also include a pool and gym.

The first stage of the project will provide more 200 beds for short term workers by the end of August.

Roebourne Shire President Nicole Lockwood says the development will ease the accommodation crisis in Karratha.

“An increase of this amount of beds at any one time is going to be a fantastic outcome.”

“Having another location to house people when we’re trying to build our city is fantastic.”

Ms Lockwood says the development is a win for the community.

“My understanding is at least 30 per cent of the facility will be set aside for housing and construction workers so not for the industry groups but actually for the town itself and the remainder could be used for the traditional fly-in fly-out workforce.”

Women lawmakers outperform male counterparts, says study

Washington, Sep.16 (ANI): A study conducted by Stanford University and the University of Chicago reaerchers has concluded that women lawmakers in Congress introduce more bills, attract more co-sponsors and bring home more money for their districts than their male counterparts do.

The study, accessed by Politico, examined the performance of House members between 1984 and 2004, and found that women delivered roughly nine percent more discretionary spending for their districts than men.

While there are obviously variables beyond gender – seniority, party affiliation, majority/minority status and the differing priorities of a freshman and a veteran lawmaker – the researchers say they’ve accounted for those in making their male-to-female comparisons.

The researchers also found that women introduced more legislation than men who served in their same districts, often hitting the ground running in their first terms.

“We find that, on average, women sponsor about three bills more per Congress per term than their male counterparts. They co-sponsor more bills than other members, and they also obtain more co-sponsors for their own bills,” said one of the researchers.

Since 1789, women have constituted just two percent of the total congressional population. The ratio of female to male representatives has increased in recent years, but the pace is still fairly glacial: Nearly 17 percent of House members are women today, compared with about 3 percent in 1979.

Researchers say the small number of female members may have something to do with their effectiveness. Women who run and win are likely the most politically ambitious and talented of their pool, having potentially overcome hurdles including voter bias and self-doubt about their ability to win.

Female candidates also tend to attract more challengers. Politically eligible women tend to doubt their ability to get elected and raise money more than men do, multiple studies have indicated.

Once women get to Capitol Hill, those hurdles may drive them to perform better, on average, than male counterparts who have faced a less contentious road. (ANI)

Victoria Police deny Indian bashing cover-up

Melbourne, Sep.16 (ANI): Victoria Police has denied they had a plan to limit publicity about the bashing of four Indian men outside a Melbourne pub on Saturday night.

Four men were arrested in relation to assault and affray, but they were released pending further investigations.

Police believe a fifth man may also have been involved in the bashing outside a pub at Epping in Melbourne’s east.

Details of the incident only emerged publicly today, prompting an outraged Indian media to claim Victoria Police had been involved in a cover-up.

Police said the Indian media were made aware of the incident via “other channels”.

Acting Senior Sergeant Glenn Parker said there was no cover-up, although he did admit the police media department would have known about the incident in the early hours of Sunday morning.

“Unfortunately, this type of incident occurs regularly. This is really treated no differently to any other event of this type. There has been no deliberate attempt to suppress it. It’s just part of normal procedure. It’s attracted more media attention than anticipated,” news.com.au quoted him, as saying.

According to the police, the four men were playing pool on Saturday night at a bar in High St, Epping, when a female hurled a racist remark at them.

The men left not long after but were followed into a car park by up to four males who were part of a larger group celebrating a birthday in the bar’s function room.

It has been alleged the Indian men were set upon and seriously assaulted by the group of males.

Police were called and arrested four males, who were interviewed in relation to assault and affray. ll four were released pending further investigations.

While only four men were arrested, one of the alleged victims told ABC Radio today that more than 70 people could have been involved.

He said the attackers didn’t use weapons, but racism was behind the incident.

“Definitely racism,” he said.

Police say that when the arrests were made, a group of about 15 men and women, who had been celebrating a birthday, directed racist abuse at the Indian men.

As the victims were escorted away by police, officers allege the larger group continued its “threatening behaviour and racist remarks”. (ANI)

Carrots are better than sticks when it comes to fostering cooperation

Washington, Sept 4 (ANI): Rewards have been found to be much more successful in promoting public cooperation rather than punishment, suggests a new study.

According to researchers, rewards robustly build compliance and cooperation and could help in developing solutions for thorny problems requiring the cooperation of large numbers of people to achieve a greater good.

“All of us engage in public goods games, on both large and small scales,” said David G. Rand, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard’s Program for Evolutionary Dynamics and lead author of the study.

“Climate change is a huge public goods game: If each person does his or her part to conserve energy and reduce CO2 emissions, it benefits us all.

“On a more local level, public goods games include volunteering on school boards, helping to maintain public facilities in your community, or cleaning up after yourself and doing your share of work at the office.

“In these types of domains, where people interact repeatedly with each other to solve a group social dilemma, our work suggests that rewards result in better outcomes than punishment,” he added.

Rand said that these rewards could change individuals’ behaviour and encourage cooperation without the destructive negative consequences that come with punishment.

During the study headed by Martin A. Nowak of Harvard’s Program for Evolutionary Dynamics, the researchers examined cooperation among 192 participants in a public goods game probing the fundamental tension between the interests of an individual and a group.

Over 50 rounds of interaction, each of four participants in a group would decide how much to contribute toward a common pool that benefited all four equally. Each participant was then able – at a cost to him or herself- to either reward or punish each of the three other subjects for their contributions to the group, or lack thereof.

As in real life, Rand said, study subjects tend to resent “free riders” who fail to contribute to a group yet reap the benefits of membership in it.

“But despite this anger at free riders, rewarding good behaviour is as effective as punishing bad behaviour for maintaining public cooperation and leads to better outcomes for the group. When both options are available, reward leads to increased contributions and payoff for the group, while punishment has no effect on contributions and leads to lower payoff for the group,” Rand added.

The study appears in journal Science. (ANI)

Britney and Jamie Lynn Spears show off hot bods on Miami holiday

Washington, Aug 1 (ANI): Britney and her sister Jamie Lynn Spears showed off their hot bikini bodies on Monday, while on Holiday in Miami.

The siblings, along with their kids and parents, had spent about an hour at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel pool Monday afternoon.

“They both looked to be in pretty good shape,” Us magazine quoted a witness as saying.

This is the first time that 18-year-old Jamie Lynn, who welcomed daughter Maddie in June 2008, has shown off her post-baby body.

“She had on a white, spangly top. A very little bikini!” said the witness.

The family, including Sean Preston, 3, and Jayden James, 2, “sat around the pool for about 20 minutes. Then Britney worked on her tan while Jamie Lynn took her daughter and her mom to a cabana on the beach.”

“They seemed pretty relaxed. Everyone was smiling,” said the witness. (ANI)

Robin Williams shaves body hair for ‘The World’s Greatest Dad’

London, Aug 31 (ANI): Actor Robin Williams has shaved his body hair for a particular scene in his new film ‘The World’s Greatest Dad’.

The comedian suffered embarrassment in 1991, when he was compared to a Yeti after stripping in the movie ‘The Fisher King’.

However, the ‘Flubber’ star is candid about his new role, which demanded him to briefly bare all to jump into a swimming pool.

“I shaved because if you don’t, it’s like animal rights issues,” the Daily Express quoted him as saying.

Recollecting his earlier film he added: “I did a nude scene in The Fisher King; it was Central Park, I was a homeless guy, so I was covered in dirt and really hairy and it was like, ‘Is that Bigfoot?’” (ANI)

Suspected Maoists kill two people in West Bengal

Sakhabanga Village (West Bengal), Aug 23(ANI): Two members of the Maoist Resistance Committee (MRC) in Sakhabanga village, 50 kilometres from Lalgarh in West Bengal’s Midnapore district were found dead on Sunday.

It is suspected that Maoists killed the two, who were active members of the recently formed committee to resist Maoist activities in the area.

Karan Murmu and Lal Murmu, went missing on Saturday night (August 22), were found dead in a pool of blood on Sunday with bullet wounds on their bodies. The two were active members of the MRC.

Rupali Murmu, wife of Karan Murmu said that she was worried when her husband, having gone for a walk after dinner, did not return home till midnight.

Murmu further said she had no knowledge on who would have killed her husband and his accomplice.

Meanwhile, Maoists have called for a 48-hour shutdown, beginning Monday in Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa, West Bengal and Chhattisgarh in protest against the arrests of two Maoists in Bihar on August 19. (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)

Appoint more Indians as directors in Malaysian firms, says social network

Kuala Lumpur, Aug.22 (ANI): Government companies and government-linked companies (GLCs) in Malaysia have been urged to appoint more Indians as directors.

According to a Tamil Nesan report, the Social Entrepreneurs Network (SeNet) has issued this appeal.

The Star quoted its chairman Madhu Marimuthu as saying that it was disappointing to see only a handful of Indians occupying positions of directors in companies when the talent pool in the community was vast.

Marimuthu said SeNet would submit a memorandum to the Prime Minister’s Department urging that eight to ten percent from the Indian community must be given jobs in the government sectors.

Indian representation in the government sector must be at all levels, he added. (ANI)

Alicia Silverstone loves to garden in the nude

New York, Aug 20 (ANI): American actress Alicia Silverstone has revealed that she loves to tend her garden in the nude.

Silverstone, 32, revealed to Health magazine that her affinity for getting naked probably started when she was doing her garden the first time.

“I’d be out there, and it would be scorching hot, so I would take off all of my clothes and garden. And then I would jump in the pool and swim-and I always get in the pool naked,” the New York Post quoted her as saying.

The actress further revealed that she used to spend a lot of time with actor Woody Harrelson, who also loves to get naked.

“I used to spend a lot of time with Woody Harrelson, and he’s not afraid to get naked,” she added. (ANI)

Holidaying Kelly Brook sizzles in skimpy orange bikini

London, August 20 (ANI): British model Kelly Brook gave onlookers an eyeful after sporting a skimpy orange bikini in Los Angeles.

The 29-year-old has been vacationing with rugby union footballer boyfriend Danny Cipriani.

Her eight-year junior lover purportedly lured the beauty into the pool before getting close and personal with her, reports the Sun.

Former ‘Strictly Come Dancing’ contestant Kelly recently revealed her secret to keep their passion alive between the two.

She said: “I make sure he is still interested by giving him really good sex.” (ANI)