E.On keeps options open on Italy nuclear tech-report

July 18 (Reuters) – Germany’s E.On (EONGn.DE) has still not decided what technology it would use for possible nuclear power plants in Italy, the head of its Italian unit, Klaus Schaefer, said in an interview with an Italian newspaper.

“We still haven’t taken a decision” on technology, Schaefer, who is chief executive of E.On Italia, told Il Sole 24 Ore in the interview, published on Sunday.

“We can count on lots of specific experience, with a variety of solutions in all the countries where we are operating,” he said.

Rival group Enel (ENEI.MI) of Italy and France’s EDF (EDF.PA) have already picked French EPR reactors and Schaefer did not exclude his company also using that.

“Nothing excluded, no limits,” he said.

Italy plans to revive nuclear energy, which was rejected by a public vote in 1987 after the Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine. But clashing political interests have delayed setting up a safety agency — an important step in the plans.

Schaefer said there were still key elements missing from the plans, including rules for competition for sites and guarantees on stability for regulation.

The nuclear safety agency, yet to be set up, is expected to define precise criteria for selecting sites and oversee construction and operation. [ID:nLDE66D0QP]

He added that E.On could start work on nuclear projects in Italy before Enel and EdF but added it was not important.

“We are in a marathon, not a 100 metre sprint,” he said.

He said the government’s target of laying the first stone within the current legislature which could run to 2013 was “a tougher objective than it was a year ago,” adding that lost time could be regained.

Schaefer said if all went well, the first nuclear power plant could be working five to seven years after the start of construction.

(Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Oddest book title of the year: ‘Crocheting Adventures with Hyperbolic Planes’!

London, March 26 (ANI): ‘Crocheting Adventures with Hyperbolic Planes’ has won the Diagram Prize, which rewards the oddest book title of the year.

Dr Daina Taimina, a mathematician at Cornell University in New York, who wrote the book, won with 42 percent of the public vote.

“I have never received a prize. My career has been quite bizzare so I do think that this award really reflects it – I am proud,” the Telegraph quoted Taimina as saying.

‘What Kind of Bean is this Chihuahua?’ by Tara Jansen-Meyer, and ‘Collectible Spoons of the Third Reich’ by James Yannes were also in the running.

Taimina confessed that she had not decided the title of her book.

She said: “Since I was expecting the publisher to come up with a great title for marketing purposes I told him to put whatever he wanted and this seemed very appropriate.

“We published a joint paper on crocheting on hyperbolic planes and he got all the emails.

“People gave him all the credit – the usual misconceptions of a woman not having a brain – but I thought that at least the crocheting credit could have been left to me. Well, I suppose now it is finally!”

Horace Bent, of The Bookseller magazine, the man behind the awards, said: “When the credit crunch began to bite British publishing, I feared oddly-titled books would suffer in a climate that was prompting publishers to focus on more bankable works – like frankly lamentable biographies of Z-list “celebrities” and those depressing white books with doleful children on the cover.

“But I am delighted that oddly-titled books proved recession-resistant, and I believe Crocheting Adventures with Hyperbolic Planes is a worthy champion.”

The first Diagram Prize was awarded to ‘Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Nude Mice’ in 1978. (ANI)

‘BB bosses have kept racism under wraps to avoid another Goody scandal’

London, Aug 21 (ANI): Big Brother’s hottest girl Noirin Kelly claims TV bosses have kept the ongoing racism and bullying on the show under wraps to avoid another Jade Goody scandal.

Kelly, who left BB last month, says Channel 4 scrapped the 24-hour live feed to prevent audience from seeing the ugly stuff going on in the show.

The Daily Star quoted Kelly as saying: “People have said n****r – but the public would never know. They only see what Big Brother wants them to see.

“They have the freedom to do whatever they want. So many things have been covered up.”

Channel 4 bosses had been making all efforts to make this season of Big Brother the best ever but the revelations made by the Irish beauty may ruin their plans.

The hottie from Dublin said: “I used the word n****r speaking about myself – but the producers never said anything to me because I am black.

“But my boyfriend Isaac said it once about me as a joke and he was instantly dragged to the diary room.

“Channel 4 has become so PC that they are killing the show. Big Brother has become too safe.

“It’s like a soap opera rather than a reality show. In life there’s racism, there’s sexism and there’s conflict. Seeing how people deal with that is what makes for interesting TV.

“Fans want to see the housemates have rows and they want to see how they resolve them. They don’t want to see Big Brother butting in all the time and trying to play God.”

Kelly alleged that the 23-year-old Rodrigo Lopes was the biggest bully on the show.

“That boy is the biggest bitch and biggest bully in there,” she said.

“He is fav-oured in the way the show is edited.

“It’s supposed to be a reality show yet there’s nothing real,” she added.

However, a Channel 4 spokesman said: “The nightly highlights shows are a balanced and fair representation of events in the house and the viewers choose the winner by public vote.” (ANI)

Eurovision rejects Georgia’s ‘anti-Putin’ song

London, Mar 11 (ANI): Organisers of Eurovision Song Contest in Moscow have rejected Georgia’s entry because it “pokes fun” at Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

Apparently, the disco-funk song, We Don’t Wanna Put In, is controversial, and it is against the competition’s rules to allow political content in entries.

“No lyrics, speeches, gestures of a political or similar nature shall be permitted,” The BBC quoted a contest spokesperson, as saying.

This year’s Eurovision song contest is to be held on May 12 and Georgia has been given until March 16 to “either rewrite the lyrics of the song, or to select another song for the contest”.

The song was chosen by a public vote and jury, and was due to be performed by female trio 3G along with male vocalist Stephane.

The song, which has a distinct 1970s feel, contains the chorus: “We don’t wanna put in, the negative move, it’s killin’ the groove.” (ANI)

10,000 pounds in gold for videos of people performing naked

London, Feb 20 (ANI): The famous TV show ‘You’ve Been Framed’ has been paying people for funny videos for a long time, and now a new Internet competition has promised to do the same, but for the naked kind.

The competition set up by World Nude Day organisers has offered a payment of almost 10,000 pounds in gold for videos showing people doing their everyday antics minus their clothes.

The entries so far are of a gymnast, naked female footballers, stripped burger bar workers, starkers snowboarders, and a group of babes filming themselves flying an aeroplane naked.

Officials say that it’s all about having a laugh in your birthday suit, not making an X-rated clip.

“World Nude Day is about setting yourself free,” the Sun quoted the officials as saying.

“It’s about nude, not lewd. It’s about having fun with your clothes off,” they added.

The worldnudeday.com competition ends on March 31, and the top 10 global entries chosen by the official judges will then go into a final, which will go to a public vote. (ANI)

Is Leona Lewis planning to miss Brit Awards?

London, Feb 18 (ANI): British pop star Leona Lewis is reportedly planning to shun the Brit Awards after she failed to get any major nominations despite having several hits in her kitty.

According to sources, Lewis has turned down the invite as a mark of protest.

Lewis is not in contention for any awards at the ceremony, but her song ‘Better in Time’ has been shortlisted for the Best British Single because unlike the other categories, a public vote will decide the winner.

The former X factor winner flew in to Britain from America with boyfriend Lou Al-Charma at the weekend and was expected at the Brits.

But sources say she has now pulled out of attending the awards bash at London’s Earls Court.

“Leona is making a stand and is not going,” the Mirror quoted a source, as saying.

“She’s more likely to be curled up on the sofa with her boyfriend Lou in Hackney than to be getting glammed up for the Brits.

“She may even jet out somewhere on holiday.

“Her view is, ‘What’s the point of getting her glad-rags on if the chances of being recognised on her own soil are slim to none?” Well we’d never turn down a chance to get our glad rags on but we see where she’s coming from. And now it’s up to us lot to save the day,” the source added. (ANI)

Oliver! to become biggest-selling show in West End history

Washington, Jan 11 (ANI): The new production of Oliver is set to become the most successful show in West End history, with record-breaking advance ticket sales of 15 million pounds.

It opens at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London on Wednesday and stars Rowan Atkinson in the role of Fagin.

Sir Cameron Mackintosh’s latest revival of Lionel Bart’s musical, based on Charles Dickens’ novel Oliver Twist, is heavily booked until the end of July, with thousands of people paying up to 60 pounds for a ticket.

It is becoming the fastest-selling West End show of all time, a record previously set by the stage adaptation of Dirty Dancing, which opened in 2006 on advance sales of 12 million pounds.

Sir Cameron said that he was ‘thrilled’ that his latest production of Oliver! had broken all previous box-office records for advance sales.

“It is a wonderful story and Lionel’s music is as intoxicating and timeless as it was nearly 50 years ago when the show first opened. It is by far the most ambitious and spectacular West End show I have ever put on,” the Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

Oliver! has gained a lot of attention since last year’s broadcast of the BBC One talent show, I’d Do Anything!, in which a panel of judges including Andrew Lloyd Webber, Denise Van Outen and Barry Humphries – the actor and comedian who played Fagin in Sir Cameron’s previous production of Oliver! – picked three boys, Gwion Jones, Harry Stott and Laurence Jeffcoate, to share the lead role.

A public vote in the show’s final episode saw Jodie Prenger chosen to play role of the ill-fated Nancy in Sir Cameron’s new 4.5 million pound production, which is directed by Rupert Goold and choreographed by Matthew Bourne. (ANI)