Meet Prince Charles and Camilla, the ‘wedding planners’!

London, Sept 20 (ANI): Prince Charles and wife Camilla are turning wedding planners and “loaning out” their country retreat of Highgrove House to wannabe brides and grooms.

And included in the package will be the royal couple’s shared “expertise”.

Like Charles and Camilla did at their Windsor wedding four years ago, couples will be encouraged to “keep it simple”, say reports.

As per rumours, the first pair to enjoy a “Charles and Camilla wedding” are TV babe Jenni Falconer and her actor fiancĂ© James Midgley, reports The Daily Star.

A royal source said: “Obviously with it being their house they would want control of the event. But they also recognise what a great opportunity it would be to showcase their home.

“Highgrove is an absolutely fantastic building and would make a wonderful venue for a wedding and reception.”

The nine-bedroom country house on a 37-acre estate near Tetbury, Gloucestershire, was bought for Charles in 1980.

A source said: “Charles is hugely proud of Highgrove. It’s a wonderful property and he has spent thousands of pounds on the gardens and grounds. I’m sure by holding weddings there Charles would take great pleasure being the host.

“And he could use them to promote the Duchy Originals organic products he’s involved with.” (ANI)

Terrorism a by-product of Pak’s past mistakes: Zardari

London, Sep. 19 (ANI): President Asif Ali Zardari has revealed that extremism was a by-product of Pakistan’s past mistakes and was deliberately created during the 1980s.

He said the employment of a liberal policy encouraged religious fanaticism and achieved of certain strategic objectives of terror perpetrators.

“What we are witnessing today is the outcome of that policy of the 80′s and even earlier.The policy of using religious extremism as an instrument of war. We in Pakistan have paid a very heavy price for this policy,” The News quoted Zardari, as saying.

Addressing a gathering at London’s International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS), Zardari pointed out that militants and militancy were not created in a vacuum; they have been the product of a deliberate policy to fight the rival ideology.

The free world adopted a novel strategy that was based on the exploitation of religion to motivate Muslims around the world to wage jehad, he added.

Furthermore, Zardari pointed out that the strategy may have worked well but some serious mistakes were also made as the world abandoned Afghanistan in a hurry and no thought was given to its stability after the withdrawal of foreign forces.

“After the retreat of foreign forces, Afghanistan was abandoned and left at the mercy of the warlords and the jehadis…Pakistan has suffered more than others. For decades we had to host and continue to host millions of Afghan refugees,” he said. (ANI)

Robbie Williams moving Down Under?

London, Sep 16 (ANI): It seems that Robbie Williams is shifting bag and baggage to Australia, all thanks to his ladylove Ayda Field.

The singer has revealed that he is searching for a farm or beachfront retreat Down Under because of his girlfriend.

Robbie divulged the details in an interview on Australia’s biggest breakfast radio show on station 2DayFM, which is being guest-hosted by Dannii Minogue.

The ‘Feel’ singer-who is making a storming comeback with new single ‘Bodies’, out on October 12-even quizzed the Aussie beauty about dealing with jetlag.

“Ayda told me she had kind of a psychic feeling she’d end up in Australia,” The Sun quoted Rob as saying.

“I’m thinking of coming down there. I have been looking for places out in the outback, maybe a farm,” he added.

Robbie has recently moved back to Blighty, and the dodgy climate is already forcing him into Aussie estate agencies. (ANI)

Monk, 88, charged with sex attacks on two women in UK

London, 22 (ANI): An 88-year-old monk has been accused of sexually assaulting two women.

Father Luke McNally from Cistercian Sancta Maria Abbey at Nunraw East Lothian allegedly attacked both since 2004.

However, he hasn’t yet appeared in court to face the charges, as he is presently suffering from poor health conditions and is under doctor’s observation.

Meanwhile, it is not certain if the two women who made allegations against Father McNally were visitors to the monastery’s guesthouse.

A spokesman for Sancta Maria Abbey refused to comment, reports the Sun.

The monks give advice to recovering alcoholics and addicts who come to the guesthouse.

People from different places in the world like South Africa, Latvia, Australia and Switzerland come to the monastery for a spiritual retreat too. (ANI)

Elton John heads off to St. Tropez for holiday

London, Aug 19 (ANI): Brit singer-songwriter Elton John has followed in the footsteps of other stars, and headed off to St. Tropez for a holiday.

John, 62, has been busy with his shows in Las Vegas, and it is only now that he has been able to join his partner David Furnish, who has been at the posh French resort since last month, reports the Mirror.

The singer, who is taking a break before he kicks off a Canadian tour next month, was seen heading for the beach as soon as he got there.

Other celebrities who recently visited the summer celeb retreat were Jack Nicholson, Lily Allen, and Kate Moss. (ANI)

George Clooney ‘declares war’ on peeping paparazzo in Italy

Washington, Aug 15 (ANI): George Clooney is planning to sue a paparazzo, who allegedly climbed the wall of his Lake Como retreat in Italy and took snaps of a topless 13-year-old girl changing in one of the star’s guest bedrooms.

The photographer also reportedly took shots of Clooney and his girlfriend Elisabetta Canalis enjoying private moments in the yard of his estate, reports Contactmusic.

The Hollywood hunk is also planning to take legal action against the two magazines that bought and published the pictures.

In a statement, Clooney said, “We’re suing two magazines and a photographer. I don’t know about the law in the United States but in Italy it’s illegal for photographers to climb over my wall and to take long lens pictures of a 13-year-old girl in her bedroom. I draw the line of privacy at that.” (ANI)

Seals quickly respond to gain and loss of habitat under climate change

Washington, July 10 (ANI): A new study has indicated that seals can quickly respond to gain and loss of habitat under climate change.

The study was conducted by an international research team, including post-doctorate Dr Mark de Bruyn and collaborators from the US, South Africa and Italy, led by Professor Rus Hoelzel from the School of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Durham University.

It revealed that Southern Elephant seals responded rapidly to climate and habitat change and established a new breeding site thousands of kilometres from existing breeding grounds.

The scientists found that when the Antarctic ice sheets of the Ross Sea Embayment retreated in the Holocene period 8,000 years ago, elephant seals adopted the emergent habitat and established a new population which flourished.

DNA sequences from the ancient remains of seals from the now extinct Antarctic colony showed high levels of genetic diversity, probably due to the very large population size sustained there.

According to Professor Rus Hoelzel, “We’ve shown how a highly mobile marine species responded to the gain and loss of new breeding habitat.

“The new habitat was quickly adopted, probably because seals migrate annually into Antarctic waters to feed. However, when the ice returned and the habitat was lost, only a small proportion returned to the original source population. The Antarctic population crashed and much diversity was lost,” he said.

This habitat was released after the retreat of the grounded ice sheet in the Ross Sea Embayment 7,500-8,000 years ago, and is within the range of modern foraging excursions from the Macquarie Island colony.

Using ancient mtDNA and evolutionary models, the research team tracked the population dynamics of the now extinct colony and the connectivity between this and modern breeding sites.

The team found clear signs of rapid expansion in the new colony 8,000 years ago.

This was followed by directional migration away, coupled with a loss of diversity 1,000 years ago, when the sea ice is thought to have expanded.

The data suggest that the new colony seals came initially from Macquarie Island, and that some returned there, but in much smaller numbers, when the new colony habitat was lost 7,000 years later.

“The seals that discovered the new breeding site had things good, because food was abundant and nearby, however when the ice returned, the new colony collapsed and only a few seals made it back to their original home,” Hoelzel said. (ANI)

Neverland won’t become a grieving place for Jacko fans

London, July 7 (ANI): Late Michael Jackson’s beloved Neverland ranch is not going to become a grieving mecca for his fans, reveals an insider.

The real estate firm overseeing the 2,700-acre ranch has already received bids from several billionaires, and even turned down a 65million pounds offer to develop the property.

“All the offers are from individual billionaires. Neverland is not going to be sold to a corporation and become a company retreat,” The Daily Express quoted a senior executive at Colony Capital as saying.

Colony became Neverland’s joint owner with the Jackson estate in 2008, when it bought the 15million pounds debt on the property, for saving the superstar from losing his home.

However, earlier, wealthy neighbours, who include actress Bo Derek and musician David Crosby, have vigorously opposed any development in the area. (ANI)

Military historian uncovers ‘Band of Brothers’ falsehood

Washington, July 5 (ANI): A military historian has denied that Easy Company of the 101st Airborne Division was the first to enter Adolf Hitler’s Berchtesgaden mountain retreat near the end of World War II.

Dr. John C. McManus insists that in 1992 book “Band of Brothers”, Stephen E. Ambrose incorrectly attributed Berchtesgaden’s capture to another Army unit: Easy Company of the 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.

He said that it was actually 7th Infantry Regiment that first took Berchtesgaden.

“Ambrose just made the mistake of taking the Easy Company guys at face value and not corroborating their stories with actual unit records,” writes McManus in his new book “American Courage, American Carnage: 7th Infantry Chronicles: The 7th Infantry Regiment’s Combat Experience, 1812 Through World War II.”

McManus said that his intent was not to impugn Ambrose’s reputation as a historian.

“I have great respect for Stephen Ambrose’s work and was definitely influenced by him,” he said.

“We all make mistakes, and I just wanted to help set the record straight,” he added.

The 7th Infantry has been involved in some of the America’s most pivotal and memorable battles.

McManus’s new book is a prequel to the first instalment in the 7th Infantry Chronicles series, published in June 2008 under the title “The 7th Infantry Regiment: Combat in an Age of Terror, the Korean War through the Present.”

It covered the regiment’s involvement in battles from the Korean War through Iraq. (ANI)

The A to Z of UK leadership’s gravy train revealed

London, May 9 (ANI): British MPs have put in claims for items from the common to the bizarre. Now, The Sun has presented their own ABC list of greed.

A is for AGA: A Tory charged 160 pounds for his annual Aga service.

B is for BREAD BIN: Labour backbencher claimed for a 20 pounds one in 2007.

C is for CAT FOOD: One animal-loving female Conservative MP claimed 78p for two tins of Cesar Chicken and Turkey pet food and 3.69 pounds for Iams Senior.

D is for DYSON: Animal vacuum cleaner, 299.99 pounds, claimed by a meticulous Lib Dem MP in 2005.

E is for ELEPHANT LAMPS: Two for 134.30 pounds, bought by well-known Tory front-bencher and EYELINER: 2.50 pounds, from Boots, bought by female Lib Dem in 2005.

F is for FARROW AND BALL PAINT: Charged by a Tory shadow minister as part of a 1,775 pounds interior house painting claim for his home in the country.

G is for GINGER CRINKLE BISCUITS: 67p, bought by a peckish Labour backbencher in 2007.

H is for HORSE MANURE: One particularly wealthy Tory MP charged 10 pounds for a bag of manure for his country retreat.

I is for IKEA CARRIER BAG: 5p, claimed by a Labour MP in his Scottish constituency and ICE CUBE TRAY: 1.50 pounds, bought by a former Labour Cabinet minister from M and S in 2008.

J is for JAFFA CAKES: 1.60 pounds for two packs, charged by an outspoken junior minister in 2004 and JELLIED EELS: ÂŁ1.31, claimed by Essex-based MP.

K is for KIT KAT: Bought from the minibar of a central London hotel by Labour minister Hazel Blears.

L is for LOO SEAT: John Prescott bought a pair in the space of a year for his constituency home.

M is for MAKE-UP MIRROR: 19.95 pounds, by Revlon, bought from John Lewis by a middle-aged female Labour MP and

MOLES: Tory grandee asked 35 pounds a quarter for a mole catcher at his country pile.

N is for NEEDLEPOINT RUG: Millionaire MP Barbara Follett claimed 528.75 pounds for cleaning and repair of the ornate Chinese floor covering. She was granted 300 pounds.

O is for ODD JOBS: A Lib Dem frontbencher claimed for 77 pounds paid for a handyman to fix a rope on his swinging chair and other small jobs.

P is for PIZZA WHEEL: 3 pounds, bought from a Bodum shop in Oxfordshire by Tory backbencher.

Q is for QUICHE DISH: Part of a 110-piece dinner set bought on eBay for 155 pounds by a Labour backbencher’s wife.

R is for RATS: A well-heeled Labour MP claimed 199 pounds a quarter for visits from Rentokil to deal with a rat and mouse infestation at her London home.

S is for SHAMPOO: 1.65 pounds, claimed by a balding Labour backbencher in 2007.

T is for TAMPAX: Two packs at 1.11 pounds each, claimed by a male Conservative MP who lost his seat in 2005.

U is for UTENSILS: Potato peeler, 4.50 pounds, claimed by a member of the Tory front bench.

V is for VILEDA SUPERMOP: 4.99 pounds, claimed by a moustachioed Labour MP in 2005.

W is for WEED KILLER: 3.49 pounds, from Focus DIY, bought by a Labour MP and part-time handyman.

X is X-RATED MOVIES: Ordered by Home Secretary Jacqui Smith’s husband Richard, two for 10 pounds.

Y is for YUCCA PLANT: 9.99 pounds from Homebase, bought by a home-loving Lib Dem member for his constituency home.

Z is for ZANUSSI OVEN: 337.18 pounds, bought by a knighted Conservative MP from B and Q in 2007. (ANI)

Martha’s Vineyard prepares for possible Obama vacation

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Though the White House says President Obama and his family have “no plans” to vacation on Martha’s Vineyard this August, businesses on the island for the rich and famous are preparing for a possible “First Family” visit.

Well-connected residents of Martha’s Vineyard, a seashore paradise, say President Obama has rented a home in the East Chop neighborhood of Oak Bluffs — a town on the island’s northeastern shore that is rich in African-American history.

Notable black Americans have owned homes in Oak Bluffs, including writer Dorothy West, former Massachusetts Sen. Edward Brooke, and New York Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr., the first African-American congressman from the East Coast since Reconstruction.

Other celebrities, including Spike Lee and Oprah Winfrey, have been frequent guests in the island community, Fox News reports.

Oak Bluffs is gearing up for Washington royalty as the Obamas’ popularity on the island is palpable.

Art galleries lining Vineyard Haven’s main street are adorned with paintings of the president. The Crocker House Inn is arranging a Michelle Obama “welcome bag” filled with island delicacies and local flowers. And Mocha Mott’s coffee shop is brewing a special roast called “Mochabama” — a blend of black and white chocolates, store owner Tim Dobel told FOXNews.com.

“His visit would be great for business,” said Andrew Gilmore, a worker at the island’s landmark retail store, The Black Dog.

Martha’s Vineyard Chamber of Commerce executive director Nancy Gardella could not confirm that the president will be staying here this summer, but said “people are definitely talking about it.”

Gardella said she is working to create a Web site where islanders can post activity suggestions for the first family, such as a kayaking trip out to Cape Poge in Chappaquiddick or a trip to the island’s most popular ice cream store.

“The vineyard has a long history of presidential hospitality, and we would be thrilled to welcome the president and his family,” she said.

Bill and Hillary Clinton made several trips to Martha’s Vineyard in the 1990s, often staying at friends’ homes in Edgartown.

Though the island has an eclectic mix of people, Gardella and others said Martha’s Vineyard has long appealed to the rich and famous because “you can walk around without having a shave and nobody cares.”

While residents express excitement over a possible presidential visit, the question most whispered in local taverns is: From whom might Obama be renting a vacation home?

“No oyster knife has cracked that one open just yet, but all bets are on Ron Davenport, Wayne Budd, or Charles Ogletree,” said a local businessman, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Obama, who does not own a vacation home, visited Martha’s Vineyard last August to attend a campaign fundraiser at the waterfront home of Ron Davenport — chairman of Pittsburgh-based Sheridan Broadcasting Corp., the largest African-American-owned communications network in the United States.

The president has stayed at the Oak Bluffs home of Harvard Law professor Charles Ogletree — a close confidant — on several occasions, beginning in 2004 after the Democratic National Convention in Boston. Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett also has a home in Oak Bluffs.

Planned visit or not, residents say the buzz over an Obama retreat is a boost to the island’s economy. (ANI)

Italy’s elegant Forte dei Marmi still lures the jet set

Forte dei Marmi – At the turn of the century, the Tuscan coastal town of Forte dei Marmi became hugely popular with artists, aristocrats and intellectuals from all over Europe.

Nowadays, the “beautiful people” still flock here to spend their holidays among the pine trees. In downtown Forte dei Marmi, the fashionable CafĂ© Versilia on the Piazza Garibaldi was a popular haunt for famous cultural names such as English writer Aldous Huxley, Italian poet Gabriele d’Annunzio or German author Thomas Mann. The latter allegedly based the character of the sorcerer, Cipolla, in his 1929 novella Mario and Magician on someone he met on the premises.

The tranquil resort on the attractive Versilia coast continues to lure an immaculately-clad jet set and remains a byword for elegance. Guests sip a glass of prosecco under the linen sunshades which line the far-reaching golden sands.

The beach bars are abuzz in the summer months, competing for attention alongside an extensive range of water sport activities and an ambitious cultural programme. The main beach stretches five kilometres between the rivulets of Fiumetto in the south and Cinquale to the north.

The name Forte dei Marmi translates as The Fortress of the Marble and the first settlers in this swampy area were dealers in the glossy white rock whose use in architecture goes back to classical Greek times.

In the 16th century, a certain Michelangelo Buonarotti, the Renaissance all-round genius commonly known only by his first name, was commissioned by Pope Leopold X. to draw up plans for the road to connect the marble quarries at Massa and Carrara in Apennine Mountains with the coast.

The artist set to work and both the road and a 300-metre along the pier were built so that the prized stone could be hauled aboard sailing ships. Today both locals and tourists gather at the spot to admire the spectacular sunsets.

A century later, the resort began to attract fishermen, farmers and quarry workers and it was in 1788 under the aegis of Grand Duke Leopold I that the town acquired its most notable landmark, the red brick fort in the main square “Il Fortino.”

Tourism in Forte dei Marmi only began to boom after World War II when wealthy Italian industrialists chose it as a summer retreat. Today the “Fortino” is home to the Museum for Satire and Caricature and visitors can admire exhibits dating back to antiquity as well as contemporary works. For those who want more there is even a specialised multimedia archive on the topic.

This town of around 8,500 residents – known to its admirers as “Forte” – offers an unusually rich tableau of cultural activities. There are numerous galleries and the town is a useful springboard for visits throughout Tuscany. Lucca, Florenz and Pisa are only a short ride away by local train.

There are plenty of chic cafes to visit in the central Forti and the town offers a wide range of hotel accommodation to suit all budgets. Four-star hotels line the promenade behind a fringe of oleander and palm trees while the more reasonably-priced establishments are generally found in the centre or on side streets.

The nearby Apennines offers all manner of sporting pursuits such as hiking and climbing tours while at the seaside windsurfers and kite surfers will find plenty to keep them occupied. A fine way of seeing Forti is from the saddle of a bicycle since in contrast to most places in Italy, the town has an extensive network of cycle paths. (dpa)

Taliban will be back, Buner retreat only a tactical move: Pak military analyst

Islamabad, Apr.25 (ANI): While the Pakistan Government may now expect international pressure on it to ease a bit following reports of the Taliban retreating from the Buner region of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), experts believe that the move is only tactical, and it is almost certain that they would come back.

“It’s a tactical move, these kinds of movements make tactical retreats.But they are not prepared to surrender their weapons or submit to state authority. They’ll be back.” The Telegraph quoted Lahore based military analyst, Hasan Askari Rizvi, as saying.

The Taliban spokesperson Muslims Khan had said following orders from their leaders the Taliban is moving out of Buner, however, it is still unclear whether the extremists have genuinely left the region, or they would just melt into the local population, by stopping their armed patrols.

Concerns were raised across the world about the Taliban inching closer to Islamabad after they moved into Buner, just 60 miles away from the federal capital.

The United States, in particular, has expressed fears of Pakistan falling into the hands of the insurgents.

Expressing fears about Pakistan being taken over by the insurgents, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen said: “We’re certainly moving closer to the tipping point where Pakistan could be overtaken by extremists.”

In the recent past America has continuously blamed Pakistan for its lack of capability and willingness to tackle the surge of the Talibani extremists.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s had also said that the Pakistan Government was basically abdicating to the Taliban and other extremists. (ANI)

Hamilton surprised over Ron Dennis’s exit from McLaren

Beijing, Apr.18 (ANI): Lewis Hamilton has expressed surprise over the exit of Ron Davis from Formula One, but was not disappointed.

“I wasn’t disappointed,” said Hamilton. “I was surprised as I hadn’t heard about it. I was just as surprised as the rest of my team. Of course, Ron has been a huge force in supporting my life and he still plays a key role in that,” the Daily Express quoted hamilton as saying after he had set the fastest time during first practice in China.

Dennis, 61, who built the McLaren team into the giant it is today, has stepped aside to run the company’s new independent automotive group.

“It can only be positive for him. He loves a challenge,” said Hamilton of Dennis’s move.

Asked if he welcomed the decision, Hamilton said: “I’m not going to fight it, am I?”

Hamilton and the team’s now-sacked sporting director Dave Ryan lied to race stewards in Australia – and in Malaysia – over the same incident. Dennis’s retreat from F1 duties could make things easier for the team, called to answer charges of fraudulent conduct by the FIA’s World Motor Sports Council on April 29. (ANI)

The Edge lands in Malibu property fuss with neighbours

Washington, April 18 (ANI): U2 guitarist The Edge has landed in a dispute with his celebrity neighbours in Malibu due to his home development plans.

The 47-year-old, born as David Evans, had hoped to put up five homes on a hill on top of a seaside town.

But his plans have gathered an angry thumbs down from Serra Retreat locals, such as Kelsey Grammer and James Cameron, who fear the building would take its toll on the local environment.

“The downside of this is a permanently scarred mountainside for the benefit of a very few that for many years all will view, Contactmusic quoted Malibu councillor Jefferson Wagner as telling the Los Angeles Times.

“For somebody so revered even to be orchestrating this type of development in such a sensitive area is hypocritical,” he added.

The rocker’s rep, Jim Vanden Berg, on the other hand, said that efforts were being made to make sure the development would “create a sense of place that respects the environment (and) architecture that will stand the test of time.” (ANI)

Kristen Bell wedded to “You Again”

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Kristen Bell will star in the comedy “You Again,” playing a young woman trying to stop her brother’s wedding to her onetime nemesis.

After finding out her brother is marrying the girl who made her high school years a living hell, the main character tries to find a way to show her brother the fiancee’s true colors.

Andy Fickman (“Race to Witch Mountain”) is directing the film for Walt Disney Pictures. Moe Jelline wrote the script.

Bell’s deal puts her back in business with Disney, for whom she stars in the romantic comedy “When in Rome,” which will be released in August.

The actress, whose TV work has included “Veronica Mars,” “Heroes” and “Gossip Girl,” recently wrapped Universal’s comedy “Couples Retreat” with Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau and Jason Bateman.

(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)

Swiss architect Zumthor wins coveted Pritzker

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

‘COMMANDING PRESENCE’

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Police probe deadly shooting at Korean Christian retreat

Los Angeles – Police in southern California Wednesday were investigating a brutal shooting spree in which one person was killed and three injured at a secluded retreat operated by a Korean-based Christian group.

The Los Angeles Times reported that the suspect in the late Tuesday killings was a 69-year-old man named John Chong who was known around the retreat centre as “Uncle”. Police said that he first killed a woman and injured her husband in their bungalow and then went to another house on the property, where two residents succeeded in fighting him off.

The incident occurred at the Kkottongnae Retreat Camp, near the city of Temecula about 140 kilometres southeast of Los Angeles. Kkottongnae, which is run by the Congregation of the Sisters of Jesus, means “flower village” in Korean and is a Christian social service organization founded in Korea. The camp helps orphans and the homeless – some of whom were staying at the quiet mountain retreat. (dpa)

Police probe deadly shooting at US retreat

Los Angeles, April 9 (DPA) Police in southern California Wednesday were investigating a brutal shooting spree in which one person was killed and three injured at a secluded retreat operated by a Korean-based Christian group.

The Los Angeles Times reported that the suspect in the late Tuesday killings was a 69-year-old man named John Chong who was known around the retreat centre as ‘Uncle’.

Police said that he first killed a woman and injured her husband in their bungalow and then went to another house on the property, where two residents succeeded in fighting him off.

The incident occurred at the Kkottongnae Retreat Camp, near the city of Temecula about 140 km southeast of Los Angeles.

Kkottongnae, which is run by the Congregation of the Sisters of Jesus, means ‘flower village’ in Korean and is a Christian social service organisation founded in Korea. The camp helps orphans and the homeless – some of whom were staying at the quiet mountain retreat.

1 dead, 3 wounded in California Korean Christian retreat shooting

TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA: A gunman opened fire at a Korean Christian retreat in Southern California Tuesday, killing one person and wounding three
others, authorities said.

The gunman was believed to be among the injured at the Kkottongnae Retreat Camp. Investigators were unsure what prompted the attack, sheriff’s spokesman Dennis Gutierrez said.

“We have some nuns that are very distraught,” Gutierrez added. He said at least two of the victims were critically injured. A nursing supervisor at the Inland Valley Regional Medical Center near the retreat said she had no information on any of the victims.

Police and emergency crews converged on the rural area off Highway 79 after receiving reports after 7 p.m. that a gunman had shot his wife, said Mario Lopez, a spokesman with the California Highway Patrol. He said one person was dead when they arrived and the other three were hospitalized.

Law enforcement officers interviewed people at what appeared to be a triage center for injured victims, but Gutierrez said the language barrier was making it difficult to get all the facts. He said investigators believe all the victims are over age 40.