7.7 magnitude quake strikes Sumatra

A major earthquake of 7.7 magnitude struck off the coast of Aceh on the Indonesian island of Sumatra on Wednesday triggering panic and power blackouts, although a tsunami alert was later lifted.

Neighbouring Thailand and Malaysia, lying east of Sumatra, also cancelled tsunami warnings.

A photographer in Sinabang on Simeulue island, south of Aceh, said that electricity was cut in the area and that he saw four injured people, including a child with a head wound who had been hit by fallen masonry.

Aceh Governor Irwandi Yusuf said earlier there had not been reports of damage or casualties so far.

“I am on the coast now, some people had gone to take refuge on higher ground but now they have returned to their homes,” Yusuf told Metro TV.

The resource-rich island of Sumatra is an important supplier of commodities such as rubber, palm oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG), but there were no immediate reports of delays in shipments because of the quake.

The quake, which struck around 5:15 a.m. (2215 GMT), was centred 200 km (125 miles) west-northwest of the coastal town of Sibolga and was at a depth of 31 km, the U.S. Geological Survey said. The epicentre was around 215 km from Medan, the largest city on Sumatra.

There were at least three aftershocks after the initial major quake.

ELECTRICITY POLES SWAY

The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center initially warned the quake could generate a local tsunami, but later cancelled its tsunami watch, saying: “Sea level readings indicate that a significant tsunami was not generated.”

An official from Indonesia’s meteorology agency said a tiny tsunami of only 3 cm (1 inch) had been detected at Sinabang and lifted its own tsunami warning.

A Metro TV reporter in the Sibolga area of North Sumatra said that he fell off his motorbike when the quake struck and the force left electricity poles swaying for minutes afterwards.

Tremors from the quake were felt in Dumai, in Sumatra’s Riau province about 1,100 km from the epicentre, Indonesia’s Antara news agency reported.

Hamid Sarong, a resident of Aceh’s provincial capital Banda Aceh, which was devastated by a tsunami in 2004, said that the quake was felt while people in the staunchly Muslim province were at dawn prayers, although there was no panic.

Sumatra lies along the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, one of the world’s most active seismic faultlines, and is frequently hit by earthquakes.

In December 2004, a magnitude 9.15 quake off Aceh triggered an Indian Ocean tsunami that killed about 226,000 people in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand and nine other countries.

A 7.6 magnitude quake struck last September off the city of Padang, southeast of Wednesday’s epicentre, killing more than 1,000 people.

Brit school bans sexually coloured ‘shagbands’

London, Sep 19 (ANI): A Brit primary school has banned its students form wearing coloured wristbands, after parents found out that they were called “shagbands”.

Parents of kids, attending Rayne Primary School near Braintree, Essex, discovered that each colour of the ‘shagband’ represents a different sex act.

“The children have been walking around with these rubber bands on calling them shagbands,” the Daily Star quoted mum-of-three Andrea Elward, 46, whose 10-year-old daughter studies in the school, as saying.

“My daughter said her friends had got them and could she have a set. Then she went red and giggled when she explained they were called shagbands.

“I had a word with the head and they banned them immediately,” she added. (ANI)

Ponting’s 27th ton helps Australia beat England in fifth ODI

Nottingham (UK), Sep.16 (ANI): Ricky Ponting scored a brilliant 126 of 109 balls to keep Australia in the hunt for a 7-0 whitewash of their one-day series against England, leading his side to a four-wicket victory in the fifth one-day international at Trent Bridge on Tuesday.

Ponting’s 27th ton in ODIs included three sixes and 14 fours, as Australia raced to 302 for six wickets with 10 balls to spare in reply to England’s total of 299 from their 50 overs.

He was well supported by deputy Michael Clarke, who reached 52 off 64.

Irishman Eoin Morgan’s maiden half-century steered England to their best score of the series in a dead rubber after Australia clinched the series 4-0 at Lord’s on Saturday.

Mitchell Johnson brought up the winning runs with a six off Ryan Sidebottom to remain unbeaten on 18, while Cameron White was not out 24.

Poor fielding frustrated England captain Andrew Struass, who demanded improvement from his batsmen after the first four matches.

“Our batters went out and played with a much more bold approach and that paid dividends today. The fielding was poor and that’s something that there should be no excuse for, we do a lot of work on the fielding and we should be better than that,” Fox Sports quoted Strauss, as saying.

The tourists rested Brett Lee, who claimed five wickets in the previous match, replacing him with fellow pacer Peter Siddle.

England brought in Mascarenhas for Luke Wright, who was hit on the toe on Monday while batting against a bowling machine set to mimic Lee’s inswinging yorkers which proved so effective last weekend.(ANI)

Gorilla-like creature resembling ‘Bigfoot’ photographed in Kentucky backyard

London, September 10 (ANI): A gorilla-like creature that resembles the mythical creature ‘Bigfoot’ is causing excitement on the web after being photographed in the back garden of a home in Kentucky in the US.

According to a report in the Telegraph, the large, hairy beast can be seen in a blurry picture taken on an automatic camera set up by an amateur hunter.

While flicking through images of rabbits and deer, Kenny Mahoney noticed a dark, humanoid creature that does not look like any of the southern US state’s known native species.

The mystery animal’s head appears too small for it to be a bear, leaving Mahoney wondering whether he had accidentally captured one of the clearest ever photos of Bigfoot.

“It looked like it had the outline of a head, and like gorilla type shoulders, and then the arms crossed is what it looks like to me,” said Mahoney.

“One of the explanations my brother-in-law said it may be a garbage bag blowed up in there, but all the smashed over vegetation in there – I really don’t know. I have no idea what it is,” he added.

Mahoney said he is very doubtful that the creature in the photo is Bigfoot.

His wife Margaret has sent the image to a wildlife expert in the hope of getting it identified.

The mythical ape-like creature Bigfoot is most regularly sighted in the forests in the northwestern states and provinces of North America, although last month a teenage girl in Poland reported seeing a similar beast.

Last year, two men in the US state of Georgia claimed to have discovered a body of Bigfoot, but subsequently confessed that photos they produced as “proof” of their find actually showed a rubber ape costume. (ANI)

Sikkim boy spreads awareness on social issues with motorbike stunts

Gayshing (Sikkim), Aug.27 (ANI): In a unique act, a 21-year-old man in Sikkim is spreading social awareness among youth against drug addiction, excessive drinking and on AIDS by performing various stunts on motorbike.

Milan Pradhan, stunt rider, fascinates large number of crowds as he performs various formidable stunts on motorbike.

All the time Pradhan is riding, popping wheelies or sometimes burning rubber.

He performed recently in Gayshing town of Sikkim with another stunt rider.

“I want to give the message to young boys that by doing stunts you can earn a very good name and ensure a bright future. You will get busy in some work. You will forget about drugs once you are busy. By sitting in a room and taking drugs will not achieve spoil your name but stunts will make your future,” says Milan Pradhan, stunt rider.

He says the young boys love motorcycling and if they could be drawn into stunt riding which needs a high level of fitness and concentration, it will keep youngsters busy in a constructive way and they will have less chances of getting into drug habits.

Pradhan is a college student. He devotes most of his time learning new motorbike driving skills in style, when he is not attending classes or doing assignments.

He tells that he started trying stunt-riding when he was in his early teenage. The family was hesitant to allow him try hand on motorbike stunts.

But Pradhan managed to convince them by showing his daredevil spirit, which helped him keep away from attracted to drugs.

His love for performing tricks on motorbike has led him to appear for the MTV ‘Stuntmania’ and now he wants to pursue stunt biking to a greater level.

Organisers of the event said that generally the youth are interested in fast life, which sometimes can trap them into drug-addiction and anti-social activities. Motorcycle race or stunt riding can give them alternatives that match with their fast life but in a positive way.

“Biking goes very well with the present-day youth. The youth are very interested in fast cars, fast bikes. And with the fast life comes the very possibility of getting drawn to drug addiction, alcoholism and also the fear of AIDS. So with the youth coming and watching such programmes… we want to motivate them towards like diverting their lifestyle or mind to constructive things,” said Anand, organiser of the bike stunt show.

Organisers say such events will go a long way in attracting the youth to stunts and thereby indirectly diverting their minds from drugs and alcoholism.

Sikkim is located in the foothills of the Himalayas and shares international borders with Nepal, Bhutan and Tibet. The northeastern belt, including Sikkim, has recently become a favourite transit point used by drug peddlers for smuggling drugs.

The unofficial data shows that use of alcohol has traditionally been prevalent among the local people. The state government has been running campaigns to create awareness on drugs and associated HIV/AIDS.

Alcohol use is traditionally prevalent in Sikkim and National Family Health Survey-2, Government of India, shows a significant prevalence of alcohol use in Sikkim- Boys (32%) and Girls (17%) among above 15 years of age. By Tashi Pradhan (ANI)

Flexible high-resolution home theatre displays come closer to reality

Washington, August 21 (ANI): You may soon get to enjoy facilities like flexible high-resolution home theatre displays, wearable health monitors, and biomedical imaging devices because scientists are working on a novel process for creating new classes of lighting and display systems.

John Rogers, the Flory-Founder Chair Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois, has revealed that the new process is all about creating and assembling ultrathin, ultrasmall inorganic light-emitting diodes (LEDs) into large arrays offers new classes of lighting and display systems with interesting properties, such as see-through construction and mechanical flexibility.

He said that such properties would be impossible to achieve with existing technologies.

“Our goal is to marry some of the advantages of inorganic LED technology with the scalability, ease of processing and resolution of organic LEDs,” said Rogers.

Compared to their organic counterparts, inorganic LEDs are brighter, more robust and longer-lived.

Organic LEDs, however, are attractive because they can be formed on flexible substrates, in dense, interconnected arrays.

Rogers and his colleagues-including collaborators from Northwestern University, the Institute of High Performance Computing in Singapore, and Tsinghua University in Beijing-say that the new technology combines features of both.

“By printing large arrays of ultrathin, ultrasmall inorganic LEDs and interconnecting them using thin-film processing, we can create general lighting and high-resolution display systems that otherwise could not be built with the conventional ways that inorganic LEDs are made, manipulated and assembled,” Rogers said.

To overcome requirements on device size and thickness associated with conventional wafer dicing, packaging and wire bonding methods, the researchers have developed epitaxial growth techniques for creating LEDs with sizes up to 100 times smaller than usual.

They have also developed printing processes for assembling these devices into arrays on stiff, flexible, and stretchable substrates.

To create an array, a rubber stamp contacts the wafer surface at selected points, lifts off the LEDs at those points, and transfers them to the desired substrate.

“The stamping process provides a much faster alternative to the standard robotic ‘pick and place’ process that manipulates inorganic LEDs one at a time. The new approach can lift large numbers of small, thin LEDs from the wafer in one step, and then print them onto a substrate in another step,” Rogers said.

The researcher says that shifting position and repeating the stamping process can transfer LEDs to other locations on the same substrate, and, in this fashion, large light panels and displays can be crafted from small LEDs made in dense arrays on a single, comparatively small wafer.

Given that the LEDs can be placed far apart and still provide sufficient light output, Rogers says that the panels and displays can be nearly transparent.

He even envisions the creation of flexible and even stretchable sheets of printed LEDs, which can have potential use in the health-care industry.

“Wrapping a stretchable sheet of tiny LEDs around the human body offers interesting opportunities in biomedicine and biotechnology, including applications in health monitoring, diagnostics and imaging,” Rogers said.

A research article describing the researchers’ work has been published in the journal Science. (ANI)

Radcliffe’s fans often give him plastic ‘fold up’ ear-type unusual gifts

Washington, July 15 (ANI): Hollywood actor Daniel Radcliffe was once gifted a rubber ear by a Japanese fan.

The 19-year-old star, best known for playing boy wizard Harry Potter in the famous film series, has revealed that some admirers give him unusual gifts to show their devotion.

“One Japanese fan sent me a present – a plastic ear. It was rubbery and you were supposed to fold it up and hold it in your hand, then walk into a party and go, ‘Oh my God, there’s something wrong with my ear!’ and let it unfold,” Contactmusic quoted him as having told Britain’s Zoo magazine.

“Everyone thought it was weird – then I found out that it’s a famous Japanese comedian’s best joke!” he added.

Radcliffe denied that he ever had romantic feelings for his co-star Emma Watson, but admitted that spending his teen years on the sets of the hit franchise was sexually frustrating.

“I know people always like to say that we’re dating, but it’s just not happening. There’s something really incestuous about the idea of it,” he added. (ANI)

Now, tires made of oil from orange peels

Washington, July 11 (ANI): Reports indicate that tire manufacturer Yokohama is now selling a model made with 80 percent non-petroleum material, substituting orange oil as the primary ingredient to make vulcanized rubber.

According to a report carried out in www.earth911.com, the new tire is called the ‘Super E-spec’ and has already received the Popular Mechanics Editor’s Choice Award in 2008.

Yokohama will initially market the tire for hybrid car models such as the Toyota Prius.

“The eco-focused dB Super E-spec mixes sustainable orange oil and natural rubber to drastically cut the use of petroleum, without compromising performance,” said Yokohama vice president of sales Dan King.

“It also helps consumers save money at the gas pump by improving fuel efficiency via a 20-percent reduction in rolling resistance,” he added.

Orange oil is considered sustainable because it is produced from a renewable resource.

The same philosophy of reducing petroleum use is utilized in producing plastics from corn starch or vegetable oil.

The process for recycling tires involves devulcanizing the rubber, which would essentially remove the oil and extract natural rubber.

Because this is an expensive process, used tires are often shredded and turned into playground surfacing or additives for the soil in sports turf. It can also be reused as artwork. (ANI)

Now, printable batteries that can be integrated into ATM cards, greeting cards

Washington, July 3 (ANI): Have problems remembering that TAN number while doing online transactions? Well, your ATM card could soon tell the code just with a simple touch, all thanks to newly developed printable batteries that could easily be fitted into bankcards.

Developed by a research team led by Prof. Dr. Reinhard Baumann of the Fraunhofer Research Institution for Electronic Nano Systems ENAS in Chemnitz, the printable battery can be produced cost-effectively on a large scale.

“Our goal is to be able to mass produce the batteries at a price of single digit cent range each,” said Dr. Andreas Willert, group manager at ENAS.

The characteristics of the battery differ significantly from those of conventional batteries.

The printable version weighs less than one gram on the scales, is not even one millimetre thick, and can therefore be easily integrated into bankcards.

The battery does not contain mercury and is thus environmentally friendly.

Its voltage is 1.5 V, which lies within the normal range, thus by placing several batteries in a row, voltages of 3 V, 4.5 V and 6 V can also be achieved.

The new type of battery is composed of different layers: a zinc anode and a manganese cathode, among others.

Zinc and manganese react with one another and produce electricity, but the anode and the cathode layer dissipate gradually during this chemical process. Therefore, the battery is suitable for applications, which have a limited life span or a limited power requirement, for instance greeting cards.

The batteries are printed using a silk-screen printing method similar to that used for t-shirts and signs.

A kind of rubber lip presses the printing paste through a screen onto the substrate, while a template covers the areas that are not to be printed on.

The process makes it possible to apply comparatively large quantities of printing paste, and the individual layers are slightly thicker than a hair.

The researchers have already produced the batteries on a laboratory scale, and the first products could possibly be finished by the end of this year. (ANI)

Seven injured in fresh Kashmir clashes

Srinagar, July 2 (ANI): At least seven persons, including a policeman were injured during fresh clashes across the Kashmir Valley on Thursday.

The police vehicle was set ablaze by a mob in Pulwama town. Two protesters — Nazir Ahmad Bhat and Pervaiz Ahmad — were critically injured when they were hit by the vehicle as the policeman tried to drive away. The protesters set the vehicle ablaze.

The driver, Mohammad Amin, was severely thrashed by the mob before he was rescued and admitted to hospital.

In Baramulla, protests continued for the fourth consecutive day against policemen being involved in the killing of four persons. Protests also took place in Shopian over the rape and murder of two women on May 30.

Police had to fire rubber bullets, burst teargas shells and used batons to disperse hundreds of demonstrators, who violated curfew in the old town of Baramulla.

Violent clashes also took place between police and groups of youth in nearby Sopore town, where authorities relaxed curfew for three hours in the morning, the sources said.

The government has already ordered a magisterial probe into the Baramulla incident and pulled out the CRPF yesterday. Police reinforcements have taken position in the town to maintain law and order, sources said, adding, at least 12 companies of police reached the town from Jammu last evening.

Demonstrations also took place in Srinagar. Several demonstrators shouted pro-freedom slogans near the Jamia Masjid under the banner of moderate faction of Hurriyat Conference.

Meanwhile, a general strike called by the hardline faction of the Hurriyat Conference paralysed normal life across the Kashmir Valley for the third consecutive day Thursday. (ANI)

Telephone exchange office catches fire

Ambala (Haryana), May 16 (ANI): A telephone exchange office in Ambala caught fire on Friday night.

The fire broke out at the BSNL telephone exchange due to a short circuit and spread towards a nearby school, K R Jain School damaging a few classrooms.

The damage is estimated to be worth lakhs.

The fire brigades of army cantonment reached the site to contain the flames.

“As the place was filled with waste materials, raw materials and rubber, the blazes of fire became very fierce and it spread towards the P K R Jain School behind the exchange. After almost one hour and a half, we have managed to contain the fire under control. Although the windows of the school are damaged, but the fire has been controlled before entering the school premises,” said Aditya Kumar Sharma, Fire officer, Haryana Government.

The cause of fire is being investigated. (ANI)

Cholesterol-busting bug identified

Washington, May 15 (ANI): Scientists at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain, have discovered a novel species of bacteria with cholesterol-busting properties.

The new bug, called Gordonia cholesterolivorans, was isolated from sewage sludge.

A steroid found in all body tissues, cholesterol is used in the cosmetics and pharmaceutical industries as stabilizer, emollient and water-binding agent.

As a consequence, steroids – including cholesterol – are a major group of contaminants in urban sewage residues.

Gordonia bacteria have only been classed as a separate group of bacteria since 1997 but they have already proved useful as they are able to degrade a wide range of environmental pollutants including phthalates (used in plastics), rubber and hazardous compounds such as the explosive hexogen (cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine).

Gordonia cholesterolivorans’ ability to break down cholesterol means that it could be used to clean up contamination.

Study author Dr Oliver Drzyzga and colleagues are studying the genetics of this novel bacterium to genetically modify strains that might also be used to synthesise new and industrially useful breakdown products of cholesterol.

“New steroid compounds made by these bacteria may find applications in the pharmaceutical and medical sectors in the future, but as some Gordonia species are pathogenic to humans it is unlikely that they could be used directly to treat high cholesterol-related conditions in humans”, said Drzyzga.

“We are trying to work out exactly how Gordonia cholesterolivorans metabolises cholesterol so that we can identify and construct metabolically engineered strains that are more rapid and effective in breaking down cholesterol,” Drzyzga added.

Their findings are reported in the current issue of the International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. (ANI)

Bruce Willis invents ‘concussion buster’

London, May 08 (ANI): Bruce Willis has created a device to avoid head injuries on the set of his action films – a helmet made of rubber bands he calls his ‘concussion buster’.

During an interview with talk show host David Letterman, the 54-year-old Die Hard star banged and bounced his head on the desk to prove how well the device works.

“I’m feeling a little clumsy lately. A little clumsy around the house and clumsy on the sets. You know, you get a little kicked in the head sometimes, banged around,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

“I’m getting a little older so I was fooling around the house and I get one of those little rubber band balls. This protects my head. I like to call it Bruce Willis’ concussion buster,” he added. (ANI)

‘Pup’ Clarke in no hurry to be top dog

Abu Dhabi (UAE), May 3 (ANI): Stand -in Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke has enhanced his status with a one-day series victory against Pakistan, but says that he is in no hurry to inherit the job permanently from incumbent Ricky Ponting.

An unbeatable 3-1 lead against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates, culminating in his unbeaten century in Abu Dhabi on Friday night, has enhanced his position beyond doubt, but Clarke says he looks forward to Ponting’s return at the helm of affairs.

Clarke has hardly put a foot wrong with his captaincy. He has kept team spirits high despite the pressure they faced after being skittled by Pakistan’s spinners in the series-opener to continue what had been a disappointing recent one-day record.

He has had to manage pacemen being rotated in and out of the side on spin-friendly pitches and draw the best from a squad with numerous stars on the comeback trail and several other players new to international cricket.

His field placements and bowling changes have mostly worked beautifully, most notably in game three when Australia engineered a Pakistan collapse of 10-76 to snatch a pivotal win.

Clarke was also in charge last time Australia won a one-day series, against Bangladesh in Darwin last September.

“Every single time I get the chance to captain Australia I love it, it’s wonderful. But for me it’s about playing as well, it’s about being in this team. The feeling in the group this whole tour has been wonderful,” The Age quoted Clarke, as saying.

“It’s not about the captaincy for me, I’ve enjoyed it, don’t get me wrong, but I can’t wait to get our skipper back. I’ve always said and I’ll continue to say I hope he’s my captain for the rest of my career, because if that’s the case our No.3 batter is a brilliant player,” he added.

Coach Tim Nielsen said Clarke’s “brilliant” efforts confirmed his status as a team leader, regardless of the captaincy tag.

“It’s confirmed for everybody what we thought we knew. He’s had success in the past when he’d filled in for Ricky as a captain, both in Twenty20 and one-day cricket, and we were very confident he would have success as a leader here,” Nielsen said.

Clarke said while thankful for the leadership experience, the series win outweighed any personal gains.

Australia will be looking to continue their winning streak in Sunday’s dead rubber in Abu Dhabi. (ANI)

Pak senators want action against Musharraf for violating Constitution

Islamabad, Apr 22 (ANI): Members of Pakistan’s National Assembly have asked the Government to take action against former President Pervez Musharraf for violating the Constitution and recommended introduction of a comprehensive policy to control target killing across the country.

Jamashed Dasti of PPP said on Tuesday that parliament should initiate the trial of Pervez Musharraf for taking unconstitutional steps.

He said that Musharraf was moving freely in the country in spite of violating the constitution.

“The parliament should not play the role of a rubber stamp and take action against a dictator to set an example for others,” The Nation quoted Dasti, as saying.

Shereen Arshad Khan of the PML-N said on a point of order that the former dictator who violated the constitution was enjoying his life due to the government’s relaxation and instead of getting punishment, he was being granted official protocol.

Barjees Tahir of the PML-N said: “General (retired) Musharraf is offender of 170 million people and parliament should take action against him.”

Nadeem Afzal Chan urged the Interior Ministry to take notice of the ongoing target killing in the country and formulate an effective policy to control it.

He said that the government should call All Parties Conference to address the problems faced by the country.

Riaz Hussain Pirzada of PML-Q expressed grave concern over the institutions of the country and said that the political leadership proved itself to be a weak leadership. (ANI)

RUBBER-Tokyo futures flat, capped as technicals wane

TOKYO, April 17 (Reuters) – Tokyo rubber futures were barely changed on Friday as currency and oil prices traded in tight ranges, while the upside was limited due to waning technical support.

* The key Tokyo Commodity Exchange rubber contract for September delivery was down 0.1 yen at 175.7 yen per kg. The key contract hit a five-month high of 179.7 yen on Monday, mainly bolstered by bullish technical drivers.

* After failing to test the key 180 yen level, the benchmark contract touched a one-week low of 170.1 yen earlier in the week.

* “Funds have stopped buying after the market failed to break above a key technical level, and unless oil prices rise sharply or the yen weakens significantly, it will be difficult for the market to test the 180 yen mark,” said a senior trader at a Japanese brokerage.

* The nearby contact looks set to be weighed down ahead of its expiry later in the month as the volume of dealers selling far exceeds speculator purchases, the senior trader said.

* He said dealers are selling RSS3 to buy SIR20 to take advantage of the price differences, prompting them to hedge by selling longer-dated futures contracts. Such moves have put a cap on the prices of these contracts, he said.

* Oil inched lower below $50 a barrel on Friday, paring Thursday’s 1.5 percent gain that came amid signs of an economic improvement in the United States. Oil prices were down 13 cents at $49.85. [O/R]

* The yen fell 0.2 percent against the dollar. A weaker yen inflates yen-based futures prices, helping to limit falls in rubber prices. [USD/]

* Japan’s Nikkei stock average rose 2.22 percent. [.T]

* Physical rubber prices were mostly steady.

PRICES OF ASIAN PHYSICAL RUBBER COMPARED WITH THURSDAY

Grade Price Change

Thai RSS3 (May) $1.70/kg unchanged

Thai RSS3 (Jun) $1.70/kg unchanged

Thai STR20 (May) $1.66/kg +$0.01

Thai STR20 (Jun) $1.66/kg +$0.01

Malaysia SMR20 (May) $1.63/kg unchanged

Malaysia SMR20 (Jun) $1.63/kg unchanged

Indonesia SIR20 (May) $0.70/lb unchanged

Indonesia SIR20 (Jun) $0.70/lb unchanged

Thai USS3 53.5 baht/kg unchanged

Thai 60-percent latex (drums, May) $1,320/tonne unchanged

Thai 60-percent latex (bulk, May) $1,200/tonne unchanged

** NOTE – The prices quoted above are offer prices collected from traders in Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia. They are not official prices quoted by state-run rubber agencies in those countries. (Reporting by Chikako Mogi; Editing by Joseph Radford)

GITMO inmate is first to give an interview from inside

London, Apr.15 (ANI): A Guantanamo inmate captured in Afghanistan at the age of 14 has become the first to give an interview from inside the camp.

Chad terror suspect Al-Guarani is one of a number of Guantanamo prisoners whose release has been ordered by an American judge. Evidence that he had fought with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was found to be “unreliable”.

According to The Telegraph, Al-Guarani spoke to a former Guantanamo inmate who works for al-Jazeera, the international Arabic television channel.

Al-Guarani said he had refused to leave his cell because he “not been granted his rights”, such as to interact with other inmates and eat “normal food”.

A group of six soldiers wearing protective gear and helmets came into the cell, he said.

“They had a thick rubber or plastic baton they beat me with. They emptied out about two canisters of tear gas on me. After I stopped talking, and tears were flowing from my eyes, I could hardly see or breathe. They then beat me again to the ground. One of them held my head and beat it against the ground. I started screaming to his senior ‘See what he’s doing, see what he’s doing’ [but] his senior started laughing and said ‘He’s doing his job’, said al Guarani.

“He broke one of my front teeth. Of course they didn’t film the blood, they filmed my back so it doesn’t show.”

Journalists who visit the Guantanamo Bay facility in Cuba have to sign a document agreeing not to speak to the prisoners.

He is currently held in Camp Iguana, a transitional camp for those whose release has been ordered where they are given greater privileges, including the telephone calls.

Amnesty International says that at least four Guantanamo captives were under 18 when they were captured, and some were as young as 13. (ANI)

Juan Williams, Speaker at Chancellor University Commencement

CLEVELAND, April 12 /PRNewswire/ — National political correspondent and
author, Juan Williams, is the keynote speaker at Chancellor University’s 160th
graduation taking place Saturday, May 2, 2009. As senior correspondent for
NPR’s Morning Edition, host of America’s Black Forum, a nationally syndicated
weekly news program, and regular panelist on FoxNews Sunday, Williams is at
the cutting edge of America’s culture and politics. In addition to
prize-winning columns and editorial writing for The Washington Post, he has
also authored six books.

Prior to writing bestsellers, Williams was a political columnist and national
correspondent for The Washington Post. In a 21-year career at The Post he
served as an editorial writer, op-ed columnist, and White House correspondent.
He won several journalism awards for his writing and investigative reporting.
He also won an Emmy Award for TV documentary writing. He was given widespread,
critical acclaim for a series of documentaries including Politics-The New
Black Power. His documentary on A. Phillip Randolph was featured on PBS. His
articles have appeared in magazines such as Newsweek, Fortune, The Atlantic
Monthly, Ebony, and The New Republic.

The Commencement is being held at the Masonic Auditorium and Performing Arts
Center in Cleveland, Ohio.

ABOUT CHANCELLOR UNIVERSITY
Chancellor University, the second oldest business school in the U.S., rooted
in northeast Ohio, is a premier global institution offering educational
opportunities to a multi-national student body, which includes
first-generation college students and working adults. Chancellor University
students graduate with real-world knowledge and skills that prepare them for a
lifetime of professional achievement, civic engagement, and personal
fulfillment in a fast-paced, ever-changing, pluralistic world. Chancellor
University graduates demonstrate critical thinking, integrity,
professionalism, and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

Chancellor University provides opportunities to earn associate, bachelor, and
master degrees in business and select professional fields, including
accounting, corporate management, criminal justice, finance, health-services
management, human resources management, small business entrepreneurship,
marketing, paralegal, and public administration.

Chancellor University has a rich and deep heritage, having graduated several
titans of business, including John D. Rockefeller, Sr., founder of the
Standard Oil Company; Harvey Firestone, founder of Firestone Tire and Rubber;
Theodore Ernst, founder of Ernst and Young; and leading Cleveland businessman
and philanthropist David N. Myers.

The school’s website is www.ChancellorU.edu.

SOURCE Chancellor University

Shaun Redgate, COO of Chancellor University, +1-216-361-2753,
sredgate@ChancellorU.edu

Fight breaks out during Georgia street protests

TBILISI (Reuters) – Tensions flared on Saturday during the third day of an opposition street campaign in Georgia against President Mikheil Saakashvili with the authorities and protesters trading blame for a fight at the protest venue.

Opposition leaders said a 50-strong mob had attacked the venue, tearing banners and ripping out computer cables at a stage set up outside parliament as dozens of protesters prepared to spend a third night on the street.

Police, however, said protesters had set on street cleaners who arrived to clear the site of litter.

Up to 5,000 people rallied on Saturday, a sharp drop from the previous two days when 60,000 and then 20,000 took to the streets to demand Saakashvili quit over his record on democracy and last year’s disastrous war with Russia.

Saakashvili has refused to resign, and instead offered dialogue. Some opposition leaders said on Friday they had agreed, but the details of a possible meeting have not been set.

“That’s the government’s response to its own proposal for dialogue,” Salome Zurabishvili, one of the opposition leaders, told reporters after the clash. “This is an insult to the Georgian people and an insult to any dialogue,” she said.

CRACKDOWN

The Georgian Interior Ministry released a statement denying any involvement. It blamed protesters, who on Saturday again blocked three main roads in the capital.

“When the cleaning crew arrived, they were accosted and physically attacked by civilians who were participating in the demonstrations,” the statement said. It said police were exercising a policy of “staying away” to avoid confrontation.

Analysts warn tensions risk boiling over into unrest. The West is watching closely for a possible repeat of a 2007 crackdown, when police firing teargas and rubber bullets dispersed the last peaceful demonstrations against Saakashvili.

The 41-year-old president has polarized opinion in the former Soviet republic since coming to power after the 2003 Rose Revolution.

Critics accuse him of monopolizing power and exerting pressure on the judiciary and media. Opposition has grown since Georgia’s five-day war with Russia last year, when Moscow crushed a Georgian assault on breakaway South Ossetia.

But diplomats question whether the alliance of more than a dozen opposition parties can maintain unity or muster enough people to force Saakashvili out.

Analysts say the president’s ruling United National Movement retains wide support and his position appears strong, despite the defection of some top allies and several cabinet reshuffles.

Many Georgians appear frustrated with political bickering and are sympathetic to government calls for stability as the global economic crisis takes hold.

Biggest steel plant in north-east India begins production

R. K. Nagar (West Tripura), April 12 (ANI): The biggest gas-based steel plant in northeast India, having a capacity of 1,50,000 tonnes per annum, has started commercial production in Tripura.

The rupees 250 crores steel plant at Bodhjungnagar, 12 kilometres north of Agartala, is a new addition of the Noida-based Dharampal Premchand Ltd (DPPC), manufacturers of the “Baba” brand of tobacco products, which already had its rubber unit in the State.

R. K. Kakrania, Director of DPPC who claimed his factory to be totally automated using digital controls producing the fines products, said: “The project would not only help to tap the unexplored business potential of the northeastern region and adjacent countries but also provide employment in the state, would ensure rapid socio-economic development of the state.”

“The State government here is much more responsive and friendly than any other State and now the State capital is connected by rail. We hope the Bangladesh government will see reason and soon give transit facility through Chittagong port and once that happens, this place shall be better than Calcutta (Kolkata).”

DPPC, which along with galvanized sheets shall also produced coloured sheets, also target of the growing market in Bangladesh and so already set its office in capital Dhaka.

“By June, the first consignment shall be exported to Bangladesh, hopefully, but we are aware and prepare to compete with China and Korea to enter into the Southeast Asia market”, Kakrani added.

Spread over 24 acres, the plant will manufacture cold rolled sheets, galvanised corrugated and plain sheets and cold rolled closed annealed sheets needed by the roofing, automobile industry and for making cupboards, panels, grain storage bins and silos and barrels. . K. Sarkar, production controller, said, “There shall be four types of products in this factory which are of the finest uniform quality using the latest digital controlled machines.”

“We are not only taking care of our products and the socio economic development of the State but we are also taking care that the wastage of the factory is not harmful and polluting. So we have a recycling plant in our factory”, Sarkar added.

DPPC, which started its journey back in 1929, has grown into a Rs 250-crore company. It has employed 300 youngsters after providing them special training.

Rajesh Debbarma, one of such youngsters, is earning Rs.2,400 per month, he says: “I was unemployed till a few days back but with the setting of the factory many more like me got employment here. Moreover, the local people are now getting tin sheets for roofing from the factory at low price because earlier this use to come from outside the State.”

State-owned upstream oil major Oil and Natural Gas Corp is supplying gas to the steel plant.

Kakrania informed, apart from steel, DPL has already commenced work to set up a ceramic tiles unit in Guwahati. The project is expected to start production by April 2010. By Pinaki Das (ANI)