Russian politician claims aliens abducted him!

London, May 6 (ANI): A prominent Russian politician has laid claim that aliens abducted him.

Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, the leader of the country’s southern region of Kalymkia, told television host Vladimir Pozner on Channel One on April 26 that he had spent several hours in the company of aliens wearing yellow spacesuits.

Ilyumzhinov, 48, said the aliens visited his apartment in downtown Moscow on September 18, 1997, and that as he was falling asleep he heard someone calling him from the balcony.

He went outside and saw the spaceship, which was a “half-transparent half tube”, and when he entered he met human-like creatures in yellow spacesuits, who he was not able to communicate with.

“I am often asked which language I used to talk to them. Perhaps, it was on a level of the exchange of ideas,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

Ilyumzhinov said the aliens gave him a tour of their spaceship, and that they had come to planet Earth to take samples – and claims to have several witnesses.

Now another politician, Russian MP Andre Lebedev, who fears Ilyumzhinov may have divulged state secrets, has urged Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to investigate the matter.

Lebedev, who wrote a letter to Medvedev raising a list of his concerns, asked for guidelines on what politicians should do if aliens abduct them.

In his letter he says that, assuming the whole thing was not just a bad joke, it was an historic event and should have been reported to the Kremlin.

He also asks if there are official guidelines for what government officials should do if contacted by aliens, especially if those officials have access to state secrets. (ANI)

Your shopping trolley will soon be knowing what you want

Melbourne, September 18 (ANI): A GPS navigation-based system is expected to revolutionise advertising, for it can publicise products directly to supermarket trolleys based on a shopper’s in-store behaviour and purchasing history.

Media Cart trolleys can alert the store’s database when a shopper moves into a particular area, triggering an appropriate ad.

Small screens on trolleys, where product messages are beamed, are all set to undergo live supermarket tests in November.

Media Cart has signed a deal with researcher TNS to analyse the data from the 50 to 100 trolleys that will operate in the Doonside, NSW and Hawker, ACT Super IGA stores.

Examples of how the system will operate, as given in a report, suggest that a mil ad can be beamed to the screen as a trolley moves into the store’s chilled dairy area.

And as soon as a product is put through the trolley’s self scanner, an ad for a rival product can be served up.

The system is also capable of reading and delivering shopping lists to the trolley by inserting a loyalty card, which will also tell the customer in which order to shop in the aisles.

Media Cart managing director Brian Paterson says that, on average, customers may expect about eight minutes of ads during a 25-minute shop.

He says that each ad will of no more than 10 seconds long.

According to him, US trials have shown that the novel system can increase participating stores’ sales by 10 per cent, and sales of featured products by 30-40 per cent.

“There is no other media that can show an ad to a shopper and then record if they buy that product,” the Age quoted Paterson as saying.

Media Cart hopes to roll out the system midway through the trial, and it has held talks with Coles and Woolworths for the purpose.

However, they are holding back until they see the results of the trial, Paterson has revealed. (ANI)

Amy Winehouse’s surprise charity gig

London, September 18 (ANI): Amy Winehouse recently did a surprise gig at a charity fundraiser for terminally ill children.

The guests present for dinner at Rays Of Sunshine in Wrotham Park, close to her Barnet home, received a pleasant surprise when she appeared out of nowhere for a five-song set.

Meanwhile, reports have come that the troubled singer has been spending hours talking to her ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil on the net.

“They are non-stop emailing at the moment,” the Sun quoted a source as saying.

The couple had divorced earlier this year. (ANI)

Lindsay laughs off psych ward rumours

Washington, September 18 (ANI): Lindsay Lohan has dismissed reports that she’s been admitted to a psychiatric ward.

It was apparently the ‘Mean Girls’ star’s publicist who brought it to her attention.

However, the actress has laughed it off, reports Contactmusic.

She posted a Tweet : “Hahahaha my publicist just called me and said she heard I was in a psych ward!!!! Hahaha WHAT IS WRONG with people???? I’m working lol (laugh out loud).

“BUT that’s one I’ve NEVER heard about myself before! New ones r (sic) always interesting huh? There’s SO much more going on in the world! Wake up.”

Lindsay has a history of going to rehab to fight drugs apart from being arrested for driving under the influence.

She is currently working on her new horror movie ‘Machete’ alongside co-stars Robert De Niro and Jessica Alba. (ANI)

New hope given to Sir Elton John in Ukrainian tot adoption bid

London, September 18 (ANI): Sir Elton John may still be hopeful of adopting the HIV positive Ukranian kid, whom he said he wishes to take home with partner David Furnish.

Ukraine’s family, youth and sports minister, Yuri Pavlenko, who had earlier dismissed any possibility of the musician adopting 14-month-old Lev, has apparently changed his stand.

According to the Telegraph, he said that Sir Elton “has the right and opportunity to invite the family of this boy to visit him, take them under his guardianship and help him grow into a good person.”

However, he mentioned that the child’s mother is alive which means he can’t be treated as an orphan.

He added: “I’d like to ask everyone to be tolerant to the boy. This is not an orphan, the child has a mother and an elder brother and so he cannot be adopted by law.

“He has a difficult fate, like his mother. Help has been provided to his mother to find strength to bring the family back together.”

The Ukranian law does not allow same sex couple to adopt a child. (ANI)

Farmers grew rice in China’s Yangtze Basin 4,000 years ago

Washington, September 18 (ANI): New findings in the form of carbonized rice have indicated that farming in the Yangtze Basin in China existed as early as 4,000 years ago.

According to a report in Epoch Times, excavation in the Xiezi Area of Hubei Province yielded a total of 402 cultural relics, including carbonized rice.

Stone tools, pottery, bronze, jade and porcelain were unearthed, as well as a number of spinning wheels, drop spindles made of clay and other textile tools.

There were also stone mounds and smelting relics such as slag.

A variety of grains and seeds were found, and experts believe there may be carbonized wheat among the plant findings at the site.

The relics were determined to be from the Neolithic Era or New Stone Age at the time of the Shang Dynasty (ca. 1600-1050 B.C.) and Western Zhou Dynasty (ca. 1046-771 B.C.)

The combination of the relics that were found and their stratigraphic age provides valuable information about the diet structure, production methods, and living conditions of the inhabitants of the area during the time of the Shang and Western Zhou dynasties.

Archeological team leader, Luo Yunbin explained that there had been speculation in the past about edible rice production in the Yangtze Basin, but the new findings provide solid physical evidence that there was agricultural development in that area during ancient times. (ANI)

3 Roman military camp sites found in Austria may rewrite history

Vienna (Austria), September 18 (ANI): Archaeologists have unearthed three Roman military camp sites archaeologists in Burgenland, Austria, which they say will rewrite the history of the Romans in the country.

According to Weiner Zeitung, Stefan Groh, the leader of the Austrian Archeological Institute (OAI) team that discovered the sites, said that the three camp sites near Strebersdorf in Burgenland’s Lutzmannsburg municipality were along the old amber road, the main Roman trading road in the region.

Groh said that the objects found at the sites, which cover an area of two hectares, would lead to new understanding of the function of the Roman army.

“Our work in this area last year and this year means that the history of the Roman presence in this region and in Austria will have to be rewritten,” he said.

“Austrian archaeology is following an outstanding path. This find will only enhance the international reputation of Austrian archaeologists,” OVP Science Minister Johannes Hahn said.

Groh said that archaeologists used geo-radar and geo-magnetics, which can locate objects up to 70 centimetres below the surface of the ground, as well as the traditional method of digging to locate the sites. (ANI)

Now, a computer that reproduces 3D view of Mars in minutes

London, September 18 (ANI): A computer system is under development that can automatically combine images of the Martian surface, captured by landers or rovers, in order to reproduce a three-dimensional view of the red planet in minutes.

The resulting model can be viewed from any angle, giving astronomers a realistic and immersive impression of the landscape.

“The feeling of ‘being right there’ will give scientists a much better understanding of the images. The only input we need are the captured raw images and the internal camera calibration. After minutes of computation on a standard PC, a three-dimensional model of the captured scene is obtained,” said Dr. Michal Havlena.

The growing amount of available imagery from Mars is nearly impossible to handle for the manual image processing techniques used to date.

The new automated method, which allows fast high quality image processing, has been developed at the Center for Machine Perception of the Technical University of Prague, under the supervision of Tomas Pajdla, as a part of the EU FP7 Project PRoVisG.

From the technical point of view, the image processing consists of three stages: the first step is determining the image order.

If the input images are unordered, that is, they do not form a sequence but still are somehow connected, a state-of-the-art image indexing technique is able to find images from cameras observing the same part of the scene.

To start with, up to a thousand features on each image are detected and “translated” into visual words, according to a visual vocabulary trained on images from Mars.

Then, starting from an arbitrary image, the following image is selected if it shares the highest number of visual words with the previous image.

The second step of the pipeline, the so-called ‘structure-from-motion computation’, helps scientists determine the accurate camera positions and rotations in three-dimensional space.

Just five corresponding features are enough to obtain a relative camera pose between the two images that have been selected as sequential.

The last and most important step is the so-called ‘dense 3D model generation’ of the captured scene, which essentially creates and fuses the Martian surface depth maps.

To do this, the model uses the disparities (parallaxes) present in images taken at two distinct camera positions, which were identified in the second step.

“The pipeline has already been used successfully to reconstruct a three-dimensional model from nine images captured by the Phoenix Mars Lander, which were obtained just after performing some digging operation on the Mars surface,” said Dr. Havlena. (ANI)

Negative public opinion about foreign countries an early warning signal for terrorism

Washington, September 18 (ANI): People’s negative views toward the leadership and policies of other countries may be an indication that a terrorist act may be carried out, say researchers.

Alan Krueger, a Princeton University economist, and Jitka Maleckova, of Charles University in the Czech Republic, came to this conclusion after analysing public opinion polls and terrorist activity in 143 pairs of countries.

Writing about their findings in the journal Science, the researchers say that there is a strong relationship between attitudes expressed toward a foreign country — indicated in surveys on foreign leaders’ performance-and the occurrence of terrorism against that country.

“Public opinion appears to be a useful predictor of terrorist activity,” said Krueger, the Bendheim Professor in Economics and Public Policy.

“This is the first study to relate public opinion across countries to concrete actions such as terrorism,” he added.

He pointed out that the notion that public attitudes can contribute to terrorism has been inadequately explored to date.

According to him, the study’s findings attain significance as they suggest that public opinion may provide a valuable early warning signal of terrorism, and help researchers better understand the causes of terrorism.

The researchers carried out their study by mining public opinion polls of residents in 19 countries in the Middle East and northern Africa conducted by Gallup.

They asked the respondents whether they approved of the job performance of the leaders of nine large countries.

According to the researchers, the countries selected for the study are world powers in terms of size, population or military strength, are the United States, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Russia and the United Kingdom.

The opinions, both positive and negative, were linked to the number of terrorist attacks conducted against the nine world powers by people from the 19 countries between 2004 and 2008. The terror attacks were compiled by the National Counterterrorism Center.

Based on the findings, Krueger says that there is not a direct connection between poverty and terrorism, contrary to a popular view.

He adds that economic status has more to do with target countries than it does with the states where the attacks originate.

He says that countries with advanced economies as well as a high degree of civil liberties are most likely to be the targets of terrorism.

The researchers admits that the study does not explain whether terrorists act in response to public opinion or whether they are simply reacting just like the larger public to external events.

However, he insists that, in either case, public opinion surveys can provide a powerful indication of the likelihood of terrorist activity.

Krueger believes that greater disapproval of another country’s leaders or policies may result in more terrorist acts because it increases the number of people who provide material support and encouragement for terrorism, and increases the number of people interested in joining cells and carrying out terrorist acts themselves. (ANI)

Hefner’s girlfriends to install stripper poles in bedroom

Washington, September 18 (ANI): Hugh Hefner’s girlfriends Kristina and Karissa Shannon are planning to install stripper poles in their bedroom at the Playboy mansion.

The twins seem really excited though they do not share the same bed with the 83-year-old Playboy mogul, who prefers to sleep with 23-year-old Crystal Harris.

“Our room is pimp. We’ve got the round spinning bed from Chicago, a kicka*s big-screen TV and we have the perfect view of all the parties in the backyard. And we’re getting a stripper pole in there, too,” Contactmusic quoted Karissa as telling E! Online.

“We’re the wild ones and party animals, and Crystal’s really calm and mellow,” she added.

However, they are not too happy with peacocks kept in the plush residence.

She said: “We don’t like the peacocks here. They poop everywhere, and they’re loud.”

Meanwhile, Crystal mentioned that it was like a dream come true for her.

She said: “I feel like I’m in a Disney castle. There’s help everywhere when you need it. It’s just so fun. Hugh is the sweetest person, and he’s the most down-to-earth person.

“We actually have a lot in common. We were both psychology majors in school and we laugh a lot together. We watch movies together. We love relaxing and having a good time and hanging out with the girls. We just keep it fun.”

The trio started dating Hugh earlier this year, after he bid goodbye to his last girlfriends Holly Madison, Kendra Wilkinson and Bridget Marquardt. (ANI)

Researchers operate biomedical robots from different locations worldwide via Internet

Washington, September 18 (ANI): Experts from the University of Washington and SRI International have jointly developed a new software protocol, to standardize the way biomedical robots are managed over the Internet.

Nine research teams from universities and research institutes around the world recently made a successful demonstration of biomedical robots operated from different locations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia with the help of the ‘Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol’.

In a 24-hour period, each participating group connected over the Internet, and controlled robots at different locations.

The tests performed demonstrated how a wide variety of robot and controller designs can seamlessly interoperate, allowing researchers to work together easily and more efficiently.

The demonstration also evaluated the feasibility of robotic manipulation from multiple sites, and was conducted to measure time and performance for evaluating laparoscopic surgical skills.

“Although many telemanipulation systems have common features, there is currently no accepted protocol for connecting these systems. We hope this new protocol serves as a starting point for the discussion and development of a robust and practical Internet-type standard that supports the interoperability of future robotic systems,” said SRI’s Tom Low.

The protocol is expected to allow engineers and designers that usually develop technologies independently, to work collaboratively, determine which designs work best, encourage widespread adoption of the new communications protocol, and help robotics research to evolve more rapidly.

Its early adoption may encourage robotic systems to be developed with interoperability in mind, and avoid future incompatibilities.

“We’re very pleased with the success of the event in which almost all of the possible connections between operator stations and remote robots were successful. We were particularly excited that novel elements such as a simulated robot and an exoskeleton controller worked smoothly with the other remote manipulation systems,” said Professor Blake Hannaford of the University of Washington. (ANI)

MJ called dad to help deal with ‘bully’ music bosses, says La Toya

Washington, September 18 (ANI): Michael Jackson’s sister La Toya has revealed that the late singer called his father Joe to help him deal with music executives.

The revelation comes as a surprise as the King of Pop had been open about his troubled relationship with his dad.

“Michael had a wonderful relationship with my father,” Contactmusic quoted La Toya as saying.

The ‘Thriller’ singer apparently wanted his father to deal with music bosses of his future shows.

She said: ” About two or three weeks before he passed he was having this really big meeting with all these people that were working with him and he said, ‘Joseph, I need you to come, I need you to be there because I’m not liking anything these people are doing with me, I want you to be there and tell them like it is.’ He even wrote a note to say, ‘I must call Joseph to have him there.’” (ANI)

Arctic sea ice cover reaches minimum extent for 2009

Washington, September 18 (ANI): A new study has found that the Arctic sea ice cover appears to have reached its minimum extent for this year, the third-lowest recorded since satellites began measuring sea ice extent in 1979.

The study was carried out by researchers from to the University of Colorado at Boulder’s National Snow and Ice Data Center.

While this year’s September minimum extent was greater than each of the past two record-setting and near-record-setting low years, it is still significantly below the long-term average and well outside the range of natural climate variability, said NSIDC Research Scientist Walt Meier.

Most scientists believe the shrinking Arctic sea ice is tied to warming temperatures caused by an increase in human-produced greenhouse gases being pumped into Earth’s atmosphere.

Atmospheric circulation patterns helped the Arctic sea ice spread out in August to prevent another record-setting minimum, said Meier.

“But, most of the 2009 September Arctic sea ice is thin first- or second-year ice, rather than thicker, multi-year ice that used to dominate the region,” said Meier.

“The minimum 2009 sea-ice extent is still about 620,000 square miles below the average minimum extent measured between 1979 and 2000 — an area nearly equal to the size of Alaska,” he added.

“We are still seeing a downward trend that appears to be heading toward ice-free Arctic summers,” Meier said.

CU-Boulder’s NSIDC will provide more detailed information in early October with a full analysis of the 2009 Arctic ice conditions, including aspects of the melt season and conditions heading into the winter ice-growth season. (ANI)

Scientists find meteorite that came from innermost asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter

Washington, September 18 (ANI): In a very rare finding, scientists have discovered an unusual kind of meteorite in the Western Australian desert and have uncovered that it came from the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Meteorites are the only surviving physical record of the formation of our Solar System.

However, information about where individual meteorites originated, and how they were moving around the Solar System prior to falling to Earth, is available for only a dozen of around 1100 documented meteorite falls over the past two hundred years.

According to Dr Phil Bland from the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London, the lead author of the study, “We are incredibly excited about our new finding. Meteorites are the most analysed rocks on Earth, but it’s really rare for us to be able to tell where they came from.”

The new meteorite, which is about the size of cricket ball, is the first to be retrieved since researchers from Imperial College London, Ondrejov Observatory in the Czech Republic, and the Western Australian Museum, set up a trial network of cameras in the Nullarbor Desert in Western Australia in 2006.

The researchers aim to use these cameras to find new meteorites, and work out where in the Solar System they came from, by tracking the fireballs that they form in the sky.

The new meteorite was found on the first day of searching using the new network, by the first search expedition, within 100m of the predicted site of the fall.

The meteorite appears to have been following an unusual orbit, or path around the Sun, prior to falling to Earth in July 2007, according to the researchers’ calculations.

The team believes that it started out as part of an asteroid in the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

It then gradually evolved into an orbit around the Sun that was very similar to Earth’s.

The new meteorite is also unusual because it is composed of a rare type of basaltic igneous rock.

According to the researchers, its composition, together with the data about where the meteorite comes from, fits with a recent theory about how the building blocks for the terrestrial planets were formed.

This theory suggests that the igneous parent asteroids for meteorites like today’s formed deep in the inner Solar System, before being scattered out into the main asteroid belt.

Asteroids are widely believed to be the building blocks for planets like the Earth, so the new finding provides another clue about the origins of the Solar System. (ANI)

Self-harming Megan Fox wasn’t a ‘cutter’ in young age

London, September 18 (ANI): ‘Transformers’ star Megan Fox has confessed that she often harmed herself in young age.

The 23-year-old star, however, says that she never went to the extremes of harming herself with a cutter.

“Girls go through different phases when they’re growing up, when they’re miserable, and do different things, whether it’s an eating disorder or they dabble in cutting,” the Sun quoted her as saying.

“I don’t want to elaborate. I would never call myself a cutter,” she added.

Posing on the front of Rolling Stone in a revealing see-through bodysuit, Fox has revealed that her temper is ridiculously bad.

She has even admitted threatening to murder her boyfriend Brian Austin Green in a fit of anger. (ANI)

Lennon’s ‘Jesus’ quote mag sold for $12713

London, September 18 (ANI): A magazine in which John Lennon had scribbled that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus has been sold for 12,713 US dollars.

In a 17 day online auction run by RR Auction of Amherst, New Hampshire, an orthopaedic surgeon at New York’s Mount Sinai Medical Centre made the winning bid.

The September 1966 issue of Datebook has a photograph of the late musician with his sign “John C Lennon” above it, reports the Daily Express.

He had said in the magazine: “Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I needn’t argue about that; I’m right and I will be proved right.

“We’re more popular than Jesus now. I don’t know which will go first – rock’n'roll or Christianity.”

The statement had even led to anti-Beatles sentiment in the United States. (ANI)

Why Diana’s death could lead to a murder probe

London, September 18 (ANI): Princess Diana’s death could have led to a murder inquiry had Scotland Yard not failed to disclose to French detectives the existence of a note in which she had herself predicted that she would be killed, says a top lawyer.

Michael Mansfield has revealed that Diana’s divorce lawyer Lord Mishcon wrote the note after a conversation with her in 1995.

According to him, Diana told Mishcon that she believed that she might be killed, possibly in a staged road accident.

“Efforts would be made if not to get rid of her (be it by some accident in her car such as a pre-prepared brake failure or whatever)… at least to see that she was so injured or damaged as to be declared unbalanced,” the Daily Express quoted the note as reading.

Mansfield believes that French police would have been “obliged” to investigate whether the 1997 car crash that claimed Diana’s life was part of a scheme of murder, had they been made aware of the note.

He says that British police instead allowed the note to become public knowledge long after the French inquiry had wound down.

“When the note was given to the police, if they had handed it straight over or made the contents known to the French police they would have had to investigate,” he said.

“There were representatives of the French police visiting London and New Scotland Yard and they could have been made aware of the gist of the note. I think that had the French known, they would have been obliged to investigate.

“The point is that there was information suggesting that she thought somebody was going to kill her in an accident or a car crash or something. Obviously if a police force anywhere in the world gets information like that, while you don’t automatically assume that it is correct, you obviously have to investigate.

“It might have come to a dead-end, but it might have come to a murder inquiry,” he added. (ANI)

Aniston’s new flick in ‘script theft’ suit

Washington, September 16 (ANI): The producers of Jennifer Aniston’s new film have been sued by two screenwriters, who alleged that the movie’s plot has been stolen.

Filing their papers against NBC Universal executives, Greg Crowder and Tony Freitas claimed that Scott Bernstein had rejected their script titled ‘The Truth’ when he was Vice President of Production for Universal Pictures in 2006.

Their contention is that the script has now been revamped as ‘Love Happens’, starring Aniston and Aaron Eckhart.

The film is set to hit cinemas on September 18, reports Contactmusic.

According to documents obtained by TMZ.com, Crowder and Freitas want it pulled from release or 100,000 dollars in damages.

Crowder claims that Bernstein told him the script for The Truth needed a rewrite before Universal would buy it, and since the producers refused to pay for the rewriting work, the deal did not materialise.

The writer says that he was shocked to learn that the script for Aniston’s new flick, which revolves around a self-help guru with a dark past, was very similar to that he had written with Freitas. (ANI)

India to sign two pacts with Belarus during Krishna’s visit

Minsk, Sept 17 (ANI): India and Belarus will sign two bilateral agreements during External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna’s two-day visit to that country.

During his visit, Krishna will call on Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko.

He will also hold wide-ranging talks with his counterpart Sergey Martynov. The agreements to be signed are one on Cooperation in Physical Education and Sports and an MoU on the Establishment of a Digital Learning Centre in Minsk.

The Digital Learning Centre will impart skills in advanced computing and software creation to young Belarusian students, initially with Indian faculty members and thereafter with trained Belarusian professionals.

This will be the first visit by India’s External Affairs Minister to Belarus.

Krishna will also pay an official visit to Turkmenistan on September 18 and 19.

He will call on Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhammedov and hold meetings with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Rashid Meredov.

Krishna will also have a meeting with Minister in-charge of Oil and Gas sector Baymyrat Hojamuhammedov.

Both countries will sign a cooperation agreement during the visit. (ANI)

Congress screens aspiring candidates for polls in Maharashtra

Mumbai, Sep 12 (ANI): Congress party has begun shortlisting candidates aspiring for party’s nomination for the October 13 assembly elections in Maharashtra.

Congress party, which is running a coalition government with Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) in Maharashtra for the second term in a row, is yet to sort out hiccups on seat sharing with its ally.

As the days for nominations to open on September 18 draws close, state Congress party leaders went in a huddle in Mumbai to screen aspirants seeking ‘ticket’ to contest polls on the party symbol.

“I have given my profile, I have told about major problems in our area including drinking water and irrigation and people do not get benefited from the policies of the government,” said Anil Chandra Kumar Gupta, an aspirant from Tiroda seat of Gondia district.

Congress party, which also heads the central coalition, is on a high after its good performance in the April-May general elections. (ANI)