Flood situation remains grim in UP, Bihar

Lucknow/Patna, Aug 22 (ANI): The flood situation remains grim in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, as all rivers in both states are flowing above the danger mark.

Bihar recorded eleven deaths, while sixteen people have died in Uttar Pradesh.

Over 600 villages in the Terai district and 250 villagtes in the Sidharth Nagar District of Uttar Pradesh have been affected by the floods.

The flood situation in Bihar worsened on Saturday as swollen rivers inundated vast swathes of countryside in seven districts.

The river Burhi Rapti, Kunhara and Jamuar nullah are flowing above the danger mark in Uttar Pradesh. Thousands of acres of crops in Barabanki, Bahraich, Siddharthanagar and Pilibhit have been destroyed by the flood.

According to the State Relief Commissioner, over one lakh people have been evacuated from the affected areas.

Over five lakh people were affected as flood inundated Kishanganj, Saharsa, Supaul, Sitamarhi, and Purnia in Bihar.

The Central Water Commission report, has cautioned the state over the flood in major rivers like Bagmati, Kosi, Kamala Balan and Mahananda.

While Kosi was flowing above the danger mark at Basua, Bagmati breached the danger level at Benibad and Hayaghat.

Similarly, water level of Kamala Balan flowed above danger mark at Jhanjharpur, Kursela and Baltara while Mahananda flowed above danger mark at Dengraghat

The State Water Resources Department has claimed that all embankments in Bihar are safe. (ANI)

16 Indians among 30 dead as boat capsizes off Qatar coast

Doha, July 1 (ANI): About sixteen Indians were feared to be among 30 dead in a tragic incident in which as a vessel, ‘Damas Victory’, hired by a Qatar based oil-firm capsized off the coast of Qatar on Wednesday.

The incident took place about two nautical miles off Doha at around 6.30 am local time on Tuesday, the vessel had 35 people including 19 Indians on board.

According to the Indian Embassy in Qatar, five people were rescued from the boat, including three Indians.

“Rescue operations are underway and five people, including three Indians, have been saved. There is no hope of any more survivors,” an official said, adding that the Embassy was in touch with the Qatar Coast Guard.

Qatar Coast Guard recovered seven bodies, however, they were yet to be identified.

However, the rescued Indians have been identified as Jaison Verghese, Balakrishnan Velayudhan, and Prabhu Chellam.

The boat, which belonged to a Dubai-based ‘Demas Marine’, had been hired by HBK Power Cleaning company. (ANI)

What makes a great footballer

Washington, June 29 (ANI): A new study has divulged into the secrets of what makes a great footballer.

While most fans are in awe of what football players can do with a football, the source of their remarkable skill remains strangely mysterious, with speculation rife that there must be something else than just physical training that makes average players like professionals.

Now, scientists from the University of Queensland, Australia, have decided to study what this “something else” might be.

According to Dr. Robbie Wilson, this type of research may have applied outcomes for football clubs.

“Our analyses suggest that unambiguous metrics of a player’s skill components should be used to help in the selection and identification of new talent. Our studies could help to streamline selection criteria and efficiency by providing a rank ordering of individuals based upon competitive one-on-one tasks,” he said.

“In addition, the relative importance of each type of skill component could be tailored to each player’s position and the club’s immediate and future requirements,” he added.

As part of the study, members of the semi-professional University of Queensland Football Club (UQFC) were recruited as experimental subjects, and they were made to compete against each other in one-on-one “football tennis” games, which require very similar athletic and skill sets to that required for regular football games.

In parallel, the same players were evaluated for overall athleticism and skill in sixteen different tasks.

“There was no evidence of any correlations between maximal athletic performance and skill”, explained Dr. Wilson.

“Our studies suggest that skill is just as important, if not more important, than athletic ability in determining performance of complex traits, such as performance on the football field,” he added.

Interestingly, the researchers are hoping that focusing on footballing ability in humans will also provide them with insight into the role that individual skills play in other species, for example during aggression, prey capture or escape from a predator.

“To develop an understanding of the evolution and function of complex performance traits, we need to investigate the role of individual skill,” said Dr.Wilson. (ANI)

Cyclone Aila toll rises to 87 in West Bengal

Kolkata, May 27 (ANI): ‘Cyclone Aila’ has claimed 87 lives in West Bengal.

Sixteen of the 87 dead were victims of a landslide in North Bengal

Chief Minister Buddadeb Bhattarcharjee reviewed the situation after visiting Nimpith area in South 24 Parganas on Tuesday.

Railway Minister Mamta Bannerjee also came with a bevy of officials and conducted a survey of the devastation.

The Centre had dispatched 2500 personnel of the paramilitary forces to assist in the relief and rescue operations and the state government has sanctioned 1.50 crore rupees from the Contingency Fund for rescue and relief operations.

“We talked to PMO, the defence ministry, the finance ministry, the home ministry and the central government. Army and BSF are here. They are doing ground work, helicopters are dropping food and water but what we feel is that there are some areas which are still damaged badly,” said Mamta Banerjee.

Operations are being carried out in Sandeshkhali and Kultali of North and South 24 Parganas districts.

Army has taken up rescue operations in Hingalganj in North 24 Parganas and Gosaba, Patharpratima and Sagardwip areas in South 24 Parganas.

Two MI-17 helicopters were air-dropping food packets in the two worst hit areas in the two districts. (ANI)

Sixteen policemen killed in naxal attack in Maharashtra

Nagpur, May 21 (ANI): Sixteen policemen were killed in a naxal attack at Tawitola area of Gadchiroli District in Maharashtra on Thursday.

The attack took place when a police party was on a routine patrolling.

According to police, Inspector Avinash Iyer and Sub Inspector Shantaram Ghorpade along with five to six women constables were killed in the attack. (ANI)

PETA activists ask people to turn vegetarian to avoid swine flu

Mumbai, May 8 (ANI): Activists of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) staged a roadside campaign in Mumbai on Thursday to propagate vegetarianism following threats of swine flu.

The highlights of this campaign were activists dressed like a pig and nurses holding placards, which read ‘Prescription For Swine Flu, Go Vegetarian’.

They contended that abstaining from consumption of pork can curb the menace of swine flu.

“We are here to let people know that getting away with swine flu problem is as simple as that putting meat away from your diet…. Putting pork away from your plate. Just to go vegetarian. Once you go vegetarian there won’t be a need of pig farms as it is being clarified by various newspapers that swine flu is occurring just because of filth in the pig farms,” said Nikunj Sharma, Campaign Coordinator, PETA.

Ever since swine flu infected a number of people in as many as 15 countries, hospitals in India have taken preventive measures to tackle the epidemic.

Earlier this week, the Central Government sounded an alert across tIndia following the arrival of six passengers from abroad who showed symptoms of fever and common cold.

The World Health Organization has reported 658 laboratory confirmed cases of influenza A/H1N1 infection with 17 deaths from sixteen countries.

There are 160 laboratory confirmed human cases in USA with one death. Mexico has reported 397 cases including sixteen deaths.

Other countries which have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths are: Austria (1), Canada (51), Hong Kong (Special Administrative Region of China) (1), Costa Rica (1) Denmark (1), France (2), Germany (6), Israel (3), Netherlands (1), New Zealand (4), Republic of Korea (1) Spain (13), Switzerland (1) and United Kingdom (15). (ANI)

18 killed, 22 injured in China road accident

Beijing – A collision between a bus and a truck Saturday morning killed 18 people and left another 22 injured in south-western China, local media reported. A passenger bus traveling in Chuxiong prefecture, Yunnan Province, veered off the road early morning after being hit from the rear by a truck, according to the Xinhua news agency.

Sixteen passengers on the bus died, along with two passengers in the truck.

The truck collided with the bus, after the bus driver slowed to avoid a swerving vehicle ahead, the report said.

Official statistics indicate that China has the highest rate of traffic fatalities in the world, with 5.1 road accident deaths for every 10,000 motor vehicles in 2007, compared with an average global rate of two deaths.(dpa)

U.S. workers want job reviews changed, survey says

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Four out of five U.S. workers are dissatisfied with their job performance reviews and would like to see them better reflect their work, said a survey released on Tuesday.

A third of those workers would like to see the reviews tied to compensation, and a fifth said they would like the reviews to be more fair, said the survey conducted for Taleo Corp., a provider of talent management solutions.

Overall, 78 percent of U.S. workers want to change some aspect of the review process, the study said.

Sixteen percent of workers would like the reviews to be conducted more often, while 11 percent want to get rid of them altogether, it said. Fifteen percent said they would not want to see any changes.

“In the current economy, job performance is front and center of the corporate agenda. So it’s not surprising that this is an area where American workers want to seize greater control,” said Alice Snell, vice president of Taleo Research.

Five percent of those surveyed said they did not have performance reviews at their jobs. Two-thirds said they last had a performance review in the past year.

The random nationwide telephone survey was conducted among 881 employed adults for Dublin, California-based Taleo by KRC Research from March 12 to March 16, 2009.

It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

Radio Pakistan says Sikhs in India are forcibly converted

Abohar, April 6 (ANI): Facing criticism both internationally as also at home over the increased number of attacks against peaceful citizens, Radio Pakistan has been trying hard to project that India too is facing similar problems.

Through the recent broadcast of the Punjabi Durbar program, the programme has been heard trying to spread misinformation that Hindus are forcing members of minority communities to convert themselves in India.

Residents living in the border areas of Punjab, where Pakistan Radio has many listeners, are surprised at such allegations.

“This is a part of Pakistan’s propaganda to create tension among people in India. The Hindus are neither forcing people of Muslim majority nor Sikhs to convert themselves. These allegations are being made to create tension and disturb the law and order situation. According to the Indian Constitution, every citizen has right to profess any religion. These allegations are not going to have any effect on the people here because everybody knows that this is Pakistan’s propaganda to disturb peace in India ” said Dr. Harbhajan Singh, a Sikh scholar.

“So far as my experiences are concerned in Punjab, people are very much concerned about each other. There is no discrimination in Punjab. I am staying in Punjab for the last sixteen years and in Abohar, for the last 13 years and I have not been forced to change my religion. Actually I am getting more support from other religions,” said Jijoi, a Christian.

Broadcasters of the Radio Pakistan need to educate themselves about the provision of the Constitution of India which ensures freedom to every citizen of this country to practice his religion. The right to equality is also a fundamental right.

Perhaps the programmers are obsessed with the situation around them, where there is hostilitity among the Shias and Sunnis, the Punjabis, Baluchs and the Sindhis.(ANI)

Sixteen arrested for destruction of mangroves

MIRA ROAD: The Mira Road police on Thursday arrested 16 people on charges of destroying mangroves at Kanakia Nagar. They have been sent to judicial
custody till April 15 by the Thane civil court. Dumping of garbage and construction debris in the last of March had destroyed large patches of mangroves along the creek at Kanakia Nagar. Civic contractors assigned the task of clearing garbage from urban areas were dumping it on the mangrove plot. Construction debris was also being unloaded there.

The police seized seven dumpers belonging to civic contractors. They also recovered a JCB machine owned by the Mira-Bhayander Municipal Corporation (MBMC). The entire Mira-Bhayander area has a large stretch of mangroves, most of which has been reclaimed by builders, allegedly in connivance with MBMC officials. Since last week, locals have been noticing the mangroves in Kanakia Nagar being wiped out. Most of the reclamation work is carried out early in the morning or late in the evening, said a resident.

According to sources, the mangrove plot is being levelled to make a road that would connect residential complexes coming up in the vicinity.

Following a PIL filed by the Bombay Environmental Action Group (BEAG) in 2005, the Bombay high court had directed a freeze on the destruction and cutting of mangroves in the state. In January this year, BEAG had knocked on the high court’s door expressing concern over the destruction of mangroves in Mira-Bhayander, alleging that the civic administration was also responsible for it. The court had asked the MBMC to reply to the allegations.

Mangroves have made way for an artificial beach at Jesal Park in Bhayander (E). BEAG, in its report to the high court, had cited instances of mangroves being destroyed in RNP Park through diversion of sea-water and garbage dumping.

Among those held were truck owners Rajitram Yadav, Ranatchand Yadav, Bhaiyalal Yadav and Manoj Ramzan Shaikh. The police also arrested 12 drivers and cleaners. They were, however, yet to take action against the errant civic officials.

President presents Padma awards

New Delhi, Mar 31 (ANI): Bollywood actors Akshay Kumar and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Atomic Energy Commission of India (AECI) chief Anil Kakodkar were among the recipients of the Padma awards from President Pratibha Patil on Tuesday.

Aishwarya Rai, a former Miss World and now a member of the Bachchan family, received a Padma Shree award for her contribution to the field of entertainment.

Akshay Kumar, a globally acclaimed actor, also received a Padma Shree.

Kakodkar received the Padma Vibhushan award for 2008 for his contribution to the field of nuclear science and technology.

Sister Nirmala, who served for 12 years as the Superior-General of the Kolkata-based Missionaries of Charity, received the Padma Vibhushan.

Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Director Ashok Ganguly was also awarded the Padma Vibhushan.

Sixteen people were awarded Padma Bhushan, including renowned classical singer Shamshad Begum and Tech Czar Sam Pitroda.

Forty-five people were given Padma Shree awards, for their contribution in various spheres of activity, including the arts, education, industry, literature, science, sports, social and public life.

Vice President Hamid Ansari, Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh and a host of other dignitaries attended the function. (ANI)

Jaipur gears up for Gangaur festival

Jaipur, Mar 24 (ANI): In anticipation of the much awaited annual Gangaur festival, shops in Jaipur have starting stocking the idols of Hindu God Shiva and her consort Gauri.

Gangaur festival is one of the most important festivals in Rajasthan and is observed throughout the state with great fervour and devotion by womenfolk who worship the idols of Gauri for the welfare of their life partners.

Describing the significance of the festival, Shalu, a local said, “Idol of Isar ji represents Hindu god Shiva while that of Gangaur ji represents goddess Parvati. We offer prayers to these idols on this day. Unmarried girls pray for getting a good groom while the married ladies pray for the long life of their husbands.”

The ladies decorate their hands and feet by drawing designs with ‘mehandi’.

Due to the increasing demands of the devotees, more than fifty varieties of Isar- Gangaur idols made out of clay, wood and other materials are available in the market.

Naveen Jain, a local shopkeeper said there is a lot of demand for these idols.

“There is a lot of demand for the idols of Isar and Gangaur ahead of this festival. There are a lot of varieties of these idols available in the market today. When a procession is taken out, one can see the idols of Isar and Gangaur as tall as six feet,” said Jain.

The prices of these idols range between Rs. 50 to Rs 14,800.

Ladies set up the idol of Isar-Gangaur in their homes sixteen days before the Gangaur festival, which falls in March, the first month in the traditional Hindu calendar, and worship them continuously for sixteen days. By Lokendra Singh (ANI)

Israel committed war crimes in Gaza: The Guardian

London, Mar. 24 (ANI): During its 23-day offensive in the Gaza Strip, Israel had committed numerous war crimes by using Palestinian children as human shields and targeting medics and hospitals, The Guardian has claimed.

A month-long investigation obtained detailed evidence of civilians being hit by fire from unmanned drone aircraft under Operation Cast Lead.

The films recorded by The Guardian reveal that the Israel operation was aimed at Hamas, but left about 1,400 Palestinians dead, including more than 300 children.

However, the Israeli Defence Forces insisted that international law had been observed.

Meanwhile, an IDF squad leader was quoted in the daily newspaper Ha’aretz as saying his soldiers interpreted the rules to mean “we should kill everyone there [in the centre of Gaza]. Everyone there is a terrorist.”

Amnesty International has said Hamas should be investigated for executing at least two dozen Palestinian men in an apparent bout of score settling with rivals.

“Only an investigation mandated by the UN security council can ensure Israel’s co-operation, and it’s the only body that can secure some kind of prosecution. Without a proper investigation there is no deterrent,” said Amnesty’s Donatella Rovera, who spent two weeks in Gaza investigating war crime allegations.

Some of the most dramatic testimony gathered by the Guardian came from three teenage brothers in the al-Attar family. They describe how they were taken from home at gunpoint, made to kneel in front of Israeli tanks to deter Hamas fighters from firing.

“They would make us go first so if any fighters shot at them the bullets would hit us, not them,” 14-year-old Al’a al-Attar said.

Medics and ambulance drivers said they were targeted when they tried to tend to the wounded; sixteen were killed.

According to the World Health Organisation, more than half of Gaza’s 27 hospitals and 44 clinics were damaged by Israeli bombs. (ANI)

Fire near Kolkata airport

Kolkata, Mar 23 (ANI): A fire broke out in two chemical factories near the International Airport in Kolkata today, leading authorities to evacuate two Air India planes from the hangar to the parking bay.

The fire broke out at around 10 a.m at the Puja Chemical and Cisoon Chemical factories at Narayanpur, adjacent to the airport.

According to airport sources, flights, which take off, or land at the Koikhali end of the Netaji Subhash Chander airport, were doing so from the Madhyamgram side as smoke from the blaze has enveloped the area.

Sixteen fire engines are engaged in fighting the blaze. (ANI)

Uttar Pradesh: Notification for first phase of five LS election to be issued tomorrow

Lucknow, Mar 22 (ANI): The notification for the first phase of five phase Lok Sabha elections in Uttar Pradesh will be issued on Monday.

A total of sixteen parliamentary segments will go for poll in this phase.

The chief Electoral officer of the state Anuj Kumar Bishnoi has reviewed the poll arrangements of several districts in video conferencing.

He has directed strict implementations of model code of conduct and fool-proof security arrangements during the electioneering and on the day of polling.

Candidates may file their nomination papers till March 30.

Constituencies which will go for poll in first phase are Bansgaon, Gorakhpur, Maharajganj, Kushinagar, Deoria, Salempur, Ballia, Ghosi, Azamgarh, Lalganj, Machhlishahr, Ghazipur, Chandauli, Varanasi, Roberstganj and Mirzapur spread in thirteen districts of four divisions of Azamgarh, Vindhyachal, Gorakhpur and Varanasi. (ANI)

Sports teams’ rankings don’t affect their chances of success deeper into any tournament

Washington, March 17 (ANI): Sports teams’ rankings may predict their chances of winning during the initial stages of any tournament, but they start becoming statistically insignificant as the final round draws near, says a University of Illinois expert.

Sheldon H. Jacobson, a professor of computer science, says that the higher-seeded teams are most likely to beat their lower-seeded opponents in the first three rounds of an NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.

He, however, add that once the field has been winnowed to the so-called “Elite Eight” teams, each team’s odds of winning are statistically equal, no matter how high or low the teams were initially ranked at the start of the tournament.

“The deeper you get into the tournament, the less effective seeding is in predicting winners,” Jacobson says.

Jacobson says that for the 12 teams that comprise the top three seeds in each of the four regional brackets, seeding is an “excellent predictor” of the outcomes of the first three rounds of games with those teams.

“In the first round, the No. 1 seed has beaten the No. 16 seed 100 percent of the time,” he says.

“But after the Sweet Sixteen, it is a statistical toss-up as to who wins the remaining games. A team’s seeding can be thrown out the window. They really do not give you a good indication of who is going to win the games,” he adds.

Jacobson says that the impetus of the study was not to predict brackets or winners in advance of the tournament, but to see if the top three teams’ seeding in each bracket is a good predictor of how far they will go in the “Big Dance.”

“I have always been surprised that the first seeds seem to do better than the second seeds, who seem to do better than the third seeds, because you would think that there is not really a big difference between the top three seeds from each of the four regions,” he says.

As to whether there is a statistically significant difference between what are ostensibly the top 12 teams in the country, he says: “The answer is both ‘yes’ and ‘no’.

There are differences, but it is not a question as to whether they are different; it is a question as to when they are different, based on the rounds of the tournament. Seeds are important, but they start to lose their strength beginning in the Sweet Sixteen round. By the time they reach the Elite Eight, those teams were not statistically different than anyone else in the field.”

Despite its weakness as a predictive model, Jacobson doesn’t believe the seed-based ranking system used by the NCAA needs to be replaced wholesale.

“The committee has a very challenging job seeding the teams, and the tournament format by design is exciting,” he said.

“We are talking about bringing 65 teams together from all the major conferences – the Big Ten, Big 12, SEC, PAC-10, ACC and the Big East – and then you have many teams that you rarely see on national television. But it should not change the seeding system, since seeds are not designed to predict the winner of each game, but rather, are based on a resume of performance for an entire season.”

An article about Jacobson’s observations, which he has written along with graduate student Douglas M. King, will be published in a forthcoming issue of the Journal of Gambling Business and Economics.(ANI)

Countdown begins for Miss India beauty contest

Mumbai, Feb 28 (ANI): It is countdown time for the Miss India 2009 pageant in Mumbai.

Sixty-five dazzling contenders appeared at an event on Friday ahead of the contest, which is to be held on April this year. The sixteen finalists will be announced on March 9.

Some of the contestants were excited and enjoying the media attention.

“It’s the most renowned and well known contest in the country. Just being a part of it, is amazing. I really hope that I am selected. I am really looking forward to the training,” said Ridhima Shahni, a nineteen-year-old aspirant from Pune.

These contestants are to be put through an intensive training programme to ensure that the eventual winners fare exceptionally well at international pageants.

The finalists will undergo a month-long training under the supervision of experts and professionals.

Contestants are imparted training in catwalk, skin and hair care, make-up and grooming, diet and fitness, speech and diction, workshop on Indian heritage, culture, music and art.

“I tell them one thing, keep and maintain your Indian values and Indian culture that at end of the day when you go abroad and integrate in the modernization, globalization, you will that is what will make you the winner,” said Marc Robinson, a contestant director.

India first won a Miss World title in 1966 with the crowning of Reita Faria. Thereafter, it took another 28 years for an Indian woman to secure another world beauty title.

In 1994, Sushmita Sen won the Miss Universe crown, while Aishwarya Rai secured the Miss World title. Both are now Bollywood actresses. (ANI)

Polling begins for Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal by-elections

Umroi, Jan 25 (ANI): Voting has begun for the assembly by-election at Bhadohi reserve segment in Sant Ravidas Nagar in Uttar Pradesh this morning.

The polling will decide the fate of sixteen contestants. The main contenders are from Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), Samajwadi Party (SP), Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Three hundred sixty five polling booths have been set up for three lakhs forty five thousand voters to cast their votes. One hundred fifty three polling booths have been identified as sensitive.

The by-poll has been necessitated following the death of a BSP MLA.

Counting of votes will take place March 1.

Tight security arrangements have been made to avoid any kind of untoward incident.

Nearly twenty companies of security forces including five companies of Central para military forces, fifteen companies of Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC), and 1000 state police have been pressed into service.

Inter-district borders of the segment with Allahabad, Mirzapur, Varanasi and Jaunpur has already been sealed.

Voting is also underway in West Bengal for Bishnupur (West) assembly by-election.

This seat had fallen vacant due to death of CPI (M) MLA Ratin Sarkar. (ANI)

Regular three-minute workout bursts best for health

Washington, January 28 (ANI): A regular and intense three-minute workout can do wonders in boosting your metabolism, says a new study.

According to Professor James Timmons, who worked with a team of researchers from Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh, Scotland, brief high-intensity exercises repeated in every couple of days may significantly take down the risk of diabetes.

Timmons investigated the effect of ‘high-intensity interval training’ (HIT) on the metabolism of sixteen sedentary male participants, who used exercise bikes to perform a quick sprint at their highest possible intensity.

It was found that there was a significant effect on their body’s ability to process sugars.

He said, “The risk of developing cardiovascular disease and type two diabetes is substantially reduced through regular physical activity. Unfortunately, many people feel they simply don’t have the time to follow current exercise guidelines.

“What we have found is that doing a few intense muscle exercises, each lasting only about 30 seconds, dramatically improves your metabolism in just two weeks.”

He continued: “Current guidelines, with regards to designing exercise regimes to yield the best health outcomes, may not be optimal and certainly require further discussion.

“The low volume, high intensity training utilized in our study substantially improved both insulin action and glucose clearance in otherwise sedentary young males and this indicates that we do not yet fully appreciate the traditional connection between exercise and diabetes”.

He added: “This novel approach may help people to lead a healthier life, improve the future health of the population and save the health service millions of pounds simply by making it easier for people to find the time to exercise”.

The research was published in the open access journal BMC Endocrine Disorders.(ANI)

Americans joining the armed forces to beat recession woes

Washington, Jan.19 (ANI): With the recession in the United States showing no signs of ending, Americans are looking at the country’s armed forces as a viable employment option, lured by factors such as a steady paycheck, benefits and training.

As of December 2008 alone, 21,443 new soldiers have joined active duty or the reserves, reports the New York Times.

Of the four armed services, the Army has faced the toughest recruiting challenge in recent years because of high casualty rates in Iraq and long deployments overseas.

Recruitment is also strong for the Army National Guard, according to Pentagon figures. The National Guard tends to draw older people.

“When the economy slackens and unemployment rises and jobs become more scarce in civilian society, recruiting is less challenging,” the paper quotes Curtis Gilroy, the director of accession policy for the Department of Defense, as saying.

Another lure is the new G. I. Bill, which will significantly expand education benefits.

Beginning this August, service members who spend at least three years on active duty can attend any public college at government expense or apply the payment toward tuition at a private university.

As far as the United States is concerned, there has traditionally been a strong link between increased education benefits and new enlistments.

The Army has managed to meet its recruitment goals each year since 2006, but with some difficulty.

On the one hand one would think that the current recession is boon for the armed forces as far as recruitment quotas are concerned, but on the other, the procedure of recruitment and the staff involved in it, can be a stressful assignment.

The NYT report says that recruiters must typically talk to 150 people before finding one person who meets military qualifications and is interested in enlisting.

Recruiting offices are reporting a jump in the number of young men and women inquiring about joining the service in the past three months.

As a rule, when unemployment rates climb so do military enlistments. In November, the Army recruited 5,605 active-duty soldiers, six percent more than its target, and the Army Reserve signed up 3,270 soldiers, and sixteen percent more than its goal. December, when the jobless rate reached 7.2 percent, saw similar increases in recruitments.

The Army recruitment age limit is 42, which was raised from 35 in 2006 to draw more applicants.

The Army Reserve and the National Guard have also received a boost from people eager to supplement their falling incomes. (ANI)