UPDATE 1-M&B appoints Interserve’s Tim Jones in FD rejig

LONDON, June 22 (Reuters) – British pubs and restaurant group Mitchells & Butler (MAB.L) has appointed Interserve’s (IRV.L) Tim Jones as finance director replacing Jeremy Townsend, who is joining Rentokil (RTO.L) as CFO at the end of August.

Meanwhile Interserve said Tim Jones, who has tendered his resignation to take up the role at M&B, will remain at Interserve “for an appropriate period” to ensure a smooth handover.

Interserve added it will be looking at both external and internal candidates.

(Reporting by Lorraine Turner)

Katie Price could not keep her hands off lover at boxing event

London, Aug 24 (ANI): Former glamour model Katie Price, a.k.a. Jordan, loves her boyfriend Alex Reid so much that she just could not keep her hands off him even at a boxing event.

Jordan, 31, was seen stroking the cage fighter’s knee at an Ultimate Challenge UK showdown at The Troxy in East London on August 22, reports the Sun.

But things were not so smooth 24 hours earlier, when Jordan entered the ring to present a belt at a tournament at Hove Town Hall, East Sussex.

Reid, who was acting as an announcer, gazed into Jordan’s eyes and said: “I love you lady.”

But the audience immediately “burst out laughing”. (ANI)

Fans grab 2M Jacko songs and 300K albums in 3 days post his death

New York, July 1 (ANI): Late King of Pop Michael Jackson’s fans have bought almost 300,000 to 400,000 copies of his albums and 1.8 million individual digital tracks in the three days after his death, according to Billboard Magazine.

However, figures have revealed that Jackson’s albums sold just 10,000 copies in the week before his death, while digital sales capped at 40,000.

Based on weekly tracking that ended Sunday (June 28), the figures might just put three of the star’s albums -’Number Ones’, ‘The Essential Michael Jackson’ and ‘Thriller’- in the top three spots on the latest Billboard Top Pop Catalogue chart.

However, Billboard’s regular Top 200 Albums chart will not feature Jackson’s albums, as it bans any disc that’s older than 18 months.

Still, this will mark the first time in Billboard’s history that a Top Catalogue entry has outsold the No. 1 disc on its regular album list.

The Black Eyed Peas’ ‘The E.N.D.’ moved just under 100,000 copies as Jackson peaked the chart.

Besides the three Jackson albums crowding the Catalogue chart peak, other titles by the star will also occupy the Top Ten, including ‘Off The Wall’, ‘Bad’, ‘Dangerous’, and ‘The Ultimate Collection’.

Two of Jackson 5 compilations, ‘The Ultimate Collection’ and ’20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection’, are also selling like hot cakes.

Jackson’s top selling digital tunes include ‘Man in the Mirror’, ‘The Way You Make Me Feel’, ‘Billie Jean’, and ‘Smooth Criminal’. (ANI)

Jacko’s hits becoming posthumous toppers on Brit charts

London, June 29 (ANI): While the sudden death of Michael Jackson has left many fans heartbroken, his records have re-entered all charts at top positions in Britain.

The moonwalking superstar has a posthumous chart-topper with album Number Ones.

A mind-boggling 43 Jacko tracks have also popped up in the full 200 singles rundown, reports The Sun.

The King of Pop accounts for an incredible 300,000 record sales in just two days this week.

While his greatest hits sit at the top of the album pile, his 1982 masterpiece Thriller also hurtled into the Top Ten at No7.

His collections ‘King Of Pop’ and ‘The Essential’ as well as 1972 album ‘Off The Wall’ also made the Top 20.

‘Man In The Mirror’ made it to No11, while classics like ‘Thriller’, ‘Billie Jean’, ‘Smooth Criminal’, ‘Beat It’ and ‘Earth Song’ all hit the Top 40. (ANI)

Khursheed says Govt prefers smooth process for minority reservation

New Delhi, June 21 (ANI): Minority Affairs Minister Salman Khursheed has said that the government will prefer a smooth process for reservation of jobs for minorities in the private sector instead of pushing it down to anybody’s throat.

Talking to reporters here on Saturday, Khursheed said the government is proceeding with as much urgency as it can on the issue.

Asked about the time frame in which minority reservation in private sector can become a reality, he said that a dead line is not possible in this case.

Khursheed, who is also Minister for Corporate Affairs, said the industry had a positive attitude on the issue and are not opposed to reservation.

He also said that if industries demand incentives at a later stage for implementing minority reservation, the government is open to discussions. (ANI)

For smoother hair, blow dryer is better than hair straightener

Hamburg – Hair straightening irons that use heat and pressure to make hair look smooth should be avoided, according to Hamburg’s star hair stylist Manfred Martz.

“Hair dryers are the secret,” Martz said. Hair tends to hang limp after using a straightening iron, while blow drying smooth gives it a certain natural volume, he said.

Hair should be towel dried before starting to blow it dry. A large round brush and an attachment with a narrow opening should be used. The hair should not be rolled up in the brush, said Martz. Instead, it should be gently pulled through bristles while blowing it dry.

He also recommends using a spray or other product that protects the hair from heat. These can prevent dryness. A smoothing product also can help.

“You’ve still got to blow the hair dry. These products alone don’t smooth the hair,” Martz said. Don’t be discouraged if you don’t get it right on the first go, he added.

“It takes a bit of practice.” (dpa)

EC issues notice to Lalu, Rabri Devi for Model Code violation

New Delhi, Apr 9 (ANI): The Election Commission on Thursday issued notices to Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad and his wife and former Bihar Chief Minister Rabri Devi for violation of the Model Code of Conduct.

Prasad and Rabri Devi made remarks against Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Varun Gandhi and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar respectively.

Rabri Devi has been given time till April 11 to reply to the notice.

Deputy Election Commissioner J. P. Prakash said the EC has made elaborate arrangements for smooth and transparent conduct of elections.

“Apart from 2,000 observers, 1.5 lakh micro observers have also been appointed to keep a close watch on the poll process,” he added. (ANI)

India may not ease white sugar imports before polls

India is unlikely to allow duty-free imports of white sugar before general elections are completed in May, Trade Secretary G.K. Pillai said on Saturday.

“It is before the cabinet. Since it was not taken up in the last meeting, I don’t think any thing is happening on that front before elections,” he told reporters when asked about the prospects of India allowing duty free imports of white sugar.

On Monday, the union cabinet did not discuss the issue of scrapping the 60 percent import tax on white sugar.

India, a leading producer and consumer of sugar, turned to the international market for supplies this year as domestic output is set to plunge.

Earlier this year, India eased the norms for importing raw sugar to ensure smooth supplies ahead of elections.

Farm Minister, Sharad Pawar, told Reuters in an interview on March 25 the country may not need white sugar imports at zero duty as local prices had fallen.

Gwyneth Paltrow admits her marriage has issues too

New Delhi, Mar 06 (ANI): Hollywood actress Gwyneth Paltrow recently admitted that her marriage to rocker Chris Martin too has its own set of issues.

The ‘Great Expectations’ actress also came clean about the fact that her husband would definitely ‘kill’ her about it publicly, as the couple had a pact that none of them could talk about their private life openly.

Gwyneth, who was at a ‘Bent on Learning’ gala in New York, revealed that her marriage appeared smooth, but it too had its own ups and downs, reports the China Daily.

“Nothing is as good as it looks. Life is complicated, and there are always issues to overcome. Yesterday, he went to Australia, and I came here – you have to accept that,” she told Life and Style magazine.

“He is going to kill me for talking about this!” she added.

Gwyneth, who has two children with Martin, revealed that though they had issues they were brutally honest with each other and that kept their relationship strong.

“We’re brutally honest with each other. Even if, God forbid, we weren’t together in 10 years or whatever, I think we’re like a family,” she said. (ANI)

Pedigree dogs have looks but no brain

Pedigree dogs have looks but no brain Keeping a high pedigree and good looking dog has become a style statement these days. This is quite evident when we see world celebrities like socialite Paris Hilton and pop diva Britney Spears, who are often photographed carrying “handbag dogs.”

However, a new study has suggested that pedigree dogs might look extremely cute and attractive, but when it comes to brains, they are extremely stupid as now they are being bred for looks and not for brains.

The study was carried out by researchers in Sweden, led by Kenth Svartberg of the University of Stockholm, who found strong evidence that breeding dogs for appearance has led to a decline in intelligence.

If adhered to the team, “The mental and physical agility of many pedigree breeds is being eroded as owners are now looking for docile, pretty pets to live in their homes.”

It was informed by the lead author Kenth Svartberg that the changes happened over the course of just a few generations. “Modern breeding practices are affecting the behaviour and mental abilities of pedigree breeds as well as their physical features,” he reported.

The researchers analyzed approximately 13,000 dogs on characteristics, such as sociability and curiosity, to help them rate 31 different breeds.

It was found by the team that the dogs, which were specially bred for shows had relatively low levels of all the characteristics mentioned above. Furthermore, the dogs which though were attractive had a really boring and introvert personality.

Svartberg said, “Perhaps the genes behind attractive looks could also be closely linked to those that cause fearfulness.”

Smooth collies, once a herding dog, and Rhodesian ridgebacks, which were used for hunting even dangerous game, were the worst-affected working breeds.

Dark buildings, vehicles, roads act as ‘ecological traps’ for organisms

Washington, Jan 8 (ANI): Insects and other creatures can mistake smooth, dark buildings, vehicles and even roads for water, which act as “ecological traps” that jeopardize animal populations and fragile ecosystems, according to a researcher at Michigan State University.

Bruce Robertson, an ecologist studying at the W.K. Kellogg Biological Station in Hickory Corners, north of Kalamazoo, claimed that the polarized light reflected from asphalt roads, windows, even plastic sheets and oil spills, mimics the surface of the water for some species.

As these organisms use water to breed and feed, the resulting confusion could drastically disrupt mating and feeding routines and lead insects and animals into contact with vehicles and other dangers.

Robertson said that polarized light reflected from man-made structures could overwhelm natural cues to animal behaviour.

For example, Dragonflies, and similar aquatic insects that are at the centre of the food web, can be prompted to lay eggs on roads or parking lots instead of water. And hence, insect population crashes can impact higher levels of the food chain.

“Any kind of shiny, black object — oil, solar cells, asphalt — the closer they are to wetlands, the bigger the problem,” he said.

In fact, even predators following misdirected insect prey, can also find themselves in danger.

While its known that natural light is vital for creatures” ability to navigate, even visible light pollution from man-made sources can have a negative impact.

For example, newly hatched sea turtles have a tendency to move from their beach nests toward landward light sources instead of following moonlight to the safety of open water.

Robertson said that horizontally polarized light has been found to be a reliable cue for creatures to locate water, and the researchers are trying to discover the effects of light reflected from man-made structures.

Although the research highlights new concerns about human impact on native species and ecological communities, it suggests the importance of building with alternative materials and, when necessary, employing mitigation strategies, which might include adding white curtains to dark windows or adding white hatching marks to asphalt.

Robertson said that its also possible to turn it to an advantage—in locations where trees are being destroyed by insect infestations, for example, “you may be able to create massive polarized light traps to crash bark beetle populations,” if such species are found to be responsive to polarized light cues.

The findings were reported in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. (ANI)

Ancient asteroid may have created biggest known landslide on Mars

Washington, Jan 7 (ANI): Scientists have said that an asteroid may have triggered a landslide on Mars billions of years ago, which is the size of the entire United States, and the largest known anywhere.

The finding could help solve the origin mystery of Mars’s Arabia Terra region, a vast, midlevel plateau between the planet’s smooth northern lowlands and rugged southern highlands.

According to a report in National Geographic News, estimated at about 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) wide, the giant asteroid is believed to have struck Mars’s northern hemisphere billions of years ago.

The cataclysm is thought to have given the planet its topographical split personality — smooth in the north, but bumpy down south.

The impact site became the smooth, low-lying Borealis Basin, about 6,000 miles (10,000 kilometers) across. The southern part of the planet became highlands—in places several miles higher than the basin.

The border of the two regions is sharply defined, except for the Arabia Terra zone. This odd middle ground is neither highlands nor basin.

Until recently, the reason for the region had been unknown.

Arabia Terra is a relic of the giant asteroid impact, according to geophysicist Jeff Andrews-Hanna, of the Colorado School of Mines.

This unusual midland was created when a U.S.-size portion of the highlands broke free and slid 180 miles (300 kilometers) northward, down into the southern rim of the Borealis Basin, Andrews-Hanna said.

In other words, three of Mars’s largest geographic features — the Borealis Basin, the highlands, and Arabia Terra — were formed “virtually instantaneously, in a single catastrophic collision,” the geophysicist said

According to Andrews-Hanna, the first clue that Arabia Terra was formed via landslide is that the relatively flat region has steep slopes at both its northern and southern edges, which is like a giant step.

Similar features occur in other large impact craters, many of which have bull’s-eye patterns—concentric circles or ellipses of steep ridges separated by gently sloping plateaus.

The similarity of Arabia Terra to these other craters indicates that it too might have been created by an impact.

Another clue is that, at Arabia Terra, the inner rim of the Borealis Basin doesn’t line up with its inner rim elsewhere on the planet.

Instead, the rim juts northward by about 300 kilometers, as if a landslide had smudged the clean break seen in areas to the west and east. (ANI)

Courteney Cox avoids sunshine to save herself from wrinkles

New Delhi, Jan 5 (ANI): Courteney Cox has revealed that she prefers going out in the evening so she can avoid the sun”s ageing rays.

The former ‘Friends’ star said that she hates venturing out during the day – because the ‘overhead light’ gives her wrinkles, reports the China Daily.

“I should just not go out during the day. It”s that overhead light that gets you,” she said.

The 44-year-old star, who has previously admitted having Botox injections in a bid to smooth out her wrinkles, also admitted that she found it hard to deal with her advancing years when she first moved to Los Angeles.

“I”ve never seen so many beautiful people walking around. Then as I get older, I find myself going, ”Wow, I can”t believe I”m not the youngest anymore! I can”t believe the guy over there wouldn”t be attracted to me.” But I”m married, it”s a non-issue,” she told Britain”s Marie Claire magazine.

“Let me tell you, there”s a lot of pressure. Which is why I always think women should be totally open with other woman about what they do to make themselves look better,” she added. (ANI)