Italian police seize Maradona’s diamond studs

Rome, Sep 19 (ANI): Beleaguered football legend Diego Maradona had to hand over his diamond studs to police as part payment for the millions he owes the Italian tax authorities.

Italian officials paid the holidaying Argentinean coach a visit at the luxury hotel he was staying in and seized the earrings worth nearly 4,000 pounds, Sky News reports.

Police claimed that Maradona still owes some 20 million pounds, dating back to his seven-year stint at the Italian club Napoli, where he frequently failed to pay income tax.

After fleeing Buenos Aires on Monday following Argentina’s four defeats in five matches of 2010 World Cup qualifier, Maradona, 48, is currently staying at a spa in the town of Merano in north-eastern Italy, where he is trying to lose weight.

Italian authorities had seized two of his Rolex watches worth 11,000 pounds in 2006, when he was staying near Naples.

In 2005, they seized the money he was to receive for taking part in a TV dancing show.

Four years earlier, he was met by 20 police officers as he got off a plane in Rome.

Italy’s Supreme Court ordered the ex-footballer to pay 36 million euros in unpaid taxes.

According to the association of Italian taxpayers, Maradona still has 22.4 million euros to pay.

Recently, Brazilian legend Pele took a blow at Maradona, saying he feels another Argentine-born player, Alfredo di Stefano, is the best player ever.

“Maradona was a great player, but he could not kick with his right foot and did not score goals with his head.

The only time he scored an important goal with his head, it turned out he had used his hand,” Pele said referring to Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ goal against England in 1986 World Cup. (ANI)

Google’s web page ranking algorithm can detect critical species in ecosystems

Washington, September 4 (ANI): Google has developed an algorithm for ranking web-pages, which can be used to determine which species are critical for sustaining ecosystems.

The algorithm, known as “PageRank”, can be applied to the study of food webs, the complex networks describing who eats whom in an ecosystem, according to Drs. Stefano Allesina and Mercedes Pascual, researchers based at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis at the University of California, Santa Barbara and at the University of Michigan.

The researchers have adapted the PageRank algorithm, which efficiently ranks web-pages according to search criteria, for ecological purposes.

In a world of ever greater human-generated change, there is a need to forecast the impact of species extinctions on ecosystems.

This presents challenges, as every species is embedded in a complex network of relationships with others: a single extinction can cascade in further and seemingly unrelated species’ loss.

Furthering the problem, there are too many extinction scenarios to investigate, as even for simple ecosystems the number of possibilities exceeds the number of atoms in the universe.

Using the PageRank method, Allesina and Pascual identify the set of species which are most critical for maintaining ecosystem functioning.

The method identifies the species of maximum importance by determining which extinctions lead to the fastest ecosystem collapse.

PageRank assigns importance to web-pages according to the rule “a page is important if important pages point to it”.

This circular method of ranking, which can be solved through a clever application of college-level algebra, is key to the process of identifying critical species.

Although this approach would seem inappropriate, as food webs are not truly circular, the researchers introduce an ecologically-sound way to make food webs circular by adding an artificial species, representing the recycling of nutrients from all dead organisms back towards the plants that form the base of food webs.

The researchers hope that this method will be applied far beyond ecology to solve critical problems in other network-related biological fields, such as in protein interaction and gene regulation. (ANI)

Murdoch shuts London Paper, quits free sheet war

London, Aug.21 (ANI): Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation has retired from the free newspaper battlefield by announcing the closure of The London Paper.

In a rare and embarrassing admission of failure by the world’s most famous media mogul, his son James Murdoch, News Corp’s chairman and chief executive for Europe and Asia, declared the free-newspaper experiment, the subject of intense planning and major investment, had “fallen short of expectations”.

The paper, which has a staff of 60, is part of the News Corp subsidiary News International, based in Wapping, east London, and made a pre-tax loss of 12.9 million pounds in the year to June 2008.

The decision appeared to surprise executives at the rival Associated Newspapers, publisher of the free evening title London Lite as well as the nationally distributed free morning paper Metro.

There is a strong likelihood that London Lite, also a loss-making initiative, will close too, although the Standard, sold by Associated to the Russian media mogul Alexander Lebedev this year, may benefit from the shake-up.

News International launched The London Paper in the autumn of 2006 after market research by its then managing director, Clive Milner (now chief operating officer), and the newspaper’s editor, Stefano Hatfield.

“The strategy at News International over the past 18 months has been to streamline our operations and focus investment on our core titles,” said James Murdoch yesterday, in a statement that follows his father’s announcement this month of a drastic fall in profits.

The company’s UK papers suffered a 14 per cent drop in year-end advertising revenue, while profits across the global newspaper division fell from 786 million to 466 million dollars. (ANI)

Real Madrid unveil Ronaldo in front of 80,000 fans

Madrid (Spain), July 7 (ANI): Portuguese winger Cristiano Ronaldo was unveiled as a Real Madrid player last night and nearly sparked off a riot.

According to The Sun, a staggering 80,000 fans crammed the Bernabeu to welcome Ronaldo following his world-record 80-million-pound move from Manchester United.

The ceremony, however, was abandoned midway when Ronaldo had to be whisked away as dozens of supporters ran on to the pitch.

Real Madrid security guards frantically tried to contain the invaders and there was panic for a few seconds.

Ronaldo, 24, was expected back on the stage before leaving with Real supremo Florentino Perez and honorary president Alfredo di Stefano.

Instead, scared guards, who decided not to take any risks as fans ran amok on the pitch and scuffles broke out with security staff, took him away. (ANI)

Gemma Arterton ‘engaged’ to Daniel Craig’s body double

London, July 06 (ANI): Bond babe Gemma Arterton has got engaged to Daniel Craig’s body double in ‘Quantum Of Solace’, it has emerged.

The bombshell reportedly fell in love with an Italian known only as Stefano, during the filming of the James Bond movie, the Sun reports.

The 23-year-old beauty had accepted her man’s proposal at the Download Festival but not made it public.

However, now they seem to care less as they celebrated their engagement with a night out with friends and family at a London restaurant.

They were also snapped leaving the same eatery, though they tried not to be clicked together.

A sparkling diamond engagement ring was seen on her finger.

Gemma had recently broken up with 19-year-old Spanish stuntman Eduardo Muqoz, her horse-riding instructor on the set of the Disney production, ‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’. (ANI)

Architectural treasures damaged in Italian earthquake

Rome, April 7 (DPA) While public attention in Italy continued to focus Tuesday on the human toll of the earthquake that struck the central Abruzzo region, details of widespread damage to many historical buildings has also began to emerge.

In Abruzzo’s regional capital L’Aquila, originally built in the Middle Ages as a mountain stronghold, it were mostly modern buildings that were flattened when the main shock struck the city early Monday morning.

Experts noted that had the earthquake occurred hours before, people attending Palm Sunday Mass at L’Aquila’s Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio would have been in grave danger.

The earthquake caused the collapse of the roof over the central transept area of the medieval church, widely considered a masterpiece of Romanesque and Gothic architecture.

At another church, the 16th century San Bernardino, the belltower crumbled. Stones also tumbled from the city’s main cathedral, which was rebuilt after a 1703 earthquake.

Boasting several gems representing changing archaeological styles through the ages, L’Aquila also saw the destruction of the dome of the Anime Sante church, designed by the famed Neoclassical architect Giuseppe Valadier.

The dome of another church, the Baroque-style Sant’ Agostino, toppled down onto an adjacent building housing the city’s main government offices.

Surrounding towns, also suffered losses to their architectural heritage.

Among these, a tiny medieval mountain hamlet voted Italy’s prettiest in a recent poll, San Stefano di Sessanio, lost its landmark watchtower.

The earthquake’s main shock was also felt as far way as Rome, some 100 km from the epicentre, initially raising fears of possible damage to the Terme di Caracalla, located near the ancient capital’s centre.

But officials denied reports that fresh cracks had emerged on the walls of of the Terme, the famed thermal baths built by the Emperor Caracalla.

Troubled Torino draws against Lazio

Rome – Struggling Serie A side Torino took home one point from Lazio Saturday, holding the Rome side to a 1-1 draw after taking a first-half lead.

Ignazio Abate, an international defender with Italy’s youth team, livened up a dull first half at 36 minutes, drilling a smashing drive into the lower-left corner after seizing a short clearance from Ousmane Dabo.

The Rome hosts saw a first chance go begging at 44 minutes as defender Sebastiano Siviglia had his close-range shot blocked by goalkeeper Matteo Sereni with the tip of his boot.

Jeers from the home fans accompanied Lazio to the changing rooms after their dull first half, but Lazio returned on the pitch with renewed energies and managed to equalize with 15 minutes left.

Sereni saved Torino when, at 58 minutes, he had to rush outside his area to block a break from Pasquale Foggia. However, he capitulated when Siviglia nodded home after Stefano Mauri botched an overhead kick.

The draw ends a bad run of four straight defeats for Lazio, which remains relatively safe at mid-table. Torino remains third from last in the relegation zone.

Later Saturday, mid-table Napoli welcomes Bologna, a promoted side struggling just two points above the drop zone.

Leaders Inter Milan and AC Milan highlight the weekend late Sunday in a high-voltage city derby that offers the Devils a last chance to remain in contention for the title.

Inter have 53 points from 23 games, with Milan trailing at 45. Separately, second-place Juventus, at 46 points, welcomes Sampdoria earlier Sunday. (dpa)