Susan Sarandon’s daughter Eva Amurri strips for TV show

Melbourne, Sep 18 (ANI): It seems budding actress Eva Amurri is following in her mother Susan Sarandon’s footsteps, for she is playing the role of a student who turns to stripping in the latest series of US hit show ‘Californication’.

Sarandon was known for doing similar roles more than 20 years ago- in ‘The Hunger’ in 1983, she dropped her clothes for a controversial lesbian love scene with Catherine Deneuve and has never shied away from nudity in films.

And now Eva, 24- born from Sarandon’s relationship with an Italian director during the Eighties- is kick-starting her own acting career in a racy guest appearance on the show.

She stars as Jackie, a student who moonlights in a strip club, during the third season of the show starring David Duchovmy, reports the Daily Telegraph.

The show sees her writhing around Duchovmy’s college professor character Hank Moody, peeling off a corset to dance for him topless.

And later, she is shown at his place taking their relationship to the next level. (ANI)

Planck spacecraft obtains first peek of big bang’s ‘afterglow’

London, September 18 (ANI): European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Planck spacecraft has obtained its first peek at the afterglow of the big bang, revealing it in unprecedented detail.

The ESA spacecraft was launched into space on May 14 this year. It is observing the glow of hot gas from just 380,000 years after the big bang, called the cosmic microwave background (CMB).

According to a report in New Scientist, the detailed properties of this background may contain hints of hidden extra dimensions or multiple universes, as well as providing clues to what caused a brief, early period of incredibly rapid cosmic expansion.

Planck began surveying the microwave background on August 13, a few weeks after reaching its planned perch 1.5 million kilometres from Earth at a point called L2 and cooling its detectors to within 0.1 degrees Celsius above absolute zero.

Now, the Planck team has released the probe’s first image, an observational strip covering about 5 per cent of the sky.

Slight variations in temperature from place to place in the early universe give the image its mottled appearance.

“With a few per cent of the data in, you can see it’s working well and delivering good stuff,” said team member George Efstathiou of the University of Cambridge.

Planck is expected to provide the most detailed all-sky map of the cosmic microwave background yet, improving on the best current map, obtained by NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), which launched in 2001.

Planck’s detectors have more than 10 times the sensitivity of WMAP’s, and about 2.5 times the angular resolution.

“Every strip that Planck scans, we’re getting data that is many, many times more sensitive than WMAP,” Efstathiou told New Scientist.

Although Planck was only designed to observe the sky for 15 months, the team believes it could last for more than 30 months, based on new estimates of how long its coolant will last.

The extra time will allow Planck to measure the radiation with even greater precision, since it will scan the entire sky four times – two more than originally planned. (ANI)

Lap dancing, a routine part of British workplaces

London, Sept 18 (ANI): Lap dancing has become a part of British working life, a campaign group has said.

According to The Fawcett Society, which campaigns for women’s rights, companies in the UK are turning a blind eye to the use of sex clubs by workers.

The group found that some firms knowingly authorise the use of staff expenses for entertaining clients in lap dancing and strip clubs, reports The Telegraph.

After studying lap dancing clubs’ websites and contacting them directly to ask about their work with corporate clients, Fawcett researchers identified more than 300 such clubs in the UK.

Some 41 per cent of UK lap dancing clubs directly target employers through marketing on their websites, the researchers found.

Kat Banyard, the Fawcett Society researcher who wrote the report, described the sex industry as “a major threat to women’s equality at work”.

She said: “The sex industry is increasingly targeting the corporate market, with lap dancing clubs marketing themselves as ideal venues to host meetings and client entertaining. Yet lap dancing clubs are a form of commercial sexual exploitation and fuel sexist attitudes towards women. Their use in a work context discriminates against female employees and undermines women’s status at work.

She added: “For too long, employers have engaged with the sex industry without due regard for the impact on female employees, and have failed to prevent the illicit use of the sex industry by employees in a work context.” (ANI)

Punjab farmers await compensation for land

Daoke (Punjab), Sep 9(ANI): Hundreds of farmers in several villages along the India-Pakistan border in Punjab’s Attari sector claim that they have not received compensation for the land acquired by government to set-up a patrolling strip along the zero line that divides both the countries.

Farmers said that the government has paid them for the land acquired, but compensation has never been paid.

“Government acquired our land just after partition for zero line to be used for patrolling. But, no compensation has been given to us for the 14-feet-wide strip,” said Kashmir Singh, a farmer.

Residents of villages in Attari sector including Daokae, Baropal, Nashta, Mahawa, Raja Tal, Noshehra Dhalla and Havanyian are demanding the compensation.

Villagers said that they had approached authorities several times, however, no action has been taken by the government.

“We approached the government, but no one paid heed to our problem. We also approached BSF officials, but nothing was done,” said Harbhajan Singh, a farmer. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Australia faces a long, dusty fight for survival at The Oval: Roebuck

Sydney, Aug. 22 (ANI): Australia faces a long struggle to survive at The Oval, believes noted cricket columnist Peter Roebuck.

According to Roebuck, an interesting few days awaits as skilful batsmen contend with fast bowlers bent on exploiting uneven bounce and modest spinners try to make the ball bite and turn.

“Far from playing hard and true, the strip was grudging and dusty from the opening hour. Evidently the curator overdid it. This match is likely to grip till the last afternoon,” he writes in his column for The Age.

“At stumps, Australia’s position was precarious. Hereafter it might need to rethink its bowling strategy by choosing horses for courses. Previously it was able to play the same blokes in all conditions. Great bowlers travel well. The current crop have varied skills. A ruthless approach may be required, with bowlers coming and going regardless,” Roebuck says. (ANI)

Cricket legends upset over ‘overcooked’ Oval pitch

London, Aug.22 (ANI): Former cricketers have criticized the curator of the pitch at The Oval for creating a surface solely for the purpose of ensuring a result in the fifth and final Ashes Test.

By the close of play on day two, 23 wickets had fallen and Australia trailed by 230 runs.

Former West Indies fast bowler Michael Holding was scathing in his assessment of the playing surface.

“I am very disappointed in this pitch. I have never been to The Oval and seen the ball going through the top (of the pitch) like this. Even on day one we have seen this. I played here back in 1976 – in one of the hottest summers ever in England – and it didn’t play like this. It can’t be the weather,” Fox Sports quoted former West Indian fast bowler Michael Holding, as saying.

Scyld Berry, editor of cricket ‘bible’ Wisden, took aim at a pitch “as pale as a supermodel on an unhealthy diet”.

The Oval has the reputation of being a wonderful batting strip. With consistent pace and bounce, it usually encourages attractive stroke play. It can also encourage high-scoring draws, which is just what England does not want.

Shane Warne offered the bluntest, simplest assessment, that groundsman Bill Gordon, had “overbaked it a little bit to make sure there is a result”.

Gordon should know a thing or two about pitches. He has been on The Oval ground staff since 1974. (ANI)

Kristen Stewart strips for James Gandolfini’s ‘Welcome to The Rileys’

Washington, Aug 21 (ANI): Actress Kristen Stewart will appear nude in her new film Welcome to The Rileys.

The Twilight star plays a young lap dancer plus prostitute, and walks around naked in many scenes in James Gandolfini’s new flick.

Apparently, the teenage star was a little nervous to film the scenes, and so she asked her Twilight co-star Nikki Reed to join her on the set of the film in New Orleans, Louisiana.

“I’m going with Kristen to New Orleans… while she’s shooting and I’m a good support system… I have to go to be with Kristen,” Contactmusic quoted Reed as telling About.com.

But Stewart is excited about the film and feels that her nude shots will lure her fans to theatres.

She said: “It’s an independent movie that nobody would normally see and now it’s like, ‘Oh, let’s go see Bella (Twilight character) in this stripper movie; it’ll be crazy!’”

Also, Kristen is delighted to work with the Sopranos star and considers the role in the film to be the hardest she has ever done.

She added: “Working with James Gandolfini and (co-star) Melissa Leo, who is just incredible, was the most fruitful life-changing experience on a movie that I’ve ever had.

“It was just the hardest subject matter I’ve ever had to deal with – I play a very broken young girl who is a runaway. She’s a street kid. She’s working in a strip club and James Gandolfini’s character is just as dead inside as she is – and they wake each other up.” (ANI)

Archaeologists discover world’s oldest tree sign in Prague

Prague (Czech Republic), August 13 (ANI): Archaeologists have uncovered a unique 1000-year-old mark engraved into an oak tree near Celakovice in Prague, Czech Republic, which is probably the oldest preserved sign of this kind in the world.

According to a report in the Prague Monitor, the real meaning of the 10-cm star-shaped mark on the oak trunk is not certain. Experts say it may have marked the territory or serve some iconic purposes.

This find is rare as so old engraved signs were not previously mapped and they are not systematically searched for either, said archaeologist Jana Marikova from the Academy of Sciences (AV)’s Archaeological Institute.

Geologist Radek Mikulas, from the AV’s Geological Institute, found the engraved sign by accident when he was searching for the actual age and state of the old oak trunks that were lifted near Celakovice during sand and gravel strip mining.

The mark was engraved into the trunk after the bark was removed from the spot, and this is why its traces were preserved.

Experts estimate that the oaks were standing near the Labe (Elbe) River between 600-800 A.D. and the engraved symbol must originate from the early Middle Ages.

Archaeologist Dagmar Dreslerova points out that the tradition of engraving signs and ornaments date back to the Palaeolithic Era (Old Stone Age).

However, only engravings made on stone, rocks and exceptionally on bones have been preserved, as wood and other organic material decompose with time.

The first written sources mentioning signs engraved into trees to mark land borders and paths come from antiquity. (ANI)

Demi Moore shows off washboard abs at 46

London, July 12 (ANI): Demi Moore is 46 years in age, but her beach body might just give women half her age a run for their money.

The ‘Ghost’ beauty showed off her figure in a tiny bikini in the Bahamas this week, where she is holidaying with hubby Ashton Kutcher, 30.

The mum-of-three has a washboard stomach that even rivals Kutcher’s six-pack.

While holidaying, the actress even gave herself a break from her punishing fitness regime, as she clutched a beer while fooling around in the waves with her hot husband.

“Demi looked fantastic – and you don’t get abs like that at her age without putting in a lot of hard work and spending a lot of cash,” the Mirror quoted an onlooker at the beach as saying.

Demi has defied Mother Nature through years of exercise and dieting, and what many claim a little help from the surgeon’s knife as well.

Although Demi has always dismissed rumours about her costly cosmetic surgery, she has admitted paying for unusual treatments such as a detox session involving leeches sucking her blood.

In fact, the ‘Strip Tease’ star has also employed an army of health advisers – including a nutritionist, personal trainer, yoga teacher and kickboxing coach. (ANI)

Jacko was left ‘broken’ by police strip search

New Delhi, July 3 (ANI): Michael Jackson never recovered from the child molestation charges that surfaced against him in 1993, particularly from the invasive police search that authorities put him through.

According to John Randy Taraborrelli who had known Jackson for 40 years, Jackson was extremely self-conscious about his body due to all the scars he had from surgeries and was humiliated when police forced him to submit to a nude examination, reports the China Daily.

“He begged police for an hour. Michael had been broken. He came into the living room and clearly agitated and wearing a brown dressing gown. Crying softly, he took it off, stripped of all his dignity,” Taraborrelli said.

Police wanted to see Jackson in the nude because the 13-year-old who made the charges against Jackson told police that he knew Jackson was circumcised.

That claim turned out to be false, as Jackson was not circumcised. Jackson ended up not being charged as the case was settled out of court.

Even though he was not charged, Taraborrelli said that Jackson never recovered emotionally from the ordeal. (ANI)

Men, too, feel anxious to strip off on the beach

London, July 3 (ANI): It’s not just the women who worry about body image and are reluctant to bare it all, for men too feel uncool about stripping off, according to researchers.

The survey by Tescodiets.com revealed that almost 50 percent men worry about baring their stomachs on the beach.

In fact, one in three men have considered avoiding a beach holiday altogether because of how they look in their swimming trunks.

Seven in 10 men surveyed were worried about baring their bodies, 47 percent were most cautious about revealing their stomachs.

More than 2,000 men were questioned for the survey, out of which, almost 75 percent thought that British men get just as nervous as women, when it comes to slipping on the swimwear.

The boys resort to many tactics to cover up in the heat-nearly a quarter wear shorts or a T-shirt even in the sea, 40 percent diet and around one third strip off only when in the water.

Over three-quarters of men were jealous of toned, athletic men they spotted on the beach.

One third of men said that they were most worried about how they looked to the opposite sex, as compared to just 13 percent who worried about what other men would think.

“Every summer we hear plenty about women dreading having to wear a swimsuit but men clearly have many of the same issues,” Sky News quoted Catherine Ambrozewicz, head of Tescodiets.com, as saying. (ANI)

Carnivorous clock that tells time by killing bugs!

London, July 3 (ANI): Two artists in London have come up with a bizarre invention in the form of a ‘carnivorous digital clock’, which catches bugs, then dissolves their bodies to create electrolytes to power itself.

A strip of sticky flypaper moves in a loop over the surface of the unit, much like a treadmill or moving sidewalk.

When an insect lands on the paper, it’s trapped and slowly moves toward its final destination, a drop-off into a bath full of carnivorous microbes that break down its body.

“As soon as there is a predatory robot in the room the scene becomes loaded with potential,” artist James Auger told New Scientist magazine.

“A fly buzzing around the window suddenly becomes an actor in a live game of life, as the viewer half wills it towards the robot and half hopes for it to escape,” he added.

Auger and his collaborative partner Jimmy Loizeau have also built a coffee table that catches and kills mice, and a light that lures buzzing moths to their dooms. (ANI)

Astronomers unveil largest map of cold cosmic dust

Berlin, July 2 (ANI): Astronomers have unveiled the largest map of cold cosmic dust, which are peppered in the inner regions of the Milky Way galaxy, and are the potential birthplaces of new stars.

Made using observations from the APEX telescope in Chile, this will prove an invaluable map for observations made with the forthcoming ALMA telescope, as well as the recently launched ESA Herschel space telescope.

This new guide for astronomers, known as the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy (ATLASGAL) shows the Milky Way in submillimeter-wavelength light.

Images of the cosmos at these wavelengths are vital for studying the birthplaces of new stars and the structure of the crowded galactic core.

“ATLASGAL gives us a new look at the Milky Way. Not only will it help us investigate how massive stars form, but it will also give us an overview of the larger-scale structure of our galaxy,” said Frederic Schuller from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy, leader of the ATLASGAL team.

The area of the new submillimeter map is approximately 95 square degrees, covering a very long and narrow strip along the galactic plane two degrees wide (four times the width of the full Moon) and over 40 degrees long.

The Universe is relatively unexplored at submillimeter wavelengths, as extremely dry atmospheric conditions and advanced detector technology are required for such observations.

The interstellar medium – the material between the stars – is composed of gas and grains of cosmic dust, rather like fine sand or soot.

However, the gas is mostly hydrogen and relatively difficult to detect, so astronomers often search for these dense regions by looking for the faint heat glow of the cosmic dust grains.

Submillimeter light allows astronomers to see these dust clouds shining, even though they obscure our view of the Universe at visible light wavelengths.

Accordingly, the ATLASGAL map includes the denser central regions of our galaxy, in the direction of the constellation of Sagittarius – home to a supermassive black hole that are otherwise hidden behind a dark shroud of dust clouds.

The newly released map reveals thousands of dense dust clumps, many never seen before, which mark the future birthplaces of massive stars.

The clumps are typically a couple of light-years in size, and have masses of between ten and a few thousand times the mass of our Sun. (ANI)

Air New Zealand cabin crew strip off for ‘Nothing to Hide’ safety video

Melbourne, Jul 1 (ANI): Air New Zealand has come up with a novel way to get their passengers to pay attention to safety instructions – by having their flight attendants read them out wearing only body paint.

In the video, the body-painted crew cheerfully give the safety instructions, including where to stow baggage and how to use oxygen masks, reports News.com.au.

The airline launched the new in-flight safety videos on June 29 on their Boeing 737 domestic flights, and may expand them to other routes.

The release of the safety video comes on the back of the airline’s “Nothing to Hide” advertising campaign, which also showed cabin crew carrying out their duties wearing nothing more than body paint.

The crew’s “naughty parts” are blocked due to strategic camera angles in the three-and-a-half-minute safety video and 45-second commercial.

The “Nothing to Hide” commercial has been viewed around two million times on YouTube, and is the most-viewed clip to come out of New Zealand, Air New Zealand’s Marketing Manager told the New York Times. (ANI)

Australia to check out pitch at Cardiff

Worcester (UK), June 30 (ANI): Australian captain Ricky Ponting appears to be quite desperate to get as much information about the pitch at Cardiff, the venue for the first Ashes Test against England, that he is preparing to send a spy to unravel the confusion surrounding the controversial Sophia Gardens pitch.

Reports about how the new strip will play in the first Test, beginning Wednesday week, have been so contradictory that Ponting is desperate for more information.

“We’ve been talking about trying to send someone down to Cardiff this week so we can have a look at what the wicket preparation looks like,” the Herald Sun quoted Ponting, as saying.

“Since we’ve been here (in England) we’ve heard lots of stories about how dry it’s going to be and how much it’s going to spin. There was even talk a month ago about the Test not going ahead there because of problems with the pitch. But we had a closer look at some stats last week and found that something like only 14 of the 69 wickets taken there in the last three county matches have been taken with spin,” he added.

Ponting’s concerns were magnified when he spoke to umpire George Sharp, who officiated in Australia’s opening tour match in Hove and umpired a one-day match in Cardiff on May 12.

“George Sharp said that Kaneria was unplayable. He was turning them square,” Ponting said.

“We need to get a closer look at it to make informed judgments for the way we pick our side for this Worcester game,” Ponting said. (ANI)

Man U fans no fans of new look rugby league-style kit

London, June 26 (ANI): Manchester United fans want their new rugby league-style kit seriously touched up before it goes on sale next month.

United fan Nick Cooper said: “It looks more like a rugby league strip. It also looks a bit American. I’ve not been a fan of the United kits for years.”

The shirt’s design is a tribute to the shirt worn in 1909-10 when Old Trafford opened, The Sun reports.

“It won’t do anything for Wayne Rooney! It’s something you’d expect to see on a rugby league player,” Red Devils fan Jim Ferry said.

Rooney said: “I think the kits are really nice. It’s always exciting to see the new kit and I’m excited about playing in it.”

Ji-Sung Park said: “I like to think of it as V for victory and hopefully we can win every game we play in the new kits!” (ANI)

Phil Spector to serve 19 years in prison for actress’ murder

London, May 30 (ANI): US music producer Phil Spector was yesterday sentenced to 19 years to life in prison for the murder of actress Lana Clarkson in 2003.

Clarkson was best known for her role in 1985 cult film Barbarian Queen.

Clarkson, 40, met Spector while a hostess at the House of Blues on Sunset Strip. Hours later her body was found slumped in a chair in the foyer of Spector’s home with a bullet wound through her mouth.

During the five-month retrial in Los Angeles, Spector had pleaded not guilty to the second-degree murder. His lawyers said he would appeal, reports The BBC.

Spector was given a sentence of 15 years to life for second-degree murder and an additional four years for personal use of a gun.

The 69-year-old was given a retrial after the jury in his original trial failed to reach a unanimous decision in 2007.

Before sentencing, the victim’s mother, Donna, gave a statement to the court, saying: “My beautiful daughter, I miss you so.” (ANI)

Rooney looking forward to lifting Champions League cup

London, May 26 (ANI): Manchester United star Wayne Rooney is imagining himself resplendent in his club’s change strip of all white, cracking in the winning goal in the Champions League final before lifting the famous trophy high above his head.

“Since we won the Premier League, I have been thinking about the final every day. You think about scoring in it and winning it and that helps you prepare.

Before every game I can picture myself scoring and doing good things in the game. I ask the kitman the day before a match what kit we are wearing, so I can think about myself in the proper strip. I can see myself picking up the trophy now!” The Sun quoted Rooney, as saying.

Despite all the fame and fortune, though, he is still very much a kid who just enjoys the game.

Rooney, 23, added: “I dream as much as I ever did.

“There’s a lot of money in football. But if I wasn’t playing for United I’m sure that I would be playing Sunday League with my mates, because I love football. I will watch whatever match is on TV and, if I’ve missed one, I will watch a recording,” he said.

“I’m really looking forward to it and, on the back of winning the league, we will be going in with a lot of confidence. It has been a very demanding season.

It gets more difficult every year. Other teams are getting better and it’s harder to retain the Premier League and the Champions League as well. It’s really difficult and you have to be really fit. But I think the buzz from Moscow has helped us. When we won it, there was a great celebration,” he added.

“We wanted to feel that again and we’ve realised now in Europe what the style of play is that you need to be successful,” he said. (ANI)

Lankan refugee camps are not simply temporary shelters

Toronto, Mar 23 (ANI): Thousands of Sri Lankan Tamil families in the country’s south, who were divided for years by the war and finally able to see relatives in the north, are now learning that the government camps are not simply temporary shelters for those who have lost their homes.

The network, which spans the country’s north, holds almost 300,000 people, and is designed to separate the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam fighters from the civilian population using former Tamil Tiger cadres as “witnesses.”

More than 40 per cent of those in the camps are children, according to surveys by UNICEF, and they will stay until their parents have been screened for Tiger affiliations.

The detainees are not just those who have fled the violence, but the entire civilian population of the northeastern conflict area, which is being swept clean of inhabitants by the military, Globe and Mail reports.

Sri Lankan officials say they face a problem: The LTTE effectively militarized large parts of the Tamil population in the breakaway state of Tamil Eelam, in the northern strip of land it controlled until its defeat on Monday.

Fighters, officers and trained suicide bombers are embedded in the civilian population, and include some younger teenagers and older children, so the screening process is bound to be complex, perhaps impossible.

To accomplish the task, they have created an elaborate hierarchy of 41 locations, most of them in remote northern areas, with no access to guests, family members or journalists, and with only restricted contact for aid agencies, the paper reports.

The Sri Lankan Government calls the first and largest tier of camps “welfare villages” and they currently house as many as 280,000 people, some in abandoned schools, but most in cities of tents provided by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

The largest of these is a cluster of camps north of Vavuniya, in the centre of the island’s north, containing more than 200,000 people over an area of 16 square kilometres.

The government had intended to put all Tamils in this complex, but abandoned that plan because “it got so large that it is swimming” in its waste, a health official said. Now there are subsidiary camps of 11,0000 detainees near Jaffna, in the far north, and of 6,000 in Pulmoddai, in the northeast, Globe and Mail reports.

Second are the “rehabilitation centres,” high-security facilities where suspected Tamil Tiger fighters, mainly male, are held indefinitely.

Military officials said that these centres, which hold almost 3,000 suspected fighters, are used to extract information about the identities of other rebels, and to prepare known fighters to identify former comrades in “screening” operations. It is not known what forms of interrogation are used here, the paper reports.

Finally, there is a very high-security facility on the south coast of Sri Lanka near Galle, where suspected senior LTTE officials and supporters are held and interrogated. One official, a junior officer involved with the screening process, said: “This is our Guantanamo Bay.”

All civilians are required to move into basic camps and are kept until they can be removed to “screening points” where they can be positively identified as non-combatants by panels of witnesses – Tamil Tiger officers who have been “rehabilitated” at tougher, more secure camps. (ANI)

Katie Green plans Turkey trip to strip off for all-body tan

London May 20 (ANI): Katie Green has laid down some exotic vacation plans to strip off for an all over tan.

The smothering hot Ultimo model seems to have had enough of the gloomy English winter and is planning to escape the weather by flying off to Turkey to soak under some sun.

“I cannot believe how the weather is in England at the moment,” the Sun quoted her as saying.

“I’m escaping to Turkey for a few days to catch some rays.

“I hate being wrapped up in layer upon layer of clothes in England, so it’s good to get away and strip off abroad,” she added. (ANI)