Gujarat cricket will be professionalised, says Modi

Gandhinagar (Gujarat), Sep.15 (ANI): Ending the Congress party’s domination of the Gujarat Cricket Association (GCA) by taking over the presidency of the outfit, state Chief Minister Narendra Modi said on Tuesday that it would be his endeavour to professionalise the activities of the GCA.

Speaking to reporters after being elected unanimously to the post, Modi said that there was so much taking place outside and beyond the world of cricket, that he would use every opportunity and technical know-how to make cricket in Gujarat more market savvy and a better sporting entity.

Thanking all those who had elected him unopposed, he said that in the coming months and years he would do his best to improve the state of cricket in the state.

Modi replaced Narhari Amin as GCA president.

The GCA, affiliated to the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), governs the game of cricket in Gujarat.

It is involved in the conduct of the game from the grass root level to the International level. (ANI)

PM to address National Conference of Ministers of Environment and Forests today

New Delhi, Aug 18 (ANI): For a comprehensive stock taking of the implementation of policies and programmes concerning protection of environment, forests and wildlife, the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests has convened a National Conference of the Ministers of Environment and Forests of all the States and Union Territories here today.

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh will deliver the inaugural address.

Union Minister of state (Independent charge) Jairam Ramesh, Secretaries of Environment and Forests from all states, Chairman of Central Pollution Control board, Chairman of State Pollution Control Board, Principal Chief Conservators of Forests, Chief Wildlife Wardens, Members, Planning Commission, Chief Ministers, Secretaries, Government of India, Dr R K Pachauri, Director General, TERI, India, NGOs will participate in the conference.

The conference assumes significance in the context of the emerging and continuing challenges in respect of protection of environment, forests and wildlife.

The conference seeks to forge enhanced synergies between the efforts of the Central and State Governments for effective implementation of policies and programmes in this regard.

The conference will deliberate on several items.

They are i. Monitoring compliance with environmental and forestry related laws and regulations and road map for institution building;

ii.River cleaning – innovative models and enhanced co-ordination among the centre, states and local bodies;

iii. Strategies for increasing forest cover and enhancing synergies between Green India Mission, National Afforestation Programme and CAMPA Funds;

iv. Strengthening of State Forest Departments and Capacity Building of Forest Officials;

v. Protection of forests in the context of the implementation of Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forests Rights) Act, 2006;

vi. Wildlife management including Tiger Conservation and issues related to Man-Animal conflict. (ANI)

Excited Posh taking acting lessons for ‘Sex And The City’ sequel

Washington, July 13 (ANI): Victoria Beckham is so keyed up for her cameo role in the ‘Sex And The City’ movie sequel that she has started taking acting lessons.

The ex-Spice girl had earlier turned down a guest appearance in the first film, as she was too busy rehearsing for the Spice Girls’ reunion tour in 2007.

However, the fashion icon is quite upbeat about doing full justice to her role alongside Sarah Jessica Parker.

“She really wanted to be in the last movie but wasn’t able to take part because of her commitments with the Spice Girls. This time she’s keen to take part,” Contactmusic quoted a source as having told Britain’s Mail.

But this is not the first time that Posh will be acting in a film, for she has starred as herself in the 1997 movie ‘Spice World’, and also made a cameo in one episode of hit U.S. TV comedy series ‘Ugly Betty’. (ANI)

Bombay High Court scraps quota formula for college admissions

Mumbai, July 6 (IANS) Bombay High Court Monday struck down the Maharashtra government’s proposal to reserve 90 percent of college seats in the state for students from the state board.
The government had proposed only 10 percent of seats in junior colleges for students from Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) and the Indian School Certificate Examinations (ISCE). The rest were for students passing the Class 10 exam conducted by the Maharashtra State Board for Secondary and Higher Secondary Education.

Spelling a major setback to the state government, a division bench of the high court comprising Chief Justice Swatanter Kumar and Justice S.C. Dharmadhikari also lambasted the authorities for taking a “hasty decision” in the matter.

This is the second time in two years that the court has pulled up the government for its attempt to ensure that over 200,000 students of the state board get the measured share of seats and that the 25,000 students from other boards did not get an upper hand in admissions to prestigious colleges.

The judges’ ruling came in the final hearing of a plethora of petitions challenging the government resolution on the 90:10 seat sharing formula, which they termed as “arbitrary, un-constitutional and taken without application of mind”.

The judgement was welcomed by parents of students hailing from the CBSE/ICSE boards who were anxiously waiting for the admissions to begin for the junior colleges for the academic year 2009-2010.

The court said the decision was brought in for political ambitions and to favour the local board students. It “itself was self-contradictory, self-discriminative and conflicting with the objectives with which it was introduced”, the judges observed.

The court felt that the classification of students as coming from the state board and non state boards was “artificial and imaginary”.

Chief Minister Ashok Chavan asserted that they would not challenge the order in the Supreme Court. “We respect the court order,” he said.

Chavan said the 90:10 formula decision was taken after due consideration of the number of students from the state board and non-state boards.

Ageing honeybees’ learning ability remains intact when social roles are switched

Washington, July 1 (ANI): While scientists have been aware of the fact that cognitive function among humans declines as they get older, a research team in Germany have found that ageing honeybees can keep their learning ability intact or even improve it by switching their social roles.

Experts at Technische Universitat Berlin are now planning to use honeybees as a model to study general ageing processes in the brain, and hope that they may provide some clues on how to prevent them.

Dr. Ricarda Scheiner, leader of the research team, says that the oldest bees in a colony are the foragers – a task that demands a high amount of energy.

The researcher reveals that with increasing foraging duration, their capacity for associative learning was found to decrease.

According to Scheiner, no decline was observed in nurse bees that remain inside the hive taking care of the brood and the queen, even though their age was the same as that of their foraging sisters.

When a subset of these foragers were artificially forced to revert to nursing tasks, the researchers found that their learning performance improved again, demonstrating a remarkable plasticity in their brain circuits.

“The honey bee is a great model because we can learn a lot about social organisation from it and because it allows us to revert individuals into a ‘younger’ stage. If we remove all of the nurse bees of a colony, some of the foragers will revert to nursing behaviour and their brains become ‘young’ again. We thus hope to study the mechanisms responsible for age-dependent effects, like oxidative damage, and also to discover new ways to act against these aging processes,” says Dr. Scheiner. (ANI)

Men more likely to take risks when stressed

Washington, July 1 (ANI): Men under stress are more likely to take risks, correlating to such real-life behaviour as gambling, smoking, unsafe sex and illegal drug use, according to a new research.

On the other hand, stressed women moderate their behaviour and are less likely to make risky choices, the study found.

“Evolutionarily speaking, it’s perhaps more beneficial for men to be aggressive in stressful, high-arousal situations when risk and reward are involved. Applied to financial risk taking, it’s akin to competition for territory or other valuable resources,” said Nichole Lighthall of the University of Southern California Davis School of Gerontology and lead author of the paper.

The researchers asked both sexes to play a game called ‘the Balloon Analogue Risk Task’. The test involves inflating balloons to earn money.

In the control group in the study men and women displayed statistically the same levels of risk. However, in the stressed group, women were 30 per cent less likely to take a risk than a man.

“Men seem to enter more risky financial situations than women, which was part of the impetus for our study. But only in the stressed condition did we see any statistical differences in risky behaviour between men and women,” Lighthall said.

“Obviously, there are situations in the real world where risky behavior would not be beneficial. Sometimes being conservative, thoughtful and taking it slow are good things,” Lighthall said.

The study has been published July 1 in the journal PLoS One. (ANI)

Michael Jackson’s body released to there family

Michael Jackson’s body has been released to his family amid reports that the singer was regularly taking a cocktail of prescription drugs.

His body was taken to a mortuary late on Friday night at the request of the Jackson family who have yet to confirm their plans for the 50-year-old’s funeral.

Jackson was raised as a Jehovah’s Witness but before his death there were reports he had secretly converted to Islam. According to Muslim funeral custom the body is usually buried within days of the death.

Police and coroner’s officials are now examining the role prescription drugs may have played in Jackson’s death as it was reported that he was injected with the powerful painkiller Demerol shortly before he fell ill.

Entertainment news website TMZ reported that the singer received the shot at 11.30am the day of his death and The Sun said he was taking a cocktail of painkillers and other drugs.

Jackson was taking Dilaudid and Vicodin for problems with pain, Soma, a muscle relaxant, Xanax, a sedative, Zoloft and Paxil, anti-depressants and Prilosec for heartburn, said the newspaper.

Officers now want to speak to Dr Conrad Murray, a cardiologist who practices in California, Nevada and Texas. He will now be questioned further by detectives and his car was seized from outside Jackson’s house in case it contained drugs or other evidence.

Charlie Beck, assistant police chief of the Los Angeles Police Department, said it was “way too early” to draw any conclusions about the singer’s death.

He said officers spoke to Dr Murray immediately after Jackson’s death but now wanted to carry out “an extensive follow-up interview”.

Source Link – http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/feedarticle/8579935

Faster, more energy efficient electronics comes closer to reality

Washington, June 21 (ANI): You may see smaller, faster, more powerful, and less energy consuming electronic devices emerge in future, thanks to a new discovery by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Describing their work in the journal Science, the researchers have revealed that it involves a method to measure intrinsic conducting properties of ferroelectric materials, which for decades have held tremendous promise but have eluded experimental proof.

They believe that with this work, they may be on a path that will see barriers tumble.

“For years, the challenge has been to develop a nanoscale material that can act as a switch to store binary information. We are excited by our discovery and the prospect of finally being able to exploit the long-conjectured bi-stable electrical conductivity of ferroelectric materials,” said ORNL Wigner Fellow Peter Maksymovych.

“Harnessing this functionality will ultimately enable smart and ultra-dense memory technology,” added the expert who has jointly authored this study report with Stephen Jesse, Art Baddorf and Sergei Kalinin at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences.

The researchers claim that this is the first time that any group of researchers have demonstrated a giant intrinsic electroresistance in conventional ferroelectric films, where flipping of the spontaneous polarization increased conductance by up to 50,000 percent.

Ferroelectric materials can retain their electrostatic polarization and are used for piezoactuators, memory devices and RFID (radio-frequency identification) cards.

“It is as if we open a tiny door in the polar surface for electrons to enter. The size of this door is less than one-millionth of an inch, and it is very likely taking only one-billionth of a second to open,” Maksymovych said.

As authors write, the key distinction of ferroelectric memory switches is that they can be tuned through thermodynamic properties of ferroelectrics.

“Among other benefits, we can use the tunability to minimize the power needed for recording and reading information and read-write voltages, a key requirement for any viable memory technology,” Kalinin said.

Maksymovych pointed out that numerous previous works have demonstrated defect-mediated memory, but defects cannot easily be predicted, controlled, analyzed or reduced in size.

Ferroelectric switching, however, surpasses all of these limitations and will offer unprecedented functionality.

The authors believe that using phase transitions such as ferroelectric switching to implement memory and computing is the real fundamental distinction of future information technologies. (ANI)

Faster, more energy efficient electronics comes closer to reality

Washington, June 21 (ANI): You may see smaller, faster, more powerful, and less energy consuming electronic devices emerge in future, thanks to a new discovery by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Describing their work in the journal Science, the researchers have revealed that it involves a method to measure intrinsic conducting properties of ferroelectric materials, which for decades have held tremendous promise but have eluded experimental proof.

They believe that with this work, they may be on a path that will see barriers tumble.

“For years, the challenge has been to develop a nanoscale material that can act as a switch to store binary information. We are excited by our discovery and the prospect of finally being able to exploit the long-conjectured bi-stable electrical conductivity of ferroelectric materials,” said ORNL Wigner Fellow Peter Maksymovych.

“Harnessing this functionality will ultimately enable smart and ultra-dense memory technology,” added the expert who has jointly authored this study report with Stephen Jesse, Art Baddorf and Sergei Kalinin at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences.

The researchers claim that this is the first time that any group of researchers have demonstrated a giant intrinsic electroresistance in conventional ferroelectric films, where flipping of the spontaneous polarization increased conductance by up to 50,000 percent.

Ferroelectric materials can retain their electrostatic polarization and are used for piezoactuators, memory devices and RFID (radio-frequency identification) cards.

“It is as if we open a tiny door in the polar surface for electrons to enter. The size of this door is less than one-millionth of an inch, and it is very likely taking only one-billionth of a second to open,” Maksymovych said.

As authors write, the key distinction of ferroelectric memory switches is that they can be tuned through thermodynamic properties of ferroelectrics.

“Among other benefits, we can use the tunability to minimize the power needed for recording and reading information and read-write voltages, a key requirement for any viable memory technology,” Kalinin said.

Maksymovych pointed out that numerous previous works have demonstrated defect-mediated memory, but defects cannot easily be predicted, controlled, analyzed or reduced in size.

Ferroelectric switching, however, surpasses all of these limitations and will offer unprecedented functionality.

The authors believe that using phase transitions such as ferroelectric switching to implement memory and computing is the real fundamental distinction of future information technologies. (ANI)

Doctors, patients both find interaction via videoconferencing satisfactory

Washington, May 15 (ANI): Examining the feasibility and effectiveness of doctor-patient interaction through videoconferencing, a study has shown that such virtual doctor visits are similar to face-to-face visits on most measures.

“There is growing evidence that the use of videoconferencing in the medical environment is useful for a variety of acute and chronic issues. Videoconferencing between a provider and patients allows for the evaluation of many issues that may not require an office visit and can be achieved in a shorter time,” says Dr. Ronald F. Dixon, an internist at Massachusetts General Hospital and the study’s senior author.

In America, telemedicine projects are being examined to evaluate their capacity to improve patient access to care and lower healthcare costs.

During the current study, the researchers randomised patients to one of two arms.

In the first arm, the patients completed a visit-either virtual or face-to-face-with a physician, and later completed a second visit via the other modality with another physician.

In the second arm of the study, the subjects had both visits face-to-face with two different physicians.

All of the doctors and patients involved completed evaluation questionnaires after each visit.

The researchers observed that the patients found virtual visits similar to face-to-face meetings on most measures, including time spent with the physician, ease of interaction and personal aspects of the interaction.

The doctors in the study were also found to score virtual visits similar to face-to-face visits on measures like history taking and medication dispensing.

Though the physicians appeared less satisfied on measures of clinical skill and overall satisfaction, the ratings they gave to virtual visits were still in the good to excellent range.

The diagnostic agreement between physicians was 84 percent between face-to-face and virtual visits; it was 80 percent between the two face-to-face visits.

“The tradition of medicine is to lay hands on the patients, which has always been considered paramount to patient care in the minds of physicians. However, these findings suggest that virtual visits could be a viable option in circumstances where patients need to be monitored routinely for chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, obesity or depression, and where self-management strategies are not working. Virtual visits may also be effective for triage of acute, non-urgent issues like back pain or respiratory infections,” says Dixon.

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that both patients and physicians could benefit if virtual visits were used as an alternative method of accessing primary care.

The study has been reported in the Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare. (ANI)

Worries about corporate earnings cause Asian stocks to fall

Tokyo – Asian stocks slumped Wednesday on concerns over upcoming corporate earnings reports and profit taking.

The day’s sharpest stock losses were seen in Hong Kong and mainland China, where the major indices fell more than 3 per cent, as analysts predicted dismal earnings for companies for the quarter that just ended as well as for this year.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average plunged 2.69 per cent to 8,595.01 while its broader Topix index of all first-section issues was also down 2.08 per cent at
815.26.

Wall Street’s overnight losses dragged down shares in Tokyo as did Sharp Corp’s announcement that it was enlarging its expected losses for the fiscal year that ended March 31.

The Japanese electronics company said it expected its net loss to expand to 130 billion yen (1.3 billion dollars) from a February forecast of 100 billion yen and its operating loss – its first since 1977 – to worsen to 60 billion yen from 30 billion yen as demand for digital products dwindles amid harsh price competition and the global economic downturn.

Oil and property stocks fell in Hong Kong, where the benchmark Hang Seng index fell 3.04 per cent to 14,474.86, on lower crude and housing prices.

Developers in mainland China were also expected to face a stagnant market as their shares took a hit and the Shanghai Composite Index saw its biggest drop in six weeks, tumbling 3.76 per cent to 2,347.38, while the Shenzhen Composite Index dipped 3.29 per cent to 780.46.

In India, stocks bounced back from early losses on investors’ aggressive buying of property and energy shares as the Bombay Stock Exchange’s 30-share Sensex index rose 0.35 per cent to 10,571.89 and the National Stock Exchange’s broader 50-share Nifty was up 0.79 per cent at 3,282.25.

They were the exception to the norm, however, as investors in other countries in the region sold shares after analysts suggested that a stock rally that lasted through much of March was unsustainable in the current economy and before quarterly earnings reports began rolling in.

Company profits were expected to drop about 37 per cent, according to a survey of Wall Street analysts by the Bloomberg financial news agency. It would be the seventh-straight quarter of falling earnings.

Aluminium giant Alcoa Inc reported a first-quarter loss of 497 million dollars late Tuesday after posting a profit of 303 million dollars in the same quarter of 2008. The report marked Alcoa’s second-straight quarterly loss.

Investors in Australia sold stocks to lock in gains made earlier this week, sending the ASX 200 down 2.7 per cent to 3,516.

Bucking the trend were gold stocks with Newcrest Mining Ltd and Lihir Gold Ltd rising by more than 2 per cent.

In South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy, profit taking also saw the benchmark Kospi index fall 2.93 per cent to 1,262.07.

Taiwan ended a six-session winning streak as its Taiex index fell 2.4 per cent to 5,443.56.

Dealers said the government’s plan to lower credit card interest rate ceilings to no more than 12.5 per cent from around 20 per cent seriously battered financial shares.

In Singapore, the Straits Times Index fell 2.05 per cent to 1,765.51.

Other markets in South-East Asia saw lower drops. The Jakarta Composite Index dipped 1.41 per cent to 1,469.86, the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index was down 0.66 per cent at 913.74 and the Stock Exchange of Thailand was down 0.57 per cent at 440.03.

The Philippine Stock Exchange 30-share composite index was one of the few in the region to buck the downward trend and rose 1.03 per cent to 2,072.81.(dpa)

17 die in Jalaun boat mishap, rescue mission continues

SEVENTEEN BODIES of devotees who had drowned after their boat capsized in Yamuna at Beejalpur Ghat have been fished out during rescue operations, till Sunday evening in Jalaun district. Over 24 hours have passed but the operation has not concluded as the bodies of nearly 20 other devotees are yet to be fished out.

There were over 60 devotees when the boat capsized on Saturday. As many as 17 devotees managed to swim ashore safely while private divers and locals rescued eight others.

The incident occurred when devotees were returning from the ancient Jalauni Mata Temple. Rescue operations were on till Sunday night and thousands of people had gathered at the site to witness those at work.

Nine family members of head constable Mahendra Singh Senger, who is posted at Kudaura police station in Jalaun, died in the incident. Inspector General of Police (Kanpur range) Bhanu Pratap Singh visited the spot and tried to pacify the mob, which was angry at the “irresponsible behaviour” of cops of Auraiyya and Jalaun.

The cops had reportedly shirked taking responsibility on the pretext that the area did not fall under their jurisdiction. IG Singh assured the enraged people that an inquiry would be initiated.

After the boat capsized in Yamuna, villagers, who witnessed the incident, jumped into the river and made efforts to rescue those in the boat. Officials also summoned the divers of Farukkabad Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC), police divers of Etawah, Auraiyya and Jalaun to assist the ongoing operation to fish out the bodies.

SP Auraiyya Nachiketa Jha said as many as 35 persons were missing.
Wali Siddiqui

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American forces may stay in Iraq beyond June 2009 deadline

Baghdad, Mar.27 (ANI): The commander of ground forces in Iraq has said that US troops may extend their stay in the Iraqi cities of Baquba and Mosul beyond the June 2009 deadline.

A Christian Science Monitor report quoted US Lt. Gen. Lloyd Austin, as saying that the planned pullback of American soldiers from all Iraqi cities by the end of June will probably not be fully met.

Austin further claimed that Iraqi officials are likely to ask for US help in the key cities of Baquba and Mosul, meaning that American troops may stay there after the deadline for redeployment to major bases.

Senior military commanders say US troops will also likely stay on in the southern city of Basra.

“In Mosul and Diyala (Province), as we do a combined or joint assessment of the situation on the ground, I have every expectation that both sides will say we need to stay with this a little bit longer until this improves,” says Lt. Gen. Lloyd Austin, echoing sentiments of Iraqi officials concerned about ongoing fighting in those areas.

While US forces are to hand over combat missions to Iraqis by August 31, Iraqi forces likely won’t be able to operate completely on their own until the end of 2011, when American forces are scheduled to be out of Iraq altogether, says the senior US ground commander in Iraq.

“I think the Iraqis know that there are some things that have to occur before we leave. They know that there are some capabilities that they have to develop. I think they’ll be up to task when we do leave by 2011,” Lt. Gen. Austin, who leaves in April after 15 months of overseeing the day-to-day running of the war, said.

He also said that security in Iraq is far less fragile than it was a year ago but that sustainable and lasting security means more than a drop in attacks.

Austin played a key role in the US military taking Baghdad when he was deputy commander-maneuvers for the 3rd Infantry Division, leading a charge into Baghdad with fewer forces than most thought possible.

An imposing-looking but soft-spoken man who avoids the limelight, he earned a Silver Star for his role in the battle – rare enough for soldiers on the front lines but even more uncommon for general officers. It’s an award he describes as a collective achievement:

“I think it was one of the most incredible things our military has ever done. With literally two divisions – an Army division and a Marine division – we fought our way forward and liberated a city of six million people. If you lay that out and asked someone to talk about whether that’s possible, most folks would tell you that’s not possible,” he said. (ANI)

No threat to democracy in Pakistan: Zardari

Islamabad, Mar.10 (ANI): Amidst the on-going political blame game, and fears of military taking over the reigns, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has assured that there is no risk of derailment of democracy in the country.

According to a People’s Media Cell handout released before his departure to Iran, Zardari negated the notion that Pakistan is a failed state.

He said every step is being taken to ensure the stability of democracy and democratic organizations in the country.

About the ‘War on terror’, Zardari said Pakistan is carrying the burden of other countries on its shoulders, The News reports.

Zardari added that the government is working for the development of the country and its citizens, and the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) would certainly meet the expectations of masses. (ANI)

Outgoing Israeli PM Olmert likely to face corruption charges

Jerusalem, Mar.2 (ANI): Israel’s Attorney General announced Sunday that he intends to indict departing prime minister Ehud Olmert in a corruption case involving a Long Island businessman, Morris Talansky.

According to a statement from the Justice Ministry, Olmert will be granted a judicial hearing before a final decision is made.

Attorney General Menachem Mazuz said he is considering criminal charges against Olmert including fraud, breach of trust and receiving illicit funds.

According to the Jerusalem Post, the Justice Ministry statement did not mention bribe taking, although the police said in September that they had evidence pointing to such a charge.

Talansky, a resident of Woodsburgh, New York, testified that much of Olmert’s money was acquired over a period of 13 years before Mr. Olmert became prime minister in 2006.

Olmert acknowledged receiving the payments but said they were all legitimate donations for political campaigns. Still, the uproar resulting from the testimony led Olmert to resign.

Reacting to the attorney general’s announcement, Amir Dan, a media adviser of Olmert, said that Talansky’s testimony was “false and contradictory” and that the “mountains created by the police at the beginning of the episode have already turned into little molehills, and they, too, will disappear in the end.” (ANI)

Japan logs record trade deficit in January

Tokyo, Feb 25 (DPA) Japan logged the largest trade deficit on record in January as the global recession slowed exports, the finance ministry said Wednesday.

The nation’s trade deficit totalled 952.6 billion yen ($9.97 billion) in January.

The trade balance showed a deficit for four months in a row, and the largest since the government began taking the data in January 1979.

In January, exports fell 45.7 percent to 3.48 trillion yen from the previous year, and imports dropped 31.7 percent to 4.44 trillion yen, the ministry said.

With the US, Japan’s surplus shrank 75.3 percent to 132.8 billion yen. Exports fell by 52.9 percent to 571.7 billion yen, and imports from the country by 35 percent to 438.9 billion yen.

With China, Japan’s trade deficit expanded to 562.7 billion yen from 350.1 billion yen. Exports tumbled 45.1 percent to 512.1 billion yen, while imports dropped 16.2 percent to 1.07 trillion yen, the ministry said.
Indo Asian News Service

Kate Winslet likens her Oscar to mum’s cooking prize

Washington, February 25 (ANI): Kate Winslet likened her Best Actress Oscar to her mum’s victory in a pickling competition at a local pub in Britain.

After having been nominated five times earlier, the actress finally won the gong for her portrayal of a German woman with a secret Nazi past in the romantic drama “The Reader”.

Speaking after the Academy Awards, the ‘Titanic’ star added her win to her family’s previous accolade at The Retreat in Reading that saw her mum taking home a bottle of vodka in place of a coveted statuette.

“My mum won a pickled onion competition in the local pub just before Christmas and the Reading Evening Post sent me a picture of her holding her jar,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

“Well, Reading Evening Post, here’s your next Winslet picture!” she added.

Kate also dominated this season with two Golden Globes, a Screen Actors Guild award, a British BAFTA and a handful of U.S. critics awards. (ANI)

UN envoy concerned for civilians, Rajapaksa assures action

T V Sriram Colombo, (PTI) Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa today assured the UN’s humanitarian chief of all efforts to get the conflict-hit Tamil civilians in the north rehabilitated to safe areas, as the latter expressed concern over the plight of thousands of people trapped in war zone. Rajapaksa told the visiting UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs, Sir John Holmes that his government would make all efforts to bring out the civilians trapped in the war zone in the Northern Wanni and rehabilitate them to safe areas.

The meeting followed Holmes’ visit to the camps of Internally Displaced People (IDP) at Vavuniya yesterday. The UN envoy said “tens of deaths and more injuries” of civilians are taking place daily inside the northern Wanni region.

Holmes told reporters that he was concerned over restrictions on freedom of movement of the displaced and the presence of military inside the camps. Wrapping up his three-day visit to the island, he asked the government to expedite registration process of refugees at the earliest to ameliorate the lot of the civilians.

Appealing to the government and LTTE to ensure civilians were spared from the war, Holmes said: “I urge both sides to do everything they can for a peaceful and orderly end to avoid a final bloddy battle”. PTI.
PTI