England v Bangladesh test to start after rain

Play on the third day of the second test between England and Bangladesh will start after a rain delay at 1215GMT with the hosts deciding to enforce the follow-on at Old Trafford on Sunday.

England captain Andrew Strauss opted to put Bangladesh in again after his team bowled Bangladesh out for 216, in reply to the home side’s first-innings total of 419.

The tourists lost all ten first innings wickets after tea on the second day having reached 126-0. Tamim Iqbal top-scored with 108 before off-spinner Graeme Swann claimed 5-76 as Bangladesh’s fragile batting line-up capitulated in the final session.

Bangladesh need a win to draw the series after the hosts eased to an eight-wicket victory at Lord’s in the first test.

(Editing by Miles Evans; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

FEATURE – Starbucks goes upmarket with Seattle test café

Heavy velvet curtains, indie movie nights, single-origin coffees, wine and beer, mouth-watering organic pastries and gourmet cheese and meat plates — this is Starbucks?

Well, sort of. It’s Roy Street Coffee & Tea by Starbucks Corp, the result of Chief Executive Howard Schultz directing his store designers to break the mould and build a neighbourhood coffee house from scratch.

The cafe is located in Seattle’s eclectic Capitol Hill section, home to a vibrant gay community, grunge rockers, hipsters and mansion dwellers.

It and the similarly edgy 15th Avenue Coffee & Tea, also in Starbucks’ hometown, have been dubbed “idea incubators” by the now mass-market coffee chain and operate in one of the most competitive cafe scenes in the country.

Some company watchers say the two cafes signal a plan by Starbucks to move its stores back into the top end of the market, a niche it essentially vacated when it went mainstream with its lattes and Frappuccinos — now facing competition from McDonald’s Corp’s even more mass-market McCafe drinks.

“The Starbucks brand has shifted over time from being a specialty brand to being more of a mass brand. There is a gap at the top of the market,” said Harvard Business School marketing professor John Quelch. He added that smaller rivals like Peet’s Coffee & Tea and Caribou Coffee Co have seized the opportunity to fill that void.

“Obviously, Starbucks does not want to concede that top end of the brand pyramid to those competitors,” said Quelch, who did a case study of Starbucks in 2006.

The test format could “re-energize” Starbucks’ upmarket appeal and attract the kind of following originally drawn to the upstart brand 20-plus years ago, Quelch said.

The company debuted the test cafes last summer, shortly after it unveiled its new Starbucks store designs at University Village and 1st Avenue & Pike Street in Seattle.

Starbucks’ new store designs focus on energy savings and “green” building materials. Like the test stores, they have an urban industrial aesthetic that incorporates recycled building materials ranging from salvaged wood to high school bleachers.

“A major objective of ours was to get back on the leading edge of retail design,” said Arthur Rubinfeld, president of Starbucks global development. Rubinfeld returned to Starbucks to “reinvent the store experience” shortly after Schultz retook the helm of the flagging brand in early 2008.

Dan Geiman, an analyst at McAdams Wright Ragen in Seattle, said the new designs have more of a focus on coffee and a “more organic and less cookie-cutter feel”.

While Starbucks has made no announcements about its plans for the test cafes, they already are exporting ideas.

If you are the rare bird at your local shop who likes a bold brew or a decaf in the afternoon, you may have had a coffee made with the “pour over” method, where hot water is poured into a cone filter that drains into a serving cup. The method, popularized in cutting-edge independent cafes, was perfected for use at most U.S. and Canada Starbucks’ outlets by Roy Street and 15th Avenue staffers.

FULL RANGE OF ADULT BEVERAGES

During a Reuters visit to the Roy Street cafe one rainy work day afternoon, customers ran the gamut from toddler-toting moms to freelance workers and retirees.

Among them were University of Washington graduate students Nadine Maestas and Deborah Kimmey, who came for the ambience, the coffee and the alcohol.

“It’s a much improved atmosphere over other versions of Starbucks,” Maestas said of the decor, which is punctuated by locally crafted metalwork, reclaimed wood counters, industrial fixtures and richly upholstered chairs.

During their visit, they ordered coffee, beer and wine.

“We go through the whole process of drinks,” joked Kimmey.

CEO Schultz took the inspiration for Starbucks from Italy’s cafes, which offer espresso-based drinks and alcoholic beverages ranging from beer to wine to grappa. Starbucks has never embraced alcohol sales in the U.S. or abroad — but it has tested sales of such “adult beverages”.

In 2000, Starbucks offered beer and wine in three test “Cafe Starbucks” outlets in Seattle, which served breakfast, lunch and dinner. It also sold those alcoholic drinks in two “Circadia” soup, salad and sandwich shops located in San Francisco and Seattle. Those concept stores eventually closed, and some locations were turned into Starbucks stores.

Beyond that, Starbucks has conducted limited-time tests of beer and wine sales in Japan and Spain.

The Roy Street and 15th Avenue cafes debuts revived speculation that Starbucks could one day sell beer and wine at its 16,000-plus global cafes.

But, so far, the answer to that question is no.

“We have no plans at this time to offer these beverages in other locations,” a Starbucks spokeswoman said.

(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein; Editing by John Picinich)

MFB calls for insulation checks

The Metropolitan Fire Brigade (MFB) is urging anyone who has had insulation installed in their home recently, to have it professionally checked, following a house fire in Melbourne’s east overnight.

Six people escaped from the Balwyn North home after a blaze started in the roof last night.

The MFB’s Rod East says the damage bill could reach $800,000 after downlights without a protective covering caught fire inside roof insulation.

He says roof fires are extremely dangerous.

“That family had finished up their tea and they were planning what they were going to do for the rest of the evening when the girls went through the kitchen,” he said.

“This fire had been burning for quite a while before the family had been alerted to it. The first [time] the smoke alarms triggered was when the roof started to collapse.”

He says the blaze is not linked to the Federal Government’s home insulation program.

“We’re stressing that downlights especially, but also exhaust fans and the like require guards and shields to protect it from these sorts of things occurring,” he said.

Hafeez to play for Bangladeshi T20 team in Sharjah

Islamabad, Mar 8 (ANI): Pakistani all-rounder Mohammad Hafeez will be seen in action during Bangladesh’s T20 championship, the Port City League (PCL), scheduled to held in Sharjah later this year.

Hafeez will be playing for the Tigers, and will join fellow national team-mates Rana Naved, Imran Nazir, Shahid Afridi and Abdul Razzaq amongst many others, who have been signed by different teams in the championship.

The Chittagong District Sports Association had inaugurated the PCL with eight teams in May 2009.

The tournament will see the participation of Chittagong Abahani, Chittagong Mohammedan, Chittagong Brothers Union, Chittagong Port and teams sponsored by four corporate houses: Ispahani Tea, Elite Paint, Partex and Gazi Tank. (ANI)

Green tea may help improve bone health

Washington, Sept 17 (ANI): Green tea may help improve bone health, researchers in Hong Kong have reported.

The boffins found that the tea contains a group of chemicals that can stimulate bone formation and help slow its breakdown.

The study has been published in ACS’ Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a bi-weekly publication.

In the study, Ping Chung Leung and colleagues noted that many scientific studies have linked tea to beneficial effects in preventing cancer, heart disease, and other conditions.

To reach the conclusion, scientists exposed a group of cultured bone-forming cells (osteoblasts) to three major green tea components – epigallocatechin (EGC), gallocatechin (GC), and gallocatechin gallate (GCG) – for several days. They found that one in particular, EGC, boosted the activity of a key enzyme that promotes bone growth by up to 79 percent. EGC also significantly boosted levels of bone mineralization in the cells, which strengthens bones.

The scientists also showed that high concentrations of ECG blocked the activity of a type of cell (osteoclast) that breaks down or weakens bones. The green tea components did not cause any toxic effects to the bone cells, they noted. (ANI)

‘Osama’s handshake was limp, like shaking a wet fish’

London, Sep 12 (ANI): The handshake by world’s most dreaded terrorist Osama bin Laden has been described as limp, and like shaking a wet fish by a producer of CNN who met the terror mastermind.

CNN producer Peter Bergen, who wrote The Osama bin Laden I Know: An Oral History of al-Qaeda’s Leader, met the most dreaded terrorist in March 1997 when he went to film his first television interview.

Bergen narrates about the extra security around bin Laden and how they were taken to his hideout at night changing vehicles blindfolded.

The interview took place near the Tora Bora region of eastern Afghanistan where Bergen and his crew were electronically swept for tracking devices, and had to pass through three groups of guards armed with sub-machineguns.

“Bin Laden made no effort at small talk, wanting to get the interview done as soon as possible. Peter Jouvenal, our British cameraman, remembers that bin Laden’s handshake was limp, like shaking a wet fish,” The Times quoted him, as saying.

“I don’t recall shaking his hand but I do remember that he took frequent sips from a cup of tea, giving him an air that was more feline than fierce, and his blistering diatribe against the US for its policies in the Middle East was delivered in a barely audible whisper. After an hour he was gone, as suddenly as he had arrived,” he adds.

He also narrates Abdel Bari Atwan, a London-based Palestinian journalist who interviewed him in Afghanistan in 1996, as saying that Bin Laden, it seems, had prepared for life as a fugitive for years, adopting a monk-like detachment from material comforts.

Zaynab Khadr, whose family lived with the al-Qaeda leader in Afghanistan during the late 1990s, was quoted by the author as saying that he did not even allow his children to drink cold water because he wanted them to be prepared for the day when there’s no cold water.

He quotes Bin Laden as once instructing his followers: “You should learn to sacrifice everything from modern life like electricity, air-conditioning, refrigerators, gasoline. If you are living the luxury life, it’s very hard to go to the mountains to fight.”

In a tape posted to Islamist websites in February 2006, he says bin Laden confirmed his willingness to be martyred: “I have sworn to only live free. Even if I find bitter the taste of death, I don’t want to die humiliated or deceived.” (ANI)

It’s official: Britons are obsessed with weather

London, Sept 11 (ANI): Eight out of 10 Britons use current climatic conditions as the opening line when meeting a stranger, a new survey has found.

Queueing is their another favourite habit, with 70 percent of Brits favouring to wait in line compared to some of their European neighbours who favour pushing and shoving.

When it comes to takeaways, traditional fish and chips are still at the top, while more than half of Britons say their favourite luxury afternoon treat is a cream tea, reports The Daily Express.

The survey – by Debenhams – also found that the second-favourite conversation opener for Brit men is sport. But for women it is sex. (ANI)

Oz bosses bringing back 1950s style of management

Melbourne, Sep 10 (ANI): A survey has shown that bosses are cutting costs and dropping the collaborative management style of the early 2000s in favour of the 1950s-style.

Social researcher and leadership expert Avril Henry said that employers are doing everything from cutting out biscuits to banning hot food from the office.

They are also telling employees to snack on fruit outside in a bid to cut cleaning costs and cope with strained budgets, and are also micromanaging and bossing their staff around, rather than engaging with them.

“It sends a signal to employees that ‘I don’t trust you can do the job without being closely supervised’, it equates not seeking input from anybody below senior executive level,” News.com.au quoted Henry as saying.

The South African-born public speaker and author of Inspiring Tomorrow’s Leaders Today says examples of tight, bossy behaviour began emerging at the end of last year amid the deepening financial crisis.

“In the process of cutting costs we often do things that alienate the employees,” she said.

“You can cut the biscuits and you can tell people ‘we’re not providing tea and coffee, bring in your own’, but we still pay senior executives and CEOs huge bonuses,” she stated.

Henry says the leadership style is putting bosses on a direct collision course with Generation Y.

“Gen Y just go ‘I’m not working for a boss like that’,” she said of the generation born between 1980 and 1995.

“Gen Y will leave a job without another job to go to even in the current environment.

“They will do a job with less money, not necessarily in the same industry they were in, or equating to what they’re qualified to do, to work in environment where they are happy and they feel valued, not only as employees but as human beings,” she said.

Many generation X-ers (born 1965 to 1979), now in management roles, see this as “entitlement mentality”, but Henry thinks it’s a positive backlash to “toxic” workplace conditions.

“I think that (attitude is) what’s going to change workplace culture,” Henry, who is also a trained accountant, said.

“We have too many workplaces which are toxic, by toxic I mean people aren’t valued.

“Every organisation says ‘people are our greatest asset’ – my immediate response to that is then why do most organisations treat their employees like liabilities?” she stated.

“Bosses who cop a pay cut or ask their staff for thrifty suggestions show they’re ‘willing to share the pain’,” she added. (ANI)

Here’s why sugar in green tea is a healthy idea

Washington, Sept 10 (ANI): A new study has shown that adding ascorbic acid and sugar to green tea can help the body easily absorb helpful compounds that help fight health problems.

Mario Ferruzzi, lead researcher and associate professor of food science and nutrition at Purdue University, insists that adding ascorbic acid to green tea would increase the absorbability of catechins found in the tea.

Catechins, a class of polyphenols common in tea, cocoa and grape, are antioxidants thought to fight heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes and other health problems.

Ascorbic acid, sucrose or both together increase by as much as three times the amount of catechins that can be absorbed into the bloodstream.

According to Ferruzzi, Elsa Janle, a Purdue associate research professor of foods and nutrition, and Catrina Peters, the new study also demonstrates the effectiveness of a model that could reduce the number of animals needed for these types of studies.

The model charts how the digestive stability, solubility and absorption of polyphenols changes based on modifications to a beverage’s formula.

Ferruzzi said testing with the model could allow researchers to predict how a new product formula might change the product’s properties, reducing the number of animals needed for testing to only products that showed desired characteristics in the model.

The study backed up the model study that showed adding sugar and vitamin C to green tea enhanced the body’s ability to absorb polyphenols.

Ferruzzi said that adding lemon juice or other citrus juice to tea would do the trick, or consumers could look for ready-to-drink products that contain 100 percent of the recommended amount of vitamin C or ascorbic acid on the ingredient list.

“Having that vitamin C seems to do it,” Ferruzzi said. “And if you don’t want to squeeze a lemon into your cup, just have a glass of juice with your green tea.”

The study appears in journal Food Research International. (ANI)

More than half Britons get injured while eating biscuits!

London, September 8 (ANI): Britons have an amusing way of getting injured – eating biscuits on coffee or tea breaks.

According to a survey conducted by Mindlab International, on commission by Rocky, a chocolate biscuit bar, more than half of Britons have been injured while eating biscuits during a tea or coffee break.

Moreover, 500 people have landed themselves in hospital, the Telegraph reports.

Flying fragments or dunking in scalding tea hurt maximum people.

Some even poked themselves in the eye with a biscuit, while few fell off a chair reaching for the tin.

One man even ended up stuck in wet concrete after wading in to pick up a stray biscuit.

In a list of biscuits linked with potential dangers, the custard cream biccy beat the cookie to be ranked the top.

The safest of all was Jaffa cakes with a risk rating of 1.16 compared to custard cream with 5.63, as calculated by The Biscuit Injury Threat Evaluation.

The research also found that 28 per cent of people had choked on crumbs while one in 10 had broken a tooth or filling biting a biscuit.

In more funny ways of getting injured, seven percent had been bitten by a pet or “other wild animal” when trying to get their biscuit.

Mindlab International director Dr David Lewis said: “We tested the physical properties of 15 popular types of biscuits, along with aspects of their consumption such as ‘dunkability’ and crumb dispersal.”

Mike Driver, Marketing Director for Rocky added: “We commissioned this study after learning how many biscuit related injuries are treated by doctors each year.”

The full list of riskiest biscuits: Custard Cream 5.64, Cookie 4.34, Choc Biscuit Bar (eg: Rocky) 4.12, Wafer 3.74, Rich Tea 3.45, Bourbon 3.44, Oat Biscuit 3.31, Digestive 3.14, Ginger Nut 2.99, Shortbread 2.90, Caramel Shortcake 2.76, Nice Biscuit 2.27, Iced Biscuits/Party Rings 2.16, Chocolate Finger 1.38, Jaffa Cakes 1.16. (ANI)

Three newborn leopard cubs die in West Bengal

Jalpaiguri(WB), Aug 29 (ANI): Three of the four leopard cubs which were born in the Dooars region of West Bengal’s Jalpaiguri District were found dead 24 hours after birth.

Workers of the tea gardens owned by PCM Company spotted the three lifeless tiny ‘spotted beauties’ on Friday.eportedly, the mother leopard had abandoned the cubs after delivering them on Thursday.

As per the 1997 census, India had about 7,300 leopards in the wild but conservationists say the number has drastically dwindled over the decade. (ANI)

Hooch claims two lives in Ahmedabad

Ahmedabad, Aug 29 (ANI): Ahmedabad police recovered the bodies of two persons who died after allegedly consuming illicit liquor on Friday.

Three other persons are undergoing treatment at the hospital.

Relatives of victims accused the government of not taking steps to prevent the vending of illicit liquor.

“My father was complaining of a headache so I asked him to go to hospital but he didn’t want to go there then I said that take some tea. When we went for tea then we saw the dead body of a man who consumed liquor a day before, he died today after complaining of vomiting and stomach ache…there is no one to take care of poor, every one cares of rich people,” said Seema Ben, daughter of a victim.

However, police officials said that whether the victims had died after consuming illicit or poison could be ascertained only after reviewing post mortem reports.

“We can’t say that the victims consumed illicit liquor or not at this moment of time. However, doctors at the VS Hospital are said that the victims consumed some chemical but we would only say something on this only after reviewing post mortem reports,” said H. K. Mehta, additional commissioner of Police, Ahmedabad.

At least 132 people died of consuming illicit liquor in Ahmedabad in July.

Illicit liquor, also known as grog or hooch, is a flourishing beverage in India, particularly in states like Gujarat where prohibition is in force.

The illicit liquor is much cheaper as compared to the licensed drinks, which cannot be afforded by most of the people from the poorer sections of society. (ANI)

Troubled Kerry Katona threatens to ‘slash wrists’

London, August 29 (ANI): Kerry Katona recently threatened to slash her wrists after an emotional meltdown, according to reports.

The former Atomic Kitten was said to have broken down, waking her children, before screaming: “I’m going to kill myself.”

The report comes after the 28-year-old was carpeted by cops after a video of her snorting cocaine through a rolled 20-pound note emerged, reports The Sun.

The mum-of-four also purportedly spent eight hours in jail for allegedly kicking down her accountant’s door and then hurling tea over him.

Kerry later returned to her Cheshire house, where she sobbed uncontrollably in the presence of husband Mark Croft, waking her kids upstairs.

A close friend said: “She was screaming: ‘I’m going to slash my wrists’.”

A source added: “Kerry is at her lowest point ever.” (ANI)

Leopard rescued in West Bengal

Jalpaiguri (WB), Aug 13 (ANI): Wildlife officials rescued a male leopard from a tea garden in Jalpaiguri of West Bengal.

Locals from in and around the tea garden crowded the cage to have a glimpse of the wounded animal that had unleashed fear in the area.

Dipendra Nath Saha, the range officer of the Khunia said the leopard was trapped as it was terrorising the garden workers.

“This is the fourth rescue of its kind from this region in a span of two months. This leopard was doing damage to the garden workers,” Saha added.

With tiger population dwindling in recent years as a result of poaching, wildlife officials say hunters have increasingly set their sights on leopards, killing them for their skins as well as bones, claws and penises for use in traditional Asian medicines.

Depletion of their habitat has also threatened the leopards, forcing them to stray into human settlements-attacking people and cattle-and often getting killed in return.

India had about 7,300 leopards in the wild according to a 1997 census, but conservationists say the number is now likely to be much lower. (ANI)

It’s official: A nice cup of tea soothes away stress

London, Aug 13 (ANI): A new study has confirmed what millions of brew-lovers have long believed – a nice cup of tea helps us calm down during stressful times.

The study’s researchers commissioned by insurer Direct Line asked 42 volunteers, and found that the drink makes people feel “looked-after” and “at home”, reports The Daily Express.

But that’s not it: Even the tea-making ritual provides a “chillout moment” that significantly reduces anxiety levels after stressful experiences.

In the study, scientists carried out a maths test and afterwards half the group was given a glass of water and half got a cup of English breakfast tea.

The research found that the water-drinkers showed a 25 per cent increase in anxiety compared with before the task, while the tea-drinkers were four per cent less stressed.

Participants said the tea relaxed them and helped to “draw a line” under their stressful experience. (ANI)

Scientists create material that can repel hot water

London, July 16 (ANI): In a breakthrough study, scientists from University of Minnesota in St Paul have developed a new material that can repel hot water.

The new discovery could help protect vulnerable members of the population such as elderly, children, physically impaired people from hot-water burns.

Scientists have long been working on producing water-repelling materials inspired by natural surfaces, such as lotus leaves.

These leaves have waxy hydrophobic – water hating – coating and a spiky surface texture that helps to trap small pockets of air beneath water droplets.

During the study, Yuyang Liu along with colleagues from Hong Kong Polytechnic University, reviewed studies suggesting carbon nanotubes are powerfully hydrophobic in their search for a material that can repel hot water as well as cold, and found that they seem indifferent to temperature.

To further improve resistance to hot water, the team added carbon nanotubes to Teflon – a substance commonly used as a non-stick coating on cookware.

The researchers later dipped a cotton fabric into the mix.

They found that the material is able to repel hot water, milk, coffee and tea at 75 degree Celsius – a sufficient temperature to cause scalding – without problems.

Moreover, the hot droplets retain a near spherical shape and roll off the material.

However, Liu insists that Teflon coating alone is not so effective. He said that carbon nanotubes create a dimpled surface texture on a nanoscopic scale – small enough to trap air even under drops of hot liquid and prevent droplet impalement on the surface.

Philippe Brunet at the Mechanics Laboratory of Lille, France, thinks the work is promising.

“It has been claimed that a dense carpet of nanowires, coated with ad-hoc chemistry, should have a very high robustness to impalement but he doesn’t think anyone has tested such materials against hot water before,” New Scientist quoted him as saying.

The study appears in Journal of Materials Chemistry. (ANI)

Tripura fast emerging as a major tea exporting state

Agartala, July 11 (ANI): With its favourable agro climatic conditions, Tripura is fast emerging as a major tea exporting state in the region. The industry has evolved into a major business in the northeast.

The tea gardens here like the Manu Valley Tea Estate are in the process of modernizing production and are using the latest automatic machinery.

The tea estate has also imported Japanese machinery for plucking of tealeaves and is one of the biggest factories for tealeaf drier in Asia.

Last year, the 90-year-old tea industry in the state created history by exporting the beverage.

Despite the global economic meltdown, the tea industry in Tripura is reaping good profits in which 1 lakh Kg of tea named ‘Jewel Tips’ were exported to Iran, United Kingdom and Uzbekistan.

This generated revenue for the state and benefited the workers tremendously.

“Last year, we exported to UK, Iran, and Uzbekistan. In TATA also we have supplied more than 100,000 kilogram of tea. Now, the second phase has just started and the market is very good this year. Talk is going on with the TATA tea,” said J. C. DAS, General Manager with Tripura Group of Gardens.

“Earlier, we use the hand plucking method but now we are using machines. This has benefited us a lot as the work is completed faster and we get more money as well. We are very happy,” said Sudangshu, a Tea worker in Tripura

There are over 57 tea gardens in the Tripura, with about 6,000 hectares under plantation. Currently, the state produces about 7.5 million kilograms of tea in a year.

To give a boost to the tea industry, the Tripura Government, in collaboration with the Tea Board, is providing better irrigation facilities. Initiatives have also been taken to produce “Bio-tea”, which is free from any chemical residue.

Tea plantations have now become one of the promising industries in Tripura and are likely to witness more success in the coming years. By Pinaki Das(ANI)

Having chocolate, red wine regularly may help protect against Alzheimer’s

London, July 10 (ANI): Regular intake of chocolate, fruits, vegetables, red wine and tea could help protect against Alzheimer’s disease, according to an expert.

Dr Robert Williams, a biochemist at Kings College London, says that all contain chemicals called flavonoids that may also help existing dementia sufferers.

Flavonoids are naturally occurring antioxidants, which help beat cancer and the ageing process by protecting cells from damage. They also mop up potentially harmful oxygen molecules in the body.

New research is emerging that suggests flavonoids do not act only as antioxidants but exert their effects in other ways.

“There have been some intriguing epidemiological studies that show the consumption of flavonoid-rich vegetables, fruit juices and red wine delays the onset of the disease,” the Daily Express quoted Williams as saying.

Williams and his colleagues have focused their own cellular studies on a flavonoid called epicatechin, found in many foodstuffs, including cocoa.

“We have found that epicatechin protects brain cells from damage but through a mechanism unrelated to its antioxidant activity and have shown in laboratory tests that it can also reduce some aspects of Alzheimer’s disease pathology,” he said.

Central to the development of Alzheimer’s disease is beta-amyloid peptide, a substance normally produced in the brain but which in Alzheimer’s is deposited abnormally.

Williams has shown that flavonoids can protect brain cells against the toxic actions of beta-amyloid.

“The challenge now is to identify the single flavonoid or combination of flavonoids that exert the most positive effects,” he said.

Williams will present his findings at the British Pharmacological Society’s Summer Meeting in Edinburgh. (ANI)

William Shakespeare named UK’s greatest national treasure

London, July 4 (ANI): Legendary playwright William Shakespeare-known for his plays like ‘Romeo and Juliet’, ‘Hamlet’, etc.-has officially been named Britain’s greatest national treasure in a new poll.

The poll was sponsored by ice-cream makers Mivvi.

Buckingham Palace grabbed the second spot, while position three went to fish and chips.

Fourth on the list was Big Ben, while the age-old red phone boxes wrapped up the top five.

Wimbledon was placed at the 16th spot, and it became the highest sporting event to feature in the poll.

The tournament’s traditional treat of strawberries and cream also came in at number 24.

However, Wimbledon wasn’t the only sporting event that featured in the list, for cricket came at 26th spot, the Boat Race at 28 and the Grand National at 38.

People who featured highly in the poll include the Queen at number nine and The Beatles at 15.

UK’s traditional transport also made it to the list, with red buses at eight and black cabs at 13.

The traditional British cup of tea landed at number six, but Sunday roast could only manage 20, with bangers and mash at 36 and fry-ups at 47.

“British fare is more popular than ever at the moment, with the nation tucking into strawberries and cream while gripped by Wimbledon,” the Mirror quoted a spokesman for Mivvi, as saying. (ANI)

Closure of tea garden in West Bengal provokes protest

Bagdogra (West Bengal), July 3 (ANI): Hundreds of tea garden workers in Bagdogra region of West Bengal took out a protest march after the authorities closed down the Singhia Jhora tea estate without notice.

When the workers reported at the tea estate, located in Siliguri district, for work on Thursday they were shocked to find the gates locked. They looked for management officials but in vain.

Not knowing what to do, they staged a demonstration to protest against the closure of the tea garden.

“May be the manager is playing foul in this. When asked about this, the manager said there was nothing of that sort. But when we came in the morning we found it locked,” said Jotis Tirki, a worker.

The tea-rich Doars Terai region has as many as 315 tea gardens. Tribals form a majority of the work force in the area.

Over four million tribals inhabit the Doars Terai region and most of them are employed with the tea gardens.

With the closure of 16 tea gardens over 17,000 people have been rendered jobless. The tribals also want better working conditions and basic facilities.

The tribals have held several rounds of talks with the state and central Governments on their demands, which they said, have not been met so far. (ANI)