Cities trap more CO2 than rain forests

Washington, September 9 (ANI): A surprising new study has found that cities trap more carbon dioxide (CO2) than rain forests.

According to a report in National Geographic News, compared with tropical rain forests, cities store more carbon, acre for acre, in their trees, buildings, and dirt.

“Everyone thinks about the tropical forests, but I don’t think people consider cities as a way to store carbon,” said study leader Galina Churkina of the Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research in Germany.

“Although a lot of studies have focused on carbon in forests, grasslands, and other natural ecosystems, looking at cities-which now house half of the world’s population-is relatively new,” Churkina said.

Intentionally storing carbon in cities could be one approach to counter global warming, she added.

Churkina and colleagues pulled together previous evidence looking at various stores of organic carbon, which comes from living things, as well as from such as plants and animals, wood, dirt, and even garbage.

Cities, including both dense metropolises and sprawling suburbs, store about a tenth of all the carbon in U.S. ecosystems, the study estimated.

In total, U.S. cities contain about 20 billion tons of organic carbon, mostly in dirt, according to the new study.

Some of this carbon-rich topsoil is in parks and under lawns, but it’s also sealed underneath buildings and roads-a remnant of grasslands or forests that were there before development.

Of all this urban carbon, about three billion tons are locked up in human-made materials-two-thirds of it in garbage dumps, and the rest in building materials such as wood.

Many cities have already launched ambitious plans for turning gray to green, such as Los Angeles’ Million Trees LA project, which aims to plant a million trees in the Californian city over several years.

Trees take up CO2 and turn it into carbon in their trunks, branches, and leaves, so planting more trees helps counter some of the excess CO2 in the air.

Likewise trees also cool cities and reduce the need for air-conditioning, according to urban forest expert David Nowak of the U.S. Forest Service in Syracuse, New York.

By planting trees around buildings, he added, “you avoid about four times more CO2 emissions than the trees sequester.”

Study leader Churkina added, “people could (also) try to store more carbon in gardens by smart management of the land. The carbon storage in lawns is quite amazing.” (ANI)

Manchester City stadium ‘target of loner’s Columbine-style massacre plot’

London, Sep.8 (ANI): A teenage loner accused of plotting a Columbine-style gun massacre at his school also considered targeting Manchester City’s stadium.

According to The Sun, Matthew Swift, 18, was said to have sent his idea in a computer message to 16-year-old co- accused Ross McKnight.

A jury at Manchester Crown Court heard how he told McKnight: “I was thinking of targets to attack – like the City stadium.”

Both teens allegedly plotted a killing spree at Audenshaw High School, Manchester, on the tenth anniversary of the Columbine massacre.

Swift also wrote in a diary: “I cannot wait for Judgment Day. It is going to be awesome.” he friends deny conspiracy to murder and to cause explosions.

The trial continues. (ANI)

Daniel Craig tops Sexy Male Movie Chests poll

London, Sep 4 (ANI): Brit actor Daniel Craig has come out tops in a new poll conducted on sexy male movie chests.

The survey by LOVEFiLM.com showed that a whopping 34 percent film fans voted 41-year-old Craig’s skimpy trunks scene in ‘Casino Royale’ as their favourite.

Scottish actor Gerard Butler came in second for his role in ’300′, while American actor Brad Pitt came in third for his role in ‘Troy’.

‘Borat’ star Sacha Baron Cohen took the fourth place, Sean Connery the fifth with his role in ‘Thunderball’, and Leonardo DiCaprio came in sixth for his role in ‘Beach’.

Actor Hank Azaria landed in the seventh place with his role in 2004′s ‘Along Came Polly’, late singer and actor Elvis Presley took the eighth spot with his role in ‘Blue Hawaii’.

Russell Brand was placed on the ninth spot for his role in ‘Forgetting Sarah Marshall’, and the tenth place went to Jan-Michael Vincent for 60s surf movie ‘Big Wednesday’. (ANI)

Cash-strapped Brit couples prefer to buy practical gifts than luxuries

London, Aug 26 (ANI): Romantic presents like flowers and jewellery are fast becoming history, courtesy cash-strapped couples who prefer gifting useful and practical presents to each other.

That’s the conclusion of a new research.

The study revealed that almost 60 per cent of Britons preferred to buy a useful article as gift for their partners, rather than something that is not a necessity, reports the Scotsman.

The researchers found that most couples gifted jewellery to each other two decades ago. But now, they’ve been turned into gadgets like iPod, or DVDs and books.

Jewellery came in third in the list, but a kitchen gadget such as a breadmaker was named the fourth most popular gift.

One tenth of the couples admitted to have rarely gifted anything to their partners in order to save money, while one fifth said they did not exchange any gifts to save money.

The survey of 2,500 married Britons also showed that couples now spent about 196.47 pounds on each other at birthdays and Christmas, compared to nearly 230 pounds 20 years ago.

Three-quarters of today’s couples have even set limits on the amount of money to be spent on gifts, to ensure that neither overspends. Only 50 percent of those married 20 years ago followed the same.

It has also been found that people are spending less money on engagement rings. Twenty years ago men spent an average of two months’ income on their partner’s engagement ring, but now males spend just one month’s wages.

Jonathan Caplan, from gold-buying website www.mygoldmine.co.uk, said: “Times are harder, so it’s not surprising to see people are tightening their belts, but it’s sad to think that celebrations are taking the hit.

“Romantic gifts, however small, will be around and enjoyed far longer than the iPod, which will be forgotten for a newer model.” (ANI)

Maoist violence on the decline in Jharkhand, say state police

Ranchi, Aug.9 (ANI): With security personnel carrying out an anti-Maoist drive for a month, a decline in the number of Maoist attacks in Jharkhand has been observed in comparison to the same period at this time last year.

“Maoist infested State of Jharkhand has seen a fall in number of attacks as compared to the last year. There has been a decline in Maoist violence in Jharkhand state,” a top police official said.

According to police statistics, there have been 228 Maoist attacks till end of July 2009, as compared to the 245 incidents recorded in 2008 in the same period.

Police say that as many as 20 most-wanted Maoists have been killed in 61 encounters besides 261 Maoists being arrested till July this year.

“The success against the banned Communist Party of India (Maoist) is a result of credible intelligence,” said S. N. Pradhan, Inspector General of Police in Jharkhand.

“We have got some big success owing to the intelligence information. The inputs provided to us were accurate about people and places. Action based on the intelligence helped us to get success against Maoists,” added Pradhan.

Police along with armed constabulary and paramilitary forces have launched operations to flush out the Maoists flush out from their bastions. They claim to have foiled many attacks of the ‘Red Army.’

“To be on the safer side, we deploy more security personnel in places which are more prone to Maoist attacks such as government offices, railways or main highways. At the same time, we deploy them in remote Maoist areas. This has helped us to understand the strategy Maoists follow in attacking and the kind of places they target. However, we are very careful as Maoists change their strategy frequently and we have to adapt accordingly,” said Pradhan.

Jharkhand is one of the worst affected of nine States facing more than three-decade-old Maoist revolt.

The Maoists have increasingly escalated to their rural eastern strongholds and are active in nearly a third of the country’s 630 districts, up from a presence in less than a tenth of them in 2001, government and independent data shows.

In June, Maoist rebels declared a “liberated zone” in West Bengal state, close to the city of Kolkata, sparking unease among investors in the communist-ruled state.

A large number of paramilitary forces are supporting the State police in the anti-Maoists driver in West Bengal’s Lalgarh area. (ANI)

Marie Curie named greatest woman scientist of all time

London, July 2 (ANI): Nobel Prize-winning nuclear physicist Marie Curie, who discovered that radiation therapy could treat cancer, has been voted the greatest woman scientist of all time.

The Polish-born researcher bagged over a quarter of the votes (25.1 per cent), almost double the votes received by her nearest rival Rosalind Franklin (14.2 per cent), the English biophysicist who helped discover the structure of DNA.

Third on the list was Hypatia of Alexandria, played by Rachel Weisz in a recent film about the fourth century Egyptian philosopher.

New Scientist magazine conducted the poll of 800 scientists and members of the public, which was commissioned by cosmetics company L’Oreal.

At the fourth position was astrophysicist Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell with 4.7 per cent votes.

London-born Ada, the Countess of Lovelace, the mathematician who wrote the first computer programmes grabbed the fifth spot in the poll.

Austrian physicist Lise Meitner who discovered nuclear fission was sixth in the list, while British chemist Dorothy Hodgkin who pioneered X-ray techniques was at seventh.

Then came French-born Sophie Germain, who was one of the world’s greatest mathematicians, followed by American marine biologist Rachel Carson, who pioneered the global environmental movement ninth.

Standing proudly at the tenth spot is modern role model Dr Jane Goodall, the world famous primatologist, with 2.7 percent votes.

“The poll indicates the vital need to celebrate and raise awareness of the many female scientists who have shaped modern science since Marie Curie – and who are making a bigger contribution than ever,” the Telegraph quoted Dr Roger Highfield, the editor of New Scientist magazine, as saying.

Grita Loebsack, of L’Oreal said: “Women are at the forefront of advances in many scientific disciplines, particularly in health and life sciences.”

“The aim of the poll was to celebrate the contribution women have made to scientific research but also to highlight the lack of modern role models to encourage young women to pursue careers in science,” she added.

The Top 10 woman scientists of all time are:

1. Marie Curie (25.1 percent)

2. Rosalind Franklin (14.2 percent)

3. Hypatia of Alexandria (9.4 percent)

4. Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell (4.7 percent)

5. Ada, Countess of Lovelace (4.5 percent)

6. Lise Meitner (4.4 per cent)

7. Dorothy Hodgkin (3.8 percent)

8. Sophie Germain (3.7 percent)

9. Rachel Carson (3.3 percent)

10. Dr Jane Goodall (2.7 percent) (ANI)

Congress calls for shutdown in Kerala over Pinarayi clean chit(Lead:Pinarayi)

Kochi, May 6 (ANI): An angry Congress party on Wednesday called for a 12-hour shutdown across Kerala in response to the clean chit given to CPI-M state secretary Pinarayi Vijayan in connection with the SNC Lavalin graft case.

Kerala Advocate General C P Sudhakara Prasad said Vijayan need not to be prosecuted in the case relating to renovation and modernisation of three hydel projects in the state in late 1990s.

Vijayan, who had been under the scanner in the case, was State Electricity Minister when the SNC Lavalin scam broke out 12 years ago.

SNC Lavalin power scandal is one of the biggest financial scams to rock Kerala.

The Comptroller and Auditor General of India report indicted a CPI(M)-led government of the mid-1990s for a Rs 374.50 crore loss to the exchequer.

Vijayan figured as the ninth accused in a charge sheet filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI). Later, the CBI moved to seek the Government”s consent to prosecute him.

Claus Trendl, Senior Vice President of the Canadian firm SNC Lavalin, has been arraigned as the eleventh accused and A Francis, former Joint Secretary (Power) as the tenth accused. There are totally eleven accused in the case.

Among the other accused are: K Mohanachandran, Former Principal Secretary (Power) and former Kerala State Electricity Board (KSEB) Chairman, who is the first accused, G Rajashekharan Nair, former Member (Accounts) (second accused) and P A Sidharthan Menon, former KSEB Chairman.

Three hydel power stations had to be upgraded at Pallivasal, Sengulam and Panniar. Tenders were invited and was finalised to an Indian consortium and a Canadian MNC.

The foreign company quoted Rs 2.42 crore per MW, the Indian consortium – BHEL and LandT – sought Rs 1.25 per MW. The contract went to the higher bidder, contrary to normal practice. (ANI)

CPI-M’s Pinarayi Vijayan gets a clean chit in SNC Lavalin case

Kochi, May 6 (ANI): CPI-M state secretary Pinarayi Vijayan has been given a cheat in connection with the SNC Lavalin graft case.

Kerala Advocate General C P Sudhakara Prasad said Vijayan need not to be prosecuted in the case relating to renovation and modernisation of three hydel projects in the state in late 1990s.

Vijayan, who had been under the scanner in the case, was State Electricity Minister when the SNC Lavalin scam broke out 12 years ago.

SNC Lavalin power scandal is one of the biggest financial scams to rock Kerala.

The Comptroller and Auditor General of India report indicted a CPI(M)-led government of the mid-1990s for a Rs 374.50 crore loss to the exchequer.

Vijayan figured as the ninth accused in a charge sheet filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI). Later, the CBI moved to seek the Government’s consent to prosecute him.

Claus Trendl, Senior Vice President of the Canadian firm SNC Lavalin, has been arraigned as the eleventh accused and A Francis, former Joint Secretary (Power) as the tenth accused. There are totally eleven accused in the case.

Among the other accused are: K Mohanachandran, Former Principal Secretary (Power) and former Kerala State Electricity Board (KSEB) Chairman, who is the first accused, G Rajashekharan Nair, former Member (Accounts) (second accused) and P A Sidharthan Menon, former KSEB Chairman.

Three hydel power stations had to be upgraded at Pallivasal, Sengulam and Panniar. Tenders were invited and was finalised to an Indian consortium and a Canadian MNC.

The foreign company quoted Rs 2.42 crore per MW, the Indian consortium – BHEL and LandT – sought Rs 1.25 per MW. The contract went to the higher bidder, contrary to normal practice. (ANI)

Forced child marriage in Bihar

Gaya, May 5 (ANI): Personnel of Bihar Police arrested a few persons involved in the kidnapping of a young boy and conducting his marriage with a girl child by force in Gaya district.

A 15-year-old boy named Lal Babu was kidnapped on Sunday for the wedding, which was solemnised under compulsion and at gunpoint.

A student of tenth standard, Lal Babu was rounded up when he came out of his coaching centre and soon a crowd gathered at the spot.

Reportedly, the kidnappers opened fire to scare away the crowd.
Although the police nabbed Babu, they could not foil the child marriage that was conducted earlier. However, after instant investigations, the child bride was also arrested.

It was also confirmed by the police officials that both girl and boy were below the legal age of marriage, 18 and 21 years respectively.

Police arrested the girl child’s mother along with a few others, who according to primary investigations were involved in the kidnapping.

“We have arrested the girl and her mother as they had a hand in this case of kidnapping,” said Rajvansh Singh, Deputy Superintendent of Police, Gaya.
Babu said that he was forced by the kidnappers to perform the nuptial rites at gunpoint.

“They asked me to sit for marriage. When I refused, they scared me with a gun and said that will kill me if I don’t obey. They made me perform all the rituals and including the application of vermilion at gunpoint,” said Babu.

The Indian Child Marriage (Prevention) Act terms wedding of boys less than 21 years and girls less than 18 as illegal.

The law is applicable to all communities and the parents who solemnise child marriages can be jailed upto two years.

Despite being illegal since 1929, child marriage is still rampant in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. (ANI)

German government to take over HRE by way of equity issue

Munich – Germany’s government has told Hypo Real Estate (HRE), the biggest German casualty of the world financial crash, that it will obtain 90-per-cent control of the bank by way of an equity issue.

HRE disclosed the move in a board statement Friday from its head office in Munich.

Berlin would ask the shareholders at a meeting on June 2 to vote for an increase in equity from just under 700 million euros (925 million dollars) at present to 6.3 billion euros, with the German state pumping in all the new funds.

The equity issue would sharply dilute the stakes of the existing shareholders, leaving them with less than a tenth of voting stock.

The new equity would be held by SoFFin, the government agency charged with helping German banks via guarantees and equity infusions.

SoFFin disclosed earlier in Frankfurt that a government takeover offer for HRE of 1.39 euros per share had made little progress.

Only 1.28 per cent of shares had been acquired as of Thusrday afternoon, SoFFin said. That brought Berlin’s present stake to 9.94 per cent. US investor JC Flowers has been dismissive towards the bid.

The HRE supervisory and executive boards advised shareholders Friday to accept the takeover bid for their shares. That offer expires on May 4. HRE stock rose 1.4 per cent in stock-market trading Friday to 1.41 euros.

Last month, Germany legislated compulsory purchase powers in case the shareholders do not accept the takeover bid.

HRE’s problems arose at its Depfa Bank unit, which operated from largely deregulated Dublin. Depfa is a principal lender to German local government, raising bond issues for roads and new buildings.

The government has so far given the bank support worth 102 billion euros.(dpa)

Religious procession taken out on birth anniversary of Guru Arjan Dev

Amritsar, May 1 (ANI): Thousands of Sikh devotees participated in a religious procession on Friday to mark the birth anniversary of Guru Arjan Dev, the fifth master of the Sikhs.

The religious procession was carried out from Akal Takht Sahib and included students of various schools besides devotees. It concluded after being taken around the city, it concluded at the same place in the evening.

Guru Arjan dev was the fifth Sikh Guru and the first Sikh martyr.

He gave away his life for the pride of Sikh people.

During the procession, various Orchestra Bands and the Gatka teams displayed their art.

The procession was led by Panj Pyara (or the five beloved) and followed by Sri Guru Granth sahib, which was carried in the golden palanquin, and further followed by the devotees who kept chanting hymns in the meanwhile.

The Guru Arjan Dev laid the foundation of the Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) in Amritsar. He also designed the four doors in a Gurdwara, proclaiming that “My faith is for the people of all castes and all creeds from whichever direction they come and to whichever direction they bow.” so declared that all Sikhs should donate a tenth of their earnings to charity.

The greatest contribution the Guru made to the Sikh faith was to compile all of the past Gurus’ writings into one book, now the holy scripture: the Guru Granth Sahib. It was this holy book that made him a martyr. Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Need for elite civil servant group?

The creation of a Senior Executive Service (SES) has been a common theme in the reform agenda of countries, which have embarked upon civil service reforms during the last three decades. The idea is to appoint a small group of civil servants into the SES from which high-level government appointments can be made.

This carefully chosen group of civil servants will be located near the apex of the executive pyramid, just below the ministers. The SES is designed to be an enclave within the civil service that receives broader opportunities, has special conditions of employment, is made accountable for rigorous standards of performance and behaviour, is paid a higher rate of remuneration and has less job security.

The Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC) in its tenth report has recommended that in the context of emerging challenges, there is a case for a “progressive approach to incorporation of certain features of a position- based SES model into the civil services in India”. The ARC has examined the position-based SES in Australia, Belgium, New Zealand, the UK, Netherlands and USA, which is more open because appointments to identified senior positions are made from a wider pool comprising all civil servants who are qualified to apply as well as those applicants from the private sector with relevant domain competency and experience.

Its openness is its basic strength. Although this system is more open than the career system, in practice, the bulk of appointments in the position-based system are from among career civil servants.

According to the tenth report of the ARC, in the American SES, “outsiders” fill up only 10 per cent of the positions. In Australia, recruitment to the SES from outside the Australian Public Service has ranged from 25 per cent in 1992-93 to 14 per cent in 2000-01.

The ARC has deliberated on the advantages and disadvantages of the career-based and position-based SES model for India. In India, it has been difficult not only for highly qualified persons from outside government, but also for high performers from other services to get selected for top civil service positions.

It has also been alleged that the quasi-monopolistic hold of the career civil services on senior management position breeds complacency, inhibits innovative thinking and prevents the inflow of new ideas from outside government. Such arguments constitute the rationale for the suggestion that a position-based SES type of structure may need to be considered for the Indian Civil Services.

The counter argument, however, is that the All India Services (and the IAS in particular), provide a unique link between the cutting edge at the field level and top policy making positions. This bridge between policy making and implementation, while crucial to all systems, has been of strategic significance in the Indian context, given the regional diversity of the country and was an aspect of the British administration in India which was consciously adopted by our Constitution makers.

The ARC Report after weighing all the aspects has said: “The Commission has considered this issue in all its aspects and in the context of emerging challenges and on balance feels that there is a case for a progressive approach to incorporation of certain features of a position-based SES model into the civil services in India”.

Soccer star Scholes throws 100 K pound bash for wedding anniversary

London, Mar.31 (ANI): Shy soccer star Paul Scholes has changed habits of a lifetime to throw a 100,000-pound bash for his tenth wedding anniversary.he Manchester United midfielder is known for shunning the celebrity circuit, but this time, he even hired X Factor singer Laura White to perform his wife Claire’s favourite songs.

Ice sculptures and champagne fountains welcomed guests to the posh White Hart Hotel in Saddleworth.

It is believed Paul, 34, renewed his wedding vows with childhood sweetheart Claire, 33.

A source said: “He wanted to push the boat out for once.” (ANI)

Nicola McLean feels incomplete without Indian bindi

London, Mar 24 (ANI): English glamour model Nicola McLean has revealed that wearing an Indian bindi makes her feel complete and extra special.

McLean, 25, who is wearing a bindi, which is an Indian piece of jewellery or cosmetic mark, on her forehead, is from Hamilton, Lanarkshire, and she has been the face of top jewellers Rox, who are designing a diamond bindi in honour of this year’s tenth Miss Scotland contest.

“The Rox bindi will cost 21,000 pounds. My bindi was just costume jewellery in lookalike rubies and diamonds,” the Sun quoted her as saying.

“But whether it’s made of diamonds or glass, wearing a bindi makes a girl feel extra special.

“I love bindis. When I was growing up in Hamilton, I had an Indian pal and I used to wear hers.

“It’s like a ‘finishing touch’ when you’re all glammed up.

“I think bindis are lucky and I always feel lucky when I’m wearing one,” she stated.

Rox, who are sponsoring the Miss Scotland contest, are using their top designer Christina Tagore to make the stunning Miss Scotland bindi.

“It’s made from 18-carat yellow gold, with a stunning, flawless one-carat pear-cut diamond,” Tagore said.

“It will be a work of art,” she added.

The bindi is the most fascinating and mystical of all Indian body decoration, and Hindus place great importance on this ornate mark on the forehead between the eyebrows, a major nerve point from ancient times for prosperity and good luck. (ANI)

2009 sees Friday the 13th occurring in two months in a row after 11yrs

Washington, Mar 13 (ANI): For the first time in 11 years, 2009 registered Friday the 13th falling in two consecutive months-February and March.

And what’s more, the double whammy can only occur in certain non-leap years and only in a February-March combination.

In fact, one can look for another of the Friday the 13th combo in 2015.f this wasn’t enough, the double threat isn’t the only Friday the 13th claim to infamy for 2009, a particularly tough year for superstitious minds.

The ominous date falls on three Fridays this year: February 13; this Friday, March 13; and again on November 13.

However, three Friday the 13ths in one year is the maximum it can get, at least until we follow the Gregorian calendar, which Pope Gregory XIII ordered the Catholic Church to adopt in 1582.

“You can’t have any [years] with none and you can’t have any with four because of our funny calendar,” National Geographic News quoted Underwood Dudley, a professor emeritus of mathematics at DePauw University in Greencastle, as saying.

The calendar works just as its predecessor the Julian calendar did, with a leap year every four years.

But the Gregorian calendar skips leap year on century years except those divisible by 400.

For example, there was no leap year in 1900 but one was observed in 2000. This trick keeps the calendar in tune with the seasons.

Thus, Dudley noted that we have an ordering of days and dates that repeats itself every 400 years.

And in this order, some years such as 2009 appear with three Friday the 13ths. Other years have two or one.

“It’s just that curious way our calendar is constructed, with 28 days in February and all those 30s and 31s,” said Dudley.

And there’s one more revelation with the 400-year order in practice: The 13th falls on Friday more often than any other day of the week.

“It’s just a funny coincidence,” said Dudley.

Richard Beveridge, a mathematics instructor at Clatsop Community College in Oregon, authored a 2003 paper in the journal Mathematical Connections on the mathematics of Friday the 13th.

He noted the 400-year cycle is further broken down into periods of either 28 or 40 years.

“At the end of every cycle you get a year with three Friday the 13ths the year before the last year in the cycle … and you also get one on the tenth year of all the cycles,” he said.

Two thousand nine is the tenth year of the cycle that started in 2000. (ANI)

Famous Khajuraho dance festival begins in MP

Khajuraho (MP), Feb 27 (ANI): The annual week-long Khajuraho dance festival kick-started in Madhya Pradesh.

The classical dance festival in Khajuraho is staged against the backdrop of tenth century temples built by rulers of the Chandella dynasty.

Organized by Madhya Pradesh Tourism Department, the cultural extravaganza takes place at an open-air auditorium in front of the Chitragupta Temple dedicated to the Sun God and the Vishwanatha Temple dedicated to Lord Shiva.

Khajuraho Dance Festival, though comparatively a dance festival of recent origin, has already become a legendary festival having earned a great deal of reputation among locals and foreigners.

The dances performed here are said to be truly divine with the wonderful backdrop of the sculptures of Khajuraho. The temples are brightly lit and are shimmering with the lights.

State Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan said that the government proposes to hold an international event soon at the tourist spot.

“Khajuraho is a reflection of the entire human lifestyle. It is a reflection of the Indian cultural heritage, it is a story in itself, and it is a way of living life. To promote this place as a tourist spot, we are thinking of ways to improve the festival. We are also proposing an international event soon after the elections and after the rainy season,” said Chauhan.

Among the Indian classic dances portrayed during the festival include Kathak, Odissi, Kathakali, Bharathanatyam, Kuchipudi and Manipuri.

The best performers of these dance forms are specially invited to the festival.

The festival offers an opportunity for amatuer artists too to rub shoulders with the exponents. For many of them, a performance in Khajuraho is the opportunity of a lifetime.

“This place is really very pure. The feeling of performing here is really good. The audience and ambience is good,” said Kasturi, an artist.

A cluster of Hindu, Buddhist and Jain Temples dating back to 950-1050 AD, known for its erotic sculptures, has endowed Khajuraho with international fame and recognition.

The festival was started by the Madhya Pradesh Government in 1975 and now entices the whole world. By Narendra Parmar(ANI)

Aviation turbine fuel prices down by 3.7 percent

New Delhi, Feb 16 (ANI): Public sector oil companies have announced a slash of 3.7 per cent in the prices of Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF), the tenth reduction since last September.

The slash in prices came into effect from Sunday midnight.

Jet fuel prices in Delhi were slashed to Rs 29,158 per kilolitre from Rs 30,288 per kilolitre.

In Mumbai, ATF rates went down by Rs 1,191 per kilolitre to Rs 29,985 per kilolitre.

ATF prices rose to Rs 71,028.26 per kilolitre in Delhi in August 2008 with the peaking of global crude oil prices to 147 dollars a barrel.

Since then, fuel prices have been slashed every month and decreased twice in November.

The state-run Indian Oil Corporation, Hindustan Petroleum and Bharat Petroleum revise ATF rates on the 1st and 16th of every month based on the average international jet fuel rates in the preceding fortnight. (ANI)

First-time mums at higher psychosis risk in month following childbirth

Washington, Feb 10 (ANI): First-time mothers are at the greatest risk of developing psychosis in the month following the birth of their child – even if they have never been treated in hospital for mental illness in the past, according to a new study.

It can be common for mothers to experience mental illness in the post-partum period (the months following childbirth): most frequently these might involve short-lived cases of the “baby blues” in the days after birth, and mild to moderate postnatal depression in the weeks and months that follow.

Psychotic illness – a mental condition involving episodes where the individual is unable to distinguish between reality and their imagination – in the post-partum period is relatively rare.

In the new study, Unnur Valdimarsdottir, of the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, and colleagues investigated the rates of psychosis in first-time mothers up to 90 days after the birth of their child, and a number of possible risk factors for psychosis, in Sweden between 1983 and 2000.

The researchers identified nearly three quarters of a million first-time mothers in Sweden in this period and found that 892 had been admitted to hospital for psychosis within 90 days of giving birth (a rate of 1.2 cases for every thousand births).

About half of these women had no previous record of being hospitalized for any psychiatric illness.

Amongst the women who developed psychosis, the incidence rate was highest during the first month following birth and it dropped to a tenth of that initial rate at 90 days after birth.

Also, the research established that the risk of developing psychosis increased with maternal age: women older than 35 were at two times greater risk than women aged 19 or less.

Factors linked to less risk of psychosis in the population of women studied were higher infant birth weight and maternal diabetes; other factors, including smoking and not living with the infant’s father, had no or limited impact on the risk of psychosis during the postpartum period.

The study therefore suggests that there is a specific risk of first-time mothers developing psychosis in the early period after childbirth.

The study has been published in the open-access journal PLoS Medicine. (ANI)

Sunlight used to turn CO2, water vapour into natural gas

London, February 6 (ANI): Materials scientists at Pennsylvania State University in University Park have successfully used sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water vapour into a range of fuels faster than ever before.

Lead researcher Craig Grimes has revealed that his team used hollow titania (titanium dioxide) nanotubes-around 135 nanometres wide and a tenth of a millimetre long-to catalyse the reaction.

Though titania nanoparticles have been used to speed up this process earlier also, Grimes’ team were able to generate hydrocarbons around 20 times faster than that achieved in previous studies.

The researchers attribute their success to clever chemistry. They added a little nitrogen to their nanotubes and loaded copper and platinum nanoparticles onto the surfaces.

While titania works best as a catalyst for this reaction in ultraviolet light on its own, Grimes says that adding nitrogen and copper to the mix shifts the preference of the titania tubes to visible light.

And the copper and platinum nanoparticles are thought to speed up the latter stages of the reaction.

The reaction itself also takes place inside the nanotubes, which are hollow and have a large internal surface area thanks to their thin 20-nanometer-thick walls.

During the study, Grimes and his colleagues filled steel tubes with carbon dioxide and water vapour, covered the end of the chambers with a film of their nanotubes, and capped the containers with a quartz window to let light in.

The researchers later set the closed chambers outside on the university campus on sunny days, from July to September 2008, reports Nature magazine.

When light falls on the nanotubes, they release energetic charge carriers, which split the water molecules inside them into two reactive components – hydroxide radicals and hydrogen ions. The hydrogen ions combine to form hydrogen gas.

Although the research team is yet unclear exactly what happens next, they think that the carbon dioxide also splits to form oxygen and carbon monoxide, which then reacts with gaseous hydrogen to form methane and water.

The devices generated roughly 160 microlitres of the hydrocarbons per hour per gram of their titania nanotubes, a rate at least 20 times higher than in previous studies done with ultraviolet light.

Physical chemist Michael Gratzel at the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne in Switzerland says that the efficiency of the catalyst is still quite low, but is optimistic that further work can improve it.

An article on this work has been published online in the journal Nano Letters. (ANI)

Religion considered more divisive than race in Britain, survey finds

London, Jan 20 (ANI): Six in ten respondents to a major opinion poll in Britain are in agreement that faith was the more divisive characteristic, while only two out of ten disagreed.

Black, Muslim and non-Muslim Asian respondents were more likely than the country as a whole to agree that religion was more divisive, reports The Telegraph.

The study, which was carried out by Ipsos MORI for the Equality and Human Rights Commission, suggests that there has been a substantial shift in public opinion.

It found that Britain is “increasingly at ease with racial diversity”, according to the Commission, with 84 per cent of people agreeing that “ethnic groups should be free to celebrate their customs and traditions while seeking to integrate into the British society”.

More than half of people disagreed that “people who move to Britain from abroad should leave their old traditions behind”, while less than a third agreed.

A total of 75 per cent of respondents said they would be “happy for [their] child to marry someone from another ethnic group”. Fewer people (70 per cent) said they would be happy for their child to marry someone of a different faith.

Meanwhile, following the election of Barack Obama in the US, more than half of respondents said it was “certain or likely” that Britain would have a black, Asian or mixed race prime minister in the next 20 years.

The study was commissioned to mark the tenth anniversary of the Macpherson report into the police’s mishandling of the inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence in 1993. (ANI)