South African officials withhold findings of Caster Semenya’s gender test

London, Sep. 19 (ANI): Even before South African star athlete Caster Semenya’s gender was questioned at the World Championships in Berlin, Athletics South Africa (ASA) had found out and withheld the fact that she had internal testes, an e-mail exchange has revealed.

According to the e-mail exchanges published in the Mail and Guardian newspaper, ASA officials were aware of the findings of a Pretoria clinic that Semenya had internal testes and produced abnormal amounts of testosterone for a woman, Times Online reports.

It was ASA’s chief medical officer and team doctor, Harold Adams, who had suggested the need carrying out the tests on Semenya, 18, because of her deep voice, muscular body and facial hair, which later became a subject of controversy in Berlin.

Another email exchange shows that Adams later suggested that the results to be kept confidential while the South African team was in Berlin.

“Thinking about the current confidential matter, I would suggest we make the following decisions. 1. We get a gynae opinion and take it to Berlin. 2. We do nothing and I will handle these issues if they come up in Berlin,” the report quoted from Dr Adams’ email to ASA President Leonard Chuene and General Manager Molatelo Malehopo, as saying.

Following the IAAF establishing that Semenya was a hermaphrodite, South African officials not only angrily denounced it, but also denied carrying out their own tests.

Taking matters a step further, South African Sports Minister Makhenkesi Stofile lost his temper at a press conference and threatened to start a “third world war” if Semenya was banned from international competition because of her gender.

Earlier, Semenya’s ex-coach Wilfred Daniels had said the ASA had duped Semenya into thinking the gender test carried out on her were routine drug tests. (ANI)

Robbie Williams moving Down Under?

London, Sep 16 (ANI): It seems that Robbie Williams is shifting bag and baggage to Australia, all thanks to his ladylove Ayda Field.

The singer has revealed that he is searching for a farm or beachfront retreat Down Under because of his girlfriend.

Robbie divulged the details in an interview on Australia’s biggest breakfast radio show on station 2DayFM, which is being guest-hosted by Dannii Minogue.

The ‘Feel’ singer-who is making a storming comeback with new single ‘Bodies’, out on October 12-even quizzed the Aussie beauty about dealing with jetlag.

“Ayda told me she had kind of a psychic feeling she’d end up in Australia,” The Sun quoted Rob as saying.

“I’m thinking of coming down there. I have been looking for places out in the outback, maybe a farm,” he added.

Robbie has recently moved back to Blighty, and the dodgy climate is already forcing him into Aussie estate agencies. (ANI)

Michelle Williams says falling in love again didn’t soothe grief

Washington, September 16 (ANI): Michelle Williams has said that falling in love again did not save her from the pain of losing her late former beau Heath Ledger.

The actress gave birth to the late star’s daughter Matilda, who was just 2 years old when Ledger died last year of an accidental drug overdose.

“After the first year, the pain is less intense; it’s less immediate,” People magazine quoted her telling Vogue.

“But the magical thinking goes away too. And that’s a whole new reckoning. But every time I really miss him and wonder where he’s gone, I just look at her,” she added.

The Dawson’s Creek star, who had parted ways from Ledger months before his death, said returning to the dating scene has done little to help her get over the grief.

She continued: “I thought falling in love again was the only thing that was going to save me from the pain. This erroneous idea: It just makes things more complicated.” (ANI)

107-year-old Malay woman wants 23rd hubby!

Kuala Lumpur, Sept 14 (ANI): A 107-year-old woman is looking for a groom to marry for the 23rd time because she fears her present hubby will leave her after coming out of rehab.

Centenarian Mek Wok Kundor married the 37-year-old Mohd Noor Che Musa in 2005, but ever since he joined rehab in July she fears their marriage will break down after he’s cured of drugs.

The woman, who is called Tok Wook, fondly confessed her insecurity and said she was looking for a new hubby to fill her ‘forlornness and nothing more than that’.

Tok Wook lives in Kampung Bukit TokBat and plans to visit Mohd Noor on the second day of Hari Raya if someone drives her to Kuala Lumpur.

The Star Online quoted her as saying: “I want to express my feelings and tell him that I am lonely without him and if he reciprocates, I will wait for him without thinking of another marriage.”

She added: “I am not searching for a man as handsome as our Prime Minister (Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak), but someone to accompany me in my twilight years.

“I realise that I am an aged woman. I don’t have the body nor am I a young woman who can attract anyone.

“My intention to remarry is to fill my forlornness and nothing more than that.” (ANI)

Pammie’s Peta advert ‘too racy’ for US airports

New York, Sep 10 (ANI): The new campaign by PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), which starred Pamela Anderson, has run into trouble after it was considered too racy for CNN Airport Network.

The anti-fur, anti-leather commercial shows the former ‘Baywatch’ babe as a scantily clad airport security guard who strips passengers of animal products.

The ad also features Steve-O, Andy Dick, comic Carol Leifer and punk icon Nina Hagen, reports The New York Post.

PETA planned to debut the spot tomorrow at all three Gotham-area airports, and later this fall in the other 45 major airports serviced by CNN.

However, the network wrote to PETA that it’s “particularly sensitive because children make up part of the demographic in airports.”

And now the animal rights group is thinking of running the ad on in-flight entertainment. (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)

Priming infants with cues to affiliation ups their tendency to be helpful

Washington, September 3 (ANI): Ever wondered why people often spend their valuable time and energy to help a neighbour, with no promise of payback?

Well, Harriet Over and Malinda Carpenter of Germany’s Max Planck Institute have now found that priming infants with subtle cues to affiliation increases their tendency to be helpful.

During a study, they showed a large group of 18-month-old infants photographs of household objects, such as a teapot or a shoe.

The researchers revealed that the household objects were always the central image and the only thing that they talked about with the infants.

They further said that placed in the background were much smaller secondary images that were intended to prime the infants’ subconscious thinking.

For these background images, some of the infants saw two small wooden dolls, facing and almost touching each other. Others saw the dolls facing away from one another, while others saw just one doll and still others saw some wooden blocks.

According to the researchers, the idea was that the two dolls who were obviously engaged with each other-and only those dolls-would spark thoughts of group identity and belonging-and that those unconscious feelings of affiliation would increase helpful behavior in the children.

To test that, after infants had seen the images, one of the researchers “accidentally” dropped a bundle of small sticks.

She then waited to see which of the infants would spontaneously reached out to help.

If the infants didn’t help immediately on their own, the researcher dropped some hints about the sticks and needing help.

She found that the children who had been primed for affiliation and group belonging were three times as likely as any of the other infants to spontaneously offer help.

She also observed that it was specifically the affiliative relationship of the dolls that caused the effect.

The researcher revealed that infants that saw two dolls who were standing close to each other, but who were disengaged, were about as helpful as those who saw just the lone doll-or the wooden blocks.

Having observed that mere social hints could boost children’s helpfulness in the lab, the researchers came to the conclusion that a few small changes in kids’ social environments might help promote selflessness in the real world.

A research article on their study has been published in the journal Psychological Science. (ANI)

US training more drone operators than fighter, bomber pilots

Lahore, Aug 24 (ANI): The US Air Force has said it is now training more drone operators than fighter and bomber pilots as part of an expanding programme battlefield automation, and signalled that the end of the era of the fighter pilot is in sight.

In a controversial shift in military thinking – one encouraged by the now-confirmed death of Tehreek-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in a drone-strike on August 5, the US air force is looking to hugely expand its fleet of unmanned aircraft by 2047, The Guardian reported.

Just three years ago, the service was able to fly just 12 drones at a time; now it can fly more than 50.

At a trade conference outside Washington last week, military contractors presented a future vision in which pilotless drones serve as fighters, bombers and transports, even automatic mini-drones programmed to attack in swarms.

Contractors also made presentations for “nano-size” drones the size of moths that can flit into buildings to gather intelligence; drone helicopters; large aircraft that could be used as strategic bombers and new mid-sized drones could act as jet fighters.

Some 5,000 robotic vehicles and drones are now deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. By 2015, the Pentagon’s 230 billion dollars arms procurement programme, Future Combat Systems, expects to robotise around 15 percent of US armed forces.

In a recently published study, the Unmanned Aircraft System Flight Plan 2020-2047, air force generals predicted a boom in drone funding to 55 billion dollars by 2020, the Daily Times quoted the Guardian report, as saying.

Last month, US Defence Secretary Robert Gates had underscored the change in strategic thinking when he capped the production of the F-22 Raptor, the US Air Force’s most advanced interceptor, at just 187 planes.

In June, Army General Stanley McChrystal, the top US commander in Afghanistan, said he couldn’t envision a day when he had enough surveillance assets.

“The capability provided by the unmanned aircraft is game-changing. We can have eyes 24/7 on our adversaries,” said General Norton Schwartz, the US Air Force Chief. (ANI)

Hugh Grant ‘seriously’ considering retirement

Washington, Aug 15 (ANI): Hugh Grant has revealed that he is seriously thinking of giving up acting – because he freezes up on camera.

The actor has joked about retiring in past – but now he’s starting to think it’s best if he steps away from the camera.

“I like everything about filming except the acting. I’m wonderful in rehearsals, but I’ve never been very good when they actually switch the cameras on,” Contactmusic quoted him as telling Entertainment Weekly magazine.

“In recent years, I’ve had really bad attacks, where I totally freeze up. I thought, ‘Well, if I’m going to get stage fright, then I’m packing it in,’” he added.

However, Grant also said that that he’ll have to either seriously quit acting or stop talking about quitting: “I feel foolish having said so often, ‘Oh, I don’t want to do any more (films).’ And then I always do.” (ANI)

Brangelina searching for luxury house in Big Apple

New York, July 13 (ANI): Globetrotting Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are apparently thinking of setting up base in New York, for reports have suggested that the celebrity couple have been secretly checking out plush properties in the Big Apple.

According to reports, the star couple have even seen the Apthorp-the century-old upper West Side landmark that’s undergoing a condo conversion.

Although the ‘Mr. And Mrs. Smith’ pair have always rented out properties during whenever they have stayed in the city, they now seems to be interested in the fortress-like luxury of Apthorp.

“The gated courtyard means they can get in and out of their car without being hassled by paparazzi. The building also has several other exits,” The New York Daily News quoted a source as saying.

It is believed that Pitt and Jolie are thinking about putting together three units in the building.

“I heard they’re ready to spend as much as 25 million dollars,” said a source.

It is believed that the couple is beguiled by the hand wrought period details of the Apthorp, which was built in 1908 by the Astor family.

Some apartments are as large as 13 rooms and boast 11-foot ceilings and 44-inch-wide hallways. (ANI)

Indian students stand second in non-US division of NASA supersonic design contest

Washington, July 11 (ANI): Sahaj Panchal and Dhrumir Patel from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Institute of Technology, Gujarat, India, have stood second in the category of ‘non-US team’ in a contest to design a supersonic airliner, hosted by NASA.

The contest saw college students from the US, Japan and India, who researched technology and created concepts for a supersonic passenger jet.

The Fundamental Aeronautics Program in NASA’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate sponsored the competition.

The participants were challenged to design a small supersonic airliner and submit a research paper limited to 25 pages.

Designs had to be efficient, environmentally friendly, low sonic boom commercial aircraft that could be ready for initial service by 2020.

A team of undergraduates from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, and a team of graduate students from the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta tied for first place in the US division.

A University of Tokyo undergraduate team won top honors in the non-US category, with Panchal and Patel from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Institute of Technology, standing second for their design called ‘RASTOFUST’.

A group of NASA engineers reviewed the entries. The judges based their scores on how well students addressed all aspects of the problem they chose to discuss.

The judges used the following criteria: innovation and creativity; discussion of feasibility; a brief review of pertinent literature; and a baseline comparison with the relevant current technology, system or design.

“We use these competitions to generate excitement for aeronautics and the engineering behind aviation,” said Peter Coen, principal investigator of the Supersonics Project at Langley.

“I was pleased by the number and diversity of the entries we received. And I was impressed by the quality and innovative thinking demonstrated in the designs,” he added. (ANI)

Prince Charles likens himself to ‘tree hugging’ ancestor Henry VIII

London, July 9 (ANI): Prince Charles has likened himself to Henry VIII, saying his ancestor was a tree hugger, just like him.

The Royal made the reference while urging action to stop climate change during the 2009 Richard Dimbleby Lecture in London.

“Henry instigated the very first piece of green legislation in this country. In ordering the building of a great many ships, he effectively founded the Royal Navy,” The Sun quoted him as saying.

“But there came a moment when Henry realised that creating his fleet was putting too much strain on the natural supply of wood, particularly oak,” he added.

Charles further hailed the then king’s introduction of the Preservation of Woods law in 1543, to ensure that the country did not run out of timber.

He said: “It was a simple and rather elegant piece of long-term thinking.”

He added: “What was instinctively understood by many in King Henry’s time was the importance of working with the grain of Nature to maintain a balance.” (ANI)

Keanu Reeves thinking of turning a trained chef

Washington, July 4 (ANI): Keanu Reeves has apparently set his sights on a new career, for the actor wants to get trained to become a chef.

The ‘Speed’ star was so impressed with a cookbook by famed French chef Herve This that he says that it has changed his life.

This, who uses science to perfect his culinary skills, has written the book ‘Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavour’.

After reading the tome, Reeves has been spending his spare time experimenting with recipes.

“I’m dabbling in it and looking at becoming a chef. He is fantastic. I didn’t really cook before but this book may be changing my life,” Contactmusic quoted him as saying. (ANI)

Loss of faith in Cricket Australia system convinced me to quit: Martyn

Perth, July 2 (ANI): Former Australian middle-order batsman Damian Martyn has revealed that he quit because he had lost faith in the system promoted by Cricket Australia. He also said that he could accept the way the board treated the players.

“I’d lost faith in the system and the way they treated guys and that sort of stuff,” the Herald Sun quoted Martyn, as saying.

He said he had wanted to finish earlier in 2006 against South Africa, but the cajoling of teammates and pre-Ashes hype talked Martyn into going on to the 2006-07 series against England.

He realised by the end of the second Test in Adelaide that he should have been more assertive in telling the team it was time to go.

Martyn’s exit, which arrived via a solitary email to Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland, was one of the talking points of the summer, and he admitted he should have quit after making a century against the Proteas in Johannesburg in April 2006, following his recall to the Test team.

“Yeah (retirement) was on the cards but we had to fly out the next day, quickly,” Martyn said.

“It really came as a case that I was over it (international cricket), but it wasn’t made easy for me to try and retire, so it was a hard situation and I just kept trying to do the right thing and you play and by the end I’d had enough, wanted to get out and get on with the rest of my life.”

The politics of the Australian team are complex, and in explaining why he told no one of his final decision, Martyn said there was no easy way to extricate oneself from that environment.

“They might’ve liked a fairytale phone call that morning saying ‘I’m retiring’, but I knew I couldn’t do that in a sense because I’d get talked back into playing, so it was like, what do you do?” he said.

“Everybody in the group, if you walked around a team and told 15 blokes what you were thinking of doing, of retiring or doing this or that, you’d have 15 different answers.

“Some will be your mates who just don’t want your mates to go, some probably want you to go, you get a million different answers, so it’s something you just have to do yourself, stick by it and deal with it.”

Martyn also expressed empathy for Andrew Symonds, who he described as a virtual kindred spirit and a victim of the machinations of a corporatised game.

“I think Symo’s one of those guys, a bit like myself where we just wanted to get out and play cricket,” Martyn said in an interview for the Wisden Cricketer.

“We grew up as kids, for me I was playing AFL in the back yard and cricket in the front yard, and cricket took off, and next thing I know I’m playing for my country so it’s not like it’s a planned scenario, you’re thrust into this and some guys handle it differently to others.

“They (the authorities) have just got to be prepared to maybe look after guys a bit better. ” (ANI)

Yousuf’ s inclusion could see Malik open batting against Sri Lanka

Lahore, June 30 (ANI): With the return of middle order batsman Mohammad Yousuf in the team, the Pakistan team management is undecided over how to utilize all rounder Shoaib Malik, and is now thinking of pushing the former captain up the batting order.

Malik, who has been in indifferent form with the bat in the recent past, may be asked to open the batting with Salman Butt in the first Test against Sri Lanka, which begins from July 4 in Galle, team sources said.

Malik has opened batting for the team in the past, and has proved his mettle at the top of the order too.

He played a match-saving knock of 148, which was his career-best performance, and helped Pakistan win the Test series during the 2006 Sri Lanka series.

Sources said that the team management is finding it hard to keep Malik in the squad with a crowded middle-order, where players like captain Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq and now Mohammad Yousuf would be battling it out, The Daily Times reports.

Now, it would be interesting to see if Malik is axed from the team to accommodate Yousuf, who had blamed Malik for treating senior players badly, and held him responsible for his decision of joining the rebel Indian Cricket League (ICL). (ANI)

Hauritz’s career in the balance after poor form against Sussex

London, June 29 (ANI): The international career of Australian off spinner Nathan Hauritz is hanging in the balance after taking one wicket for 158 runs in a tour match against Sussex.

According to Fox Sports, the Australian team management has conceded that they are seriously thinking of leaving Hauritz on the sidelines in Cardiff, on a pitch that was tipped to take spin for the match, beginning on July 8.

Coach Tim Nielsen has received fresh intelligence that the Cardiff pitch may not be the spinner’s paradise he suspected.

Nielsen is insisting that Australia was “without a doubt” toying with the idea of fielding four frontline quicks in the first Ashes Test.

“The more I am reading about the Cardiff pitch, maybe it’s not going to be the spinning nightmare that everybody is talking about,” Nielsen said.

“The quicks have had a lot of impact there, just looking at the stats there over the last couple of years, the opening bowlers have had some success.

“I am open to the idea of waiting to see what we get in Cardiff as far as the wicket is concerned.”

If Australia does play four quicks it would save Marcus North’s spot, despite his twin failures with the bat in the Sussex match.

Under a four-quick regime, North would become the frontline spinner, a role he played in South Africa this year. (ANI)

Oz pacers will hold key to Ashes result: Benaud

London, June 28 (ANI): Australia’s fast bowlers hold the key to which way this year’s Ashes will go, feels former Australian cricketer, captain and noted commentator Richie Benaud.

In an article for The News of The World, Benaud believes England would be indulging in wishful thinking if it thought their spinners could make Australian batters dance to their wiles.

“Nothing makes my heart beat faster than the thought of spin bowling dominating an Ashes series.

Wishful thinking, however, has provided many problems for over-the-wrist spinners and orthodox finger-spinners over the 56 years I have been playing and watching England and Australia do battle,” Benaud said and claimed.

According to Benaud, England off-spinner Jim Laker (1956) and Australian leg spinner Shane Warne (1993-2007) have been the benchmarks for both forms of spin.

“But I believe this time swing will dominate. As was the case in 2005, the skill of the swing bowlers will provide the main difficulty for the batsmen. I’m confident the Australian pace bowlers will carry on from that splendid series in South Africa and, led by Mitchell Johnson and with Brett Lee shaping well, they hold the key to victory,” Benaud said.(ANI)

Sonia Gandhi sends ‘chadar’ to sacred Ajmer Sharif shrine

Ajmer, June 27(ANI): Union Ministers Salman Khursheed and Sachin Pilot offered a ‘chadar’ or holy cloth at the revered shrine of Sufi saint Khwaja Moin-ud-din Chisti in Ajmer on the occasion of 797 “Urs”, here on Saturday.

Khursheed and Pilot offered the ‘chadar’ on behalf of United Progressive Alliance Chairperson and Congress President Sonia Gandhi at the sacred Ajmer Sharif shrine.

“Everyday she (Sonia Gandhi) is praying for monsoon, in fact all of us are praying for rain. Congress leaders and thousands of other devotees have prayed for rain at this shrine and we hope that by the blessings of Khwaja Sahib (saint Khwaja Moin-ud-din Chisti) it will rain,” said Salman Khursheed.

Meanwhile, over 300 devotees from Pakistan arrived in Rajasthan’s Ajmer district on Saturday to offer prayers at the sacred Ajmer Sharif shrine.
Devotees urged that both India and Pakistan should maintain good relationship.
“India and Pakistan share a close and friendly relationship and both the countries should maintain this relationship as they are dependent on each other, sometimes problem arises but it should be sorted out and by the grace of God the relationship between both countries is improving,” said Naseer Khan, one of the devotees from Pakistan.

Devotees said that they wanted people of both countries to shed their cynical thinking.
“People should leave their cynical mentality, people of both countries should change their mentality and start living in a peaceful manner which would be good for both the countries,” said Zafar Alam, another devotee from Pakistan.

It is believed that praying at the tomb of the saint fulfils a person’s wishes. Devotees visiting the shrine offer fresh flowers as a symbol of their devotion. (ANI)

New aeroplane seat designs give sleepy travellers more room

Melbourne, June 23 (ANI): Sleep while you fly – that’s the inspiration behind a new range of airplane seats designed by a British designer.

Emil Jacob believes while it isn’t possible to extend the horizontal space in a plane, going vertical might just do the trick for passengers.

The source of inspiration for Jacob, a financial data analyst who also runs Jacob-Innovations LLC, was his own experience trying to sleep in long flights.

“I got the idea for the new designs from my own lack of sleep on long flights,” News.com.au quoted him as saying.

The novel designs involve elevating alternate rows of seats to give passengers more room to lean back in economy class, and the space to lie down in business class, in what Jacob sees as a move that will benefit both travellers and airlines.

He said: “Passengers and airlines will both win from using the new designs which make new space available on planes. Passengers will have more space in each of the various models and airlines will be able to offer better accommodations at better prices.”

Airbus’s communications manager, Mary Anne Greczyn, acknowledged the designer’s effort saying, ” This is the kind of out-of-the-box thinking Airbus really likes to encourage.” (ANI)

Innovation practitioner certification program launched

New Delhi, June 19 (ANI/Business Wire India): QAI Global Services (www.qaiglobal.com), with a vision to create an innovative workforce in India, has recently launched a new Innovation Practitioner Certification program for individuals across all domains. The program consists of online training and one-on-one mentoring from accredited trainers. The certification awarded at the end of the course is MATRIZ Level 1.

MATRIZ or the International Association of TRIZ is the international authority recognized by organizations such GE, Intel, Siemens, Motorola, LG, Samsung, Unilever, P and G and many other leading organizations. These organizations have trained thousands of their staff on MATRIZ body of knowledge to make the process of innovation structured and predictable.

The mentors have been trained by multiple TRIZ Masters such as Dr. Yury Salamatov, Nikolai Khomenko, Dr. Alla Zusman, Boris Zlotin and are authorized by MATRIZ to set up TRIZ Association of Asia to train students of different age groups.

Innovation Practitioner Certification program has nine modules with a minimum of eighty nine tasks to be completed in four months. Each module concludes with assignments that focus on development of specific skills. The training provided in the modules can also be embedded within other frameworks such as Six sigma, Lean and PDCA. The mentoring and the structure of the program is focused towards developing introspective analytical thinking skills in individuals. The program is a rich blend of strong theory backed by rigorous practical application.

Commenting on the launch, Navyug Mohnot, CEO, QAI said, “Years of rigorous research, training and practice in real world projects as consultants, has led to the creation of this program, suited for individuals irrespective of age or industry. With courses on Morphological Analysis, Identifying and Formulating Contradictions and Size-Time-Cost (STC) Operator amidst many others, this program is a part of our endeavor to create a truly innovative workforce.” (ANI)