Archive for July, 2007

Sanjay Dutt gets 6 year jail term

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
  The verdict is out. Sanjay Dutt has been sentenced to 6 years of rigorous imprisonment for illegally possessing “dangerous” weapons by the TADA special court. The verdict brings to an end one of the longest and sometimes dramatic trials of the 1993 serial blasts. The limelight is of course on Sanjay Dutt, on whose shoulders ride about a billion rupees in investment of the Indian film industry.  Source : msn news  http://blogs.minbodynsoul.com  Tags:

Vulgar’ underwear ads banned in India

Sunday, July 29th, 2007
The government on Thursday banned two underwear advertisements — Lux Cozy and Amul Macho — claiming them to be “indecent, vulgar and suggestive.  The Information and Broadcasting ministry has instructed all television channels to stop showing the advertisement with immediate effect. The ads have been considered “indecent, vulgar and suggestive” and thus violative of Rule 7 (8) of the Advertising Code, the Ministry said in its order.  The Amul Macho ad showed a newly-wed woman suggestively washing her husband’s innerwear at a dhobi  ghat.  The advertisements were being shown on many channels including Star Plus, India TV, NDTV and IBN 7.  The ban has been imposed under the advertising code, which prohibits the showing of any indecent advertisements on television.  The ministry in April has issued an advisory to all channels asking them to be more careful in selection of content of advertisements and strictly adhere to the Advertising Code.  When the advertisements continued, the ban was imposed, the ministry said.  Source : Hindustan times  http://blogs.minbodysoul.com  http://www.commonwealthtv.tv    Tags:

Asbestos found in dust from NYC eruption

Thursday, July 19th, 2007
 
NEW YORK - A massive geyser of steam and debris that erupted through a midtown Manhattan street left asbestos in the dust that settled, but city officials said Thursday that tests indicated the air was safe.
The city’s Office of Emergency Management said in a statement that long-term health problems from the rupture of the 83-year-old steam pipe and its debris were “unlikely.” Streets were still closed Thursday morning around the crater left by the eruption near Grand Central Terminal, creating near-gridlock during the morning rush. New Yorkers streamed down Park Avenue, some wearing masks to filter the air as they weaved around utility trucks amid the sound of jackhammers. Clumps of office workers, BlackBerries in hand, huddled on corners for word on whether their offices would open. Keith Williams, who installs home theaters, stood at a barricade hoping to get to the tools he had ditched a day earlier as he ran from the rumbling blast. “I said, ‘I hope that’s a train,’” the 29-year-old recalled. “I didn’t know whether a building was collapsing. We heard it, and I just took off.” The eruption began shortly before 6 p.m. Wednesday, breaking windows and rattling buildings as the pipe spewed steam, dirt and debris hundreds of feet into the air. One woman died of an apparent heart attack, and about 40 people were taken to hospitals. One was in critical condition Thursday, and another was in serious condition. Officials quickly ruled out terrorism as the cause of the blast, but for some witnesses, the explosion, dust and chaos were frighteningly reminiscent of the scene on Sept. 11, 2001. “We were scared to death. It sounded like a bomb hit or a bomb went off, just like 9/11. People were hysterical, crying, running down the street,” said Karyn Easton, a customer at a salon a few blocks from the site of the blast. “It was really surreal.” City crews worked overnight to assess and repair the damage and to determine what happened. Most subway service was restored, though most of the trains were passing Grand Central. On Thursday, asbestos contamination was the main lingering health concern, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. Some of the pipes that pump steam beneath the city to heat and cool thousands of buildings are wrapped in asbestos, which can cause cancer and other serious illnesses with prolonged exposure. Area residents were urged to keep windows closed, and anyone exposed to the falling debris was instructed to wash carefully and isolate the clothing they were wearing in plastic bags. Eight air samples in the area around the explosion found no sign of asbestos, but six of 10 samples of debris and dust came back positive, the emergency-management agency said Thursday. City engineers also warned that up to six feet surrounding the giant hole might be in danger of further collapse, and officials said workers would not be allowed into office buildings in a zone that covered several blocks. Officials said the steam pipe might have exploded under pressure caused by an infiltration of cold rainwater, or it might have been damaged by a water main break. Con Edison head Kevin Burke said the site had been inspected hours before the blast as part of a routine response to heavy rain that flooded parts of the city. He said crews had found nothing as they searched for steam rising from manhole covers or cracks in the street — indications that pipes could be in jeopardy. The steam systems are normally inspected every six weeks. It was rush hour Wednesday evening when the geyser erupted, generating a tremendous roar as 200-degree vapor sprayed as high as the top of the nearby Chrysler Building. Steam and dirt boiled from the ground for hours. Several people were struck by falling chunks of asphalt or rock that had been blasted out of the ground. Mud covered others. A woman who was bleeding heavily was helped by police while a man lay on a stretcher in the street. When the steam dispersed almost two hours later, a large crater was visible in the street and a red truck lay at the bottom of the hole. Two city buses and a small school bus sat abandoned and covered with grit in the middle of Lexington Avenue. The steam pipes have ruptured before. In 1989, a steam pipe explosion near Gramercy Park killed three people and spewed loads of asbestos into the air — a fact that Con Ed later admitted it concealed for days while residents were exposed. That explosion was caused by a condition known as “water hammer,” in which water condenses in a closed section of pipe. The sudden mix of hot steam and cool water can cause pressure to skyrocket, bursting the pipe. Authorities Thursday couldn’t immediately account for how the most seriously wounded victims of the latest eruption were hurt. Police said the woman who died, identified as Lois Baumerich, 57, of Hawthorne, N.J., suffered cardiac arrest. Among the injured were several firefighters and police Officer Robert Mirfield, who helped evacuate 75 people trapped in a nearby office building by cutting open a gate, authorities said.
source : associated press http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

PSYCHOLOGIST FROM CALIFORNIA WINS WORLD POKER GAME

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007
Jerry Yang, a 39-year-old psychologist who uses his professional training in his card-playing arsenal, won the $8.25 million top prize Wednesday at the World Series of Poker. Yang vaulted quickly from eighth to the chip lead soon after play began Tuesday afternoon.
He knocked out seven of the eight other players at the final table, reminiscent of last year when Jamie Gold ran over his opponents. The main difference, Yang did it from the back of the pack. “The only way I would win this tournament is to be aggressive from the very beginning and that’s exactly what I did,” he said. An ethnic Hmong who grew up poor in Laos, Yang said before the final table began that he would donate 10 percent of his winnings to charity, including the Make-A-Wish Foundation, Feed the Children, the Ronald McDonald House and his alma mater, Loma Linda University. He won his way into the main event from a $225 satellite tournament at the Pechanga Resort & Casino in Temecula and only began playing poker two years ago. Despite his 5-foot-3 stature — often standing up from his seat to move chips or stare down opponents — Yang was an intimidating force at the table from the beginning. He aggressively raised pots and became the first player at the table to go all-in. On the ninth hand, he forced Lee Childs, a 35-year-old software engineer from Reston, Va., to fold pocket queens, face up, on a board with a seven, four and deuce. Yang began heads up play with a giant chip lead against Tuan Lam, a 40-year-old professional online poker player from Mississauga, Ontario. Yang had 104.5 million in chips to Lam’s 23.0 million. On the last hand, with a huge mound of cash deposited on the felt, Lam moved all-in with an ace and queen of diamonds and Yang called with pocket eights. When a queen, five and nine came on the flop, it looked like Lam, waving a Canadian flag, would be on the verge of a miracle comeback, making a pair of queens for the lead. But a seven on the turn and a six on the river gave Yang a straight, sealing a win in which he dominated the final table from the moment the nine finalists sat down. “I’ve seen the miracles of God with my own eyes,” Yang said. “I did a lot of bluffing, also.” Lam, who earned $4,840,981 for his second place finish, was also a refugee who found his way to Canada from Vietnam. He said he’d be returning to his village, Bao Trinh, to help those who need it. “I was patient and waited for the big hand, but the cards came out different,” Lam said. “I have been through a hard life. And I will be going back to Vietnam and giving back.” Play at the final table began at noon in Las Vegas and didn’t finish till nearly 4 a.m. The finalists ranged in age from 22 to 62, and hailed from five nations: the U.S., Canada, Russia, England and South Africa. By birthplace, players also were from Laos, Vietnam and Denmark. Each had their section of fans in the audience, and the arena took on the air of the Olympics as supporters broke out into national songs every time their player won a big hand. “The final table says a lot about the globality of poker and the globality of our fans,” said Jeffrey Pollack, World Series of Poker commissioner for event owner Harrah’s Entertainment Inc. Yang burst out of the blocks shortly after play began. But 31-year-old Dane Philip Hilm made a stand with a flush draw and a pair of fives on the flop, pushing all-in against Yang. Yang made the call holding an ace and king for a pair of kings and Hilm never improved, finishing ninth for $525,934. Lee Watkinson, a 40-year-old poker pro from Cheney, Wash., pushed all-in before the flop with an ace and seven, but Yang read through the show of strength by calling with an ace and nine and Watkinson fell in eighth for a $585,699 payday. “I was playing for the bracelet,” Watkinson said. “I wasn’t going for third, fourth or even second. I wanted to make a play and be a contender.” Childs, who quit his job a month ago to play poker for a living, finished seventh with $705,229 when he went all-in with a king and jack against Yang, with a jack and eight. Childs lost when an eight came on the turn. “My goal when I came in to the tournament was to trust my instincts, make the right decision and hopefully not get unlucky,” Childs said. “I was that close to doubling up.” Jon Kalmar, a 34-year-old poker pro from Chorley, England, was the only player to bust out against someone other than Yang. He lost a head-to-head bet against South African retiree Raymond Rahme when his ace and king failed to improve against Rahme’s pocket jacks. Kalmar proclaimed himself “thrilled” with his prize and said he intended to use his winnings to pay bills and perhaps buy a car back home. Hevad Khan, an Internet poker pro from Poughkeepsie, N.Y., finished in sixth when his ace and queen of spades couldn’t top a pair of jacks belonging to a surging Yang. Khan didn’t seem disappointed with sixth place and his $956,243 payday as he celebrated with friends in the audience. Alex Kravchenko, 36, was Yang’s fifth victim, when he was all-in before the flop with an ace and king but Yang nailed three of a kind, holding a pocket pair of eights. Kravchenko finished in fourth with $1,852,721. Finally, Rahme went down when he pushed all-in with pocket kings on a board with an ace. After several minutes of pacing and a staredown, Yang made the call holding an ace and a five, for two aces, and Rahme shook his head in resignation. “That was the only mistake I made in the whole tournament,” Rahme said. Nine players who began the day were all that remained from a field of 6,358 players that began to play down in stages July 6. Everyone paid or won $10,000 to enter the main event, the biggest poker tournament of the year.
source : associated press Tags:

Nuclear plant reports leak after Japan quake

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007
About 100 drums containing low-level nuclear waste at Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s (Tepco) Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant were knocked over by Monday’s earthquake and some lost their lids, Kyodo news agency said on Tuesday. Checks were being made as to possible effects on the environment, Kyodo added. Company officials were not immediately available for comment. Tepco had said earlier that 315 gallons of water contaminated with radioactive material leaked into the sea but should not affect the environment. The plant, the world’s biggest nuclear power plant, reported a fire and a radiation leak at the facility after Monday’s quake, which killed nine people and injured more than 1,000.   source : gulfnews.com http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

Nuclear plant reports leak after Japan quake

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007
About 100 drums containing low-level nuclear waste at Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s (Tepco) Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant were knocked over by Monday’s earthquake and some lost their lids, Kyodo news agency said on Tuesday. Checks were being made as to possible effects on the environment, Kyodo added. Company officials were not immediately available for comment. Tepco had said earlier that 315 gallons of water contaminated with radioactive material leaked into the sea but should not affect the environment. The plant, the world’s biggest nuclear power plant, reported a fire and a radiation leak at the facility after Monday’s quake, which killed nine people and injured more than 1,000.   source : gulfnews.com http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

TO MAKE HINDI OFFICIAL LANGUAGE OF UN

Monday, July 16th, 2007
India has asked all member states of the United Nations to take immediate and strong steps for making Hindi, the second most spoken tongue in the world, an official language of the World body.
It also made a fervent and passionate appeal to all Indians settled abroad to put pressure on their respective governments for supporting the proposal. The proposal would take time as the political leaders and diplomats would have to convince other nations to garner their support. But work in this direction would start immediately, Karan Singh, president of Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) said at the sidelines of the 8th World Hindi Conference which concluded yesterday. Singh, a renowned Hindi and Sanskrit scholar, was Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s special envoy for the conference. To be adopted, the proposal would require two-thirds majority in the 192-member General Assembly. Officials at the conference explained that the member States would weigh the proposal carefully as it would lead to an increase in their financial contribution to the UN to meet the expenses, including a team of interpreters and translators for all six languages — English, Russian, Chinese, French, Spanish and Arabic. The meeting also called for giving recognition to Hindi teachers in foreign educational institutions, taking steps to popularise the language and Devanagri script to ensure it the status of second language worldwide and drawing up syllabus for its teaching. source : PRESS TRUST OF INDIA http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com   Tags:

What is the history behind Friday 13th?

Friday, July 13th, 2007
Where did it start? How has it evolved? Is it good or bad luck? There have been a number of events known as “Black Fridays” in history. Usually, these events are devastating. Some historians propose that the origin of the “Black Friday” was the simultaneous arrest of hundreds of Knights Templars on October 13, 1307 (Friday), to be later tortured into “admitting” heresy. Today, the concept of Friday the 13th has been extended through the ‘black Friday’ concept to incorporate anything really bad that happens on a Friday. In history there have been a number of events that happened on a Friday and are known as Black Friday: Black Friday (1869), a financial crisis in the United States
Black Friday (1889), the day of the Johnstown Flood.
Black Friday (1910), WSPU took militant action when the Conciliation Bill failed.
Black Friday (1919), a riot in Glasgow stemming from industrial unrest
Black Friday (1921), day on which British dockers’ and railwaymen’s union leaders announced their decision not to call for strike action against wage reductions for miners
Black Friday (1929), a stock market crash in the United States
Black Friday (1939), a day of devastating fires in Australia
Black Friday (1945), largest air battle over Norway, over Sunnfjord
Hollywood Black Friday (1945), the day the six-month-old Confederation of Studio Unions (CSU) strike boiled over into a bloody riot at the Warner Bros. studios leading to the eventual breakup of the CSU.
Black Friday (1978), a massacre of protesters in Iran
Black Friday (1982), known in Britain after Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands, sparking the Falklands War
Black Friday (1987), the day an hour-long F4 category tornado ran through the city of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Black Friday (2004), a crackdown on a peaceful protest in the capital city of Maldives, Malé Other uses of the term include: Black Friday, a name used for any Friday which falls on the 13th of a month
Black Friday, the Friday preceding Easter, also known as Good Friday or God Friday.
Black Friday (shopping), the day after Thanksgiving Day in the United States, the first shopping day of the Christmas season and one of the busiest shopping days of the year
“Black Friday” is the name given to the last Friday before Christmas in the United Kingdom. It is a day when widespread anti-social behaviour due to public alcohol consumption is expected to occur, and police are given additional powers to combat it
Black Friday (1940 film), a science-fiction/horror film starring Boris Karloff, Stanley Ridges and Bela Lugosi
Black Friday (2005 film), a Hindi film on the 1993 serial bomb blasts in Mumbai, directed by Anurag Kashyap
“Black Friday”, a title of a song by Grinspoon
“Black Friday”, a title of a song by Steely Dan
“Black Friday”, a title of a song by Megadeth
“Black Friday Rule”, a title of a song by Flogging Molly
“Black Friday”, the nickname for game 3 of the 1977 NLCS baseball championships. Philadelphia Phillies fans gave the nickname because the Phillies blew an early lead against the Los Angeles Dodgers and a controversial call was made during the game
“Black Friday”, a title of a poem written by Dennis Rader, the BTK killer Source :  wikipedia , yahoo news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

Another feather in Aishwarya’s cap of fame

Thursday, July 12th, 2007
The gorgeous Aishwarya Rai Bachchan has just added another feather in her cap of fame.
The latest feather in Ash’s cap is the ninth position in a poll of the 100 most beautiful women of today in the July issue of Harpers and Queen.
Coincidentally two years ago Ash had secured exactly the same spot in a similar poll.
Topping the list is Hollywood beauty Angelina Jolie followed by model Christy Turlingron, Queen Rania of Jordon, Director Sofia Copolla and celebrity Chef Nigella Lawson.
“It’s wonderful,” Ash is quoted as saying in a report. Watch Bollywood on Broadband !
Aishwarya beat actress Scarlett Johanson, singer Beyonce Knowles and supermodel Gisele Bundchen who husband Abhishek Bachchan was quite a fan of.
“I have the best wife in the world,” said a dotting Abhishek.
Abhishek of course is probably not surprised that she’s beat out the competition after all.   Seems like Ash is getting prettier with each passing day. soure : msn news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

First Alzheimer’s patch gets approval

Monday, July 9th, 2007
The first skin patch to treat the dementia that can plague Alzheimer’s patients gained federal approval, a drug company said Monday.
The drug in the patch, called Exelon or rivastigmine, is the same as that now available in capsule form but provides a regular and continuous dose throughout the day, according to Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. Since the drug enters the bloodstream directly, the patch also eliminates some of the gastrointestinal side effects associated with the drug when swallowed. The drug is meant to treat the symptoms of mild to moderate dementia in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. It also won Food and Drug Administration approval to treat patients with mild to moderate Parkinson’s disease dementia, Novartis said. About 4.5 million Americans have Alzheimer’s. As the disease progresses, it robs patients of their memories and changes how they both think and behave. It’s ultimately fatal. Rivastigmine isn’t a cure. It inhibits the breakdown of a chemical in the brain called acetylcholine, thought important for both learning and memory.
source : google news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com Tags: