Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Top Tourist places in US
America which consists of various genes of people is also renowned for its diversified arts and culyure that many tourists visit various places which have been famous for several exemplified reasons such as beauty, beaches, theme parks and rich tradition it had gone through. And some of the places are being seen here.
1.Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, New York
2.Universal Studios Hollywood, California
3.Metropolitan Museum, New York
4.Waikiki Beach, Oahu, Hawaii
5.Grand Canyon, Ariz
6.Busch Gardens Africa, Tampa Bay, Florida
7.Cape Cod National Seashore, Mass
8.SeaWorld San Diego, San Diego, California
9.American Museum of Natural History, New York
10.Times Square, New York City, N.Y
11.The Las Vegas Strip, Nevada
12.Faneuil Hall Marketplace, Boston,
13.Disney World's Magic Kingdom, Lake Buena Vista,
14.Niagara Falls, N.Y
15.Great Smoky Mountains National Park
16.Universal Studios Orlando/Islands of Adventure at Universal Orlando
17.SeaWorld Florida, Orlando
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Miss Russia is the Miss World
Ksenya Sukhinova of Russia won the Miss World 2008 crown on saturday in a glittering African themed paegent where she outshone 108 other contestants from various parts of the World.The first runner up was India's Parvathy Omanakuttan and the second runner up was Trinidad and Tobago's Gabrielle Walcott.The Russian became the 58th Miss World who takes over from Zhang Zi Lin of China.Hailing from Nizhnevartovsk in the north west of Siberia, Sukhinova was dressed in a purple gown, with a decorative neckline and flowing skirt.She is a student pursuing an engineering degree from the Tyumen Oil and Gas University.
Friday, December 12, 2008
20 most increduble Nudis
1. Ceratosoma amoena
2. Pteraeolidia ianthina
3. Nembrotha rosannulata
4. Noumea sulphurea
5. Neodoris chrysoderma
6. Phyllidiopsis fissurat
7. Chromodoris woodwarda
8. Notodoris minor
9. Chromodoris kuniei
10. Chromodoris tinctoria
11. Chromodoris annae
12. Gymnodoris impudica
13. Phyllidiopsis shirinae
14. Flabellina iodinea
15. Phyllodesmium poindimiei
16. Phyllidia varicosa
17. Jorunna funebris
18. Kubaryana feeding on clavelina
19. Hypselodoris bullockii
20. Mexichromis multituberculata
Best valves and controls
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Toyota,Honda Siel and HM cuts prices
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Lufthansa aims to become European leader
Saturday, December 6, 2008
The Best Movies Of 2008
1.The Dark Knight
2.Wall-E
3.Kung Fu Panda
4.The Fall
5.Hellboy 2
6.Ironman
7.The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
8.Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
9.The Forbidden Kingdom
10.The Chronicles of Narnia:Prince Caspian
Friday, December 5, 2008
Best books of 2008
1. DANGEROUS LAUGHTER by Steven Millhauser
2. A MERCY by Toni Morrison
3. NETHERLAND by Joseph o Neil
4. 2666 Roberto Bolaño
5. UNACCUSTOMED EARTH by Jhumpa lahiri
6. THE DARK SIDE by Jane mayer
7. THE FOREVER WAR by Dexter filkins
8. NOTHING TO BE FRIGHTENED OF by Julian barnes
9. THE REPUBLIC OF SUFFERING by Drew Gilpin Faust.
10. THE WORLD IS WHAT IT IS V. S. Naipaul
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Watching Tv and Web harms kids
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
20 of the world's most dangerous places
The recent acts of terrorism and lawlessness has caused havoc in most of the parts of the world and there are few places which are always advisable not to visit as these places are always under the attack of terrorists or the law and order in the country is not proper so its not always safe to move on to these places for the Foreign Nationals.
1.Iraq
2.Afghanistan
3.Chechnya
4.South Africa
5.Jamaica
6.Sudan
7.Thailand
8.Colombia
9.Haiti
10.Eritrea
11.Democratic Republic of Congo
12 Liberia
13.Pakistan
14.Burundi
15.Nigeria
16.Zimbabwe
17.Mexico
18.Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories
19.Lebanon
20.Somalia
Helena Christensen's " Changing faces "
Helena Christensen has once again transformed her look from a provocative pirate queen for Agent Provocateur to an almost angelic look to become the face of Pilgrim Jewellery.The popular Danish supermodel, Helena Christensen, has swapped Pirate for Pilgrim to become the face of one of her favourite brands of jewellery. In the Agent Provocateur in a red lace basque, thong and stockings accessorised with over-the-knee boots and a lusty grin, she created a buzz and now with her total change over is causing eveyone to see her beauty.She has joined forces with two of Denmark’s most eclectic jewellery designers, Annemette Markvad and Thomas Adamsen of Pilgrim, to co-design a new range of necklace, earrings, rings and bracelets.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Areva to supply six nuclear water reactors
Cristiano Ronaldo wins Golden Ball award
Ronaldo won the Golden Ball awarded to the European Footballer of the Year, becoming the fourth Manchester United player to take the honour and the first since fellow winger George Best in 1968.Ronaldo's brilliant scoring form helped him beat Barcelona striker Lionel Messi into second place, while Liverpool forward Fernando Torres was third in the poll results announced overnight by France Football magazine.Ronaldo scored 42 goals in all competitions last season as United won the Premier League and Champions League trophies.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Bordeaux striker Fernando Cavenaghi is in demand
Restoring Taj hotel's glory may cost Rs 5bn
The restoration of the century-old Taj Mahal Palace and Tower Hotel in downtown Mumbai that was considerably damaged during the terror siege could take as much as 12 months and cost about Rs 5 billion.The Taj is one of our oldest hotels and a heritage structure. So, any restoration work would take a minimum of a year.Visitors to the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower Hotel have come away in awe of its Indian influences, vaulted alabaster ceilings, onyx columns, archways, carpets and chandeliers, as also its collection of art and antique furniture.
Friday, November 28, 2008
Jackson may pen his memoir
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
England tour called off
Terror strikes as 87 killed in Mumbai attacks
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Arcelor Mittal to cut jobs
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Chinese Tourist Attractions
1.The Forest of Stone Steles Museum
2.The Forbidden City
3.The Ba Hanging Coffins
4.Shanghai, Manhattan of China
5.Macau, City of Portugal and China
6.Hangzhou, City Along the Qiantang River
7.Hainan, Hawaii of China
8.China - Gulangyu Island
9.Chang Jiang / Yangtze River
10.Terracotta Army
11.Mount Everest
Friday, November 21, 2008
Maruti Suzuki A-star
Maruti has worked closely with Suzuki Motors to build a car, called as A-star, this hatchback will be the fifth global car for Suzuki but first to be produced in India. A-star is expected to be priced around the 3 lakh range. Maruti Suzuki will export the A-star first to Europe and later it will be launched in india.The ‘K’ has already become the important part of Indian Auto Industry. Similar to i10, Maruti Suzuki will be powered by two engines - an 1.0L and an 1.2L . These new K-series will eventually get under the hood of other hotcakes of Maruti soon. Zen Estilo, Wagon R and Swift will get this K-series before 2010. The new 1.0L, 3 cylinder 12-valve unit developing a maximum power output of 48kW (65hp) will power the A-star.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
The Tales of Beedle the Bard
Now J.K. Rowling is giving millions of Harry Potter fans worldwide cause for celebration with a new edition of "The Tales of Beedle the Bard", available December 4, 2008.Offering the trademark wit and imagination familiar to Rowling's legions of readers as well as Aesop's wisdom and the occasional darkness of the Brothers Grimm each of these five tales reveals a lesson befitting children and parents alike: the strength gained with a trusted friendship, the redemptive power of love, and the true magic that exists in the hearts of all of us.Both a wise and delightful addition to the Harry Potter canon, this new translation of The Tales of Beedle the Bard is all that fans could hope for and more--and an essential volume for the libraries of Muggles, wizards, and witches, both young and old.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
US teen lives 118 days without heart
Microsoft rules out buying Yahoo
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Pirates anchor supertanker off Somalia
Saturday, November 15, 2008
10 top ugly buildings and monument
1. Boston City Hall; Boston, Massachusetts
2. Montparnasse Tower; Paris, France
3. LuckyShoe Monument; Tuuri, Finland
4. Metropolitan Cathedral; Liverpool, England
5. Port Authority Bus Terminal; New York City, New York
6. Torres de Colon; Madrid, Spain
7. Liechtenstein Museum of Fine Arts; Vaduz, Liechtenstein
8. Scottish Parliament Building; Edinburgh, Scotland
9. Birmingham Central Library; Birmingham, England
10. Peter the Great Statue; Moscow, Russia
Nokia sees cellphone market falling in 2009
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Ambani Leads Loss Among India's Richest
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Anil Kumble quits cricket
Anil Kumble the bowling maestro of the Indian Team and the Captain of the Test team today announced his retirement all of a suddedn which shocked even his critics down. The leading wicket taker of the India with a 616 wickets in test cricket was struggling with form for few matches and his injury was not allowing him to give a rhythm to play to his best. His decision came as a surprise as no one felt that he may hang up his boots so soon and today he played his last match.It is really a pity that such a great cricketer had to end his career in such a manner.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Quantum of Solace premiers
Quantum of Solace is the latest James Bond flick which is going to be released and the premier of it took place in a grand manner with Royals coming to attend it. Prince William and Harry were the star attractions.But the real hero of the movie Daniel Craig was the man to be seen who with his superb actions and acting has made this latest flick a superb one. The sequel of the previous movie "Casino Royale" has been marvelously been picturised with the great agent hurting after his love betrayed and he is on the look for revenge and Bond has gone over the edge and over the top.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Ferrari threaten pull out
Ferari in a shocking news has said that it will review its participation in Formula One if plans to introduce a standard engine for all teams from 2010 goes ahead. The FIA body has argued that the costs of Formula One are unsustainable in the current economic climate and must be slashed to ensure none of the 10 teams leave the sport.
But Ferrari has however expressed strong reservations about the project to equalise or standardise engines.Ferrari is one of the top rated Formula One team in the circuit and if they pull out then the future of the sport itself will be in doubt.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Four killed in aircraft crash in Wicklow
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Liverpool ends Chelsea's run at home
Liverpool ended the run of Chelsea at home, Stamford Bridge with the goal from Xabi Alonso in the 9th minute of the match. Liverpool looked solid with good attacking moves from their captain Steven Gerrad who was instrumental in the teams success on Super Sunday. With this win Liverpool assured themselves of 3 point lead over the rival Chelsea, who were crestfallen after their first loss of the season and that too at home which was least expected.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Bloodhound supersonic car
The Bloodhound supersonic car which was launched on thursday to set a new land speed record with a rocket powered car that could reach 1,600 kmph and which is faster than a bullet. The Bloodhound project was led by Richard Noble, who oversaw the team which set the existing record of 1,200 kmph in the Black Rock desert of Nevada 11 years ago.
Gilchrist's Autobiography "True Colours: My Life"
Adam Gilchrist's book " True colour: My Life " which is going to be released next week has already created a fierce debate in the cricketing world about the things written in it. Gilchrist has made explosive remarks against the batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar saying him a " bad sport " and other starkling revelations in his book and lashed out at the Indians for the events that took place in Sydney Test.Even if the book sells hugely this will surely have an effect on his IPL carrer as Indian media and public wont let him off easily for his remarks.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Beckham to move to AC Milan
Italian giant AC Milan confirmed on wednesday that former England captain David Beckham will join the club on loan during the january window transfer window. This news has been confirmed by the club coach Carlo Ancelotti.But the amount for which he is being brought on loan is still not yet been disclosed.
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Chandrayaan 1 successfully launched
Friday, October 17, 2008
Sports equipments online
Sachin crosses 12,000 runs.
Sachin Tendulkar yesterday became the highest run getter in the history of Test cricket. He crossed the magical mark of 11,953 runs which was held by Brian Lara for nearly 3 years. This feat has been keenly anticipated by the cricketing fraternity and all the greats were expecting it to broken today. Sachin also became the first man to cross 12,000 runs in test cricket history too.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
World's largest diamonds.
Miners in Lesotho have discovered a huge gem stone which could become the largest polished round diamond in history.The massive stone is 20th largest polished diamond ever found and weighs 478 carats. The Cullinan Diamond was discovered in 1905 and at 3,106 carats was the largest gem-quality rough diamond ever found.The Koh-i-noor is part of the British crown jewels. It originated in India but seized by Britain as a spoil of war in 1849. The diamond supposedly brings good luck to female owners and misfortune or death to any male who wears or owns it.The Koh-i-noor is a round cut but at 105 carats it is smaller than the potential size of the new find.
Al-Waleed bin Talal's aspirations
Al-Waleed bin Talal plans to build the world's tallest building, more than a kilometre high, as part of a $26.7 billion project in the Saudi Arabian city of Jeddah. The project, called Kingdom City, will span 23 million square metres and will include luxury homes, hotels and offices. The world's tallest man-made structure is currently the Burj Dubai skyscraper in Dubai which is still under construction but already stands at more than 680 metres in height.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Oil prices rises after rate cut
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Royal Bank of Scotland shares plunge
Ganguly quits
Ganguly who has been know for springing out surprises in the world of cricket by his actions shocked the cricket world by his announcement that he is going to retire after this australian series. He as always gave it a rude shock to the press persons who were there in conference where he was addressing his teams plans before the test. In his candid self he jus said that he is going to leave cricket after this series.And he hopes to end it in a winning note.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Manchester United on track
Manchester United defeated Blackburn Rovers during their English Premier League football match at Ewood Park in Blackburn. Man united with goals from Wayne Rooney and Wes Brown helped to win their 4th consecutive match. this helped them to be in track of their of their title defence. It was a closely contested match with lot of tacles n pushes and a win for Man united which they needed after their slow start to season.Manchester United won 2-0.
Monday, September 29, 2008
U.S. House bailout vote fails
Saturday, September 27, 2008
U.S. joins pursuit of pirates off Somalia
A U.S. destroyer and a Russian warship headed Saturday for a possible confrontation with pirates who hijacked a cargo ship carrying battle tanks, machine guns and a crew of 21.Though pursued by ships from two of the world's biggest naval powers, the pirates showed no sign of surrendering the Ukrainian vessel Faina, which they boarded Thursday off the Somali coast as it headed to Kenya. Instead, according to unconfirmed reports, they were demanding a $35-million ransom to turn over their unconventional booty, which includes 33 Russian-built T-72 tanks.
Friday, September 26, 2008
WaMu largest U.S. bank failure
Washington Mutual Inc was closed by the U.S. government in by far the largest failure of a U.S. bank, and its banking assets were sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co for $1.9 billion.Washington Mutual, the largest U.S. savings and loan, has been one of the lenders hardest hit by the nation's housing bust and credit crisis, and had already suffered from soaring mortgage losses.
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Tintin movie held up
Universal pictures has recoiled at the cost of the 3D animated movie adaptations of the adventures of Tintin by two of hollywood's top directors, steven spielberg and peter jackson.The two legendry directors had submitted to universal a $130 million budget to produce a trilogy of films based on the novel. Now Spielbeeg will have to ask paramount to foot the entire bill, at the time when the director has been looking to end his association with the studios.
Sunday, September 7, 2008
RIL in Forbes list
Billionaire Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries has made it to the annual list of world's 100 most respected companies compiled by the Wall Street Journal. topped by US-based healthcare products major Johnson & Johnson.Ranked 83rd, RIL is the only Indian company on the list, although there are three more companies led by persons of Indian origin -- PepsiCo, ArcelorMittal and Citigroup. It has been topped by US-based healthcare products major Johnson & Johnson.
Friday, August 29, 2008
India's Growth dips
India’s economy decelerated to its slowest growth rate in three-and-a-half years in the first quarter of this fiscal year, as higher interest rates forced companies to begin easing back on investment.Economists expect India to continue to lose steam in the coming months as it struggles to contain inflation that has tripled this year to 13-year highs of 12.4 per cent in mid-August.The economic headwinds have come as the Congress party-led ruling coalition is preparing for an election before May next year
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Great Wall of China
The Great Wall of China can be visited at many places along its length of several thousand kilometers. Its condition ranges from excellent to ruined and access from straightforward to quite difficult.The Great Wall, as we know it, is actually a series of several walls built at different times by different emperors.
TATA's concern over nano
Tata Motors has threatened to pull out of West Bengal state where it is building a factory to roll out the world's cheapest car, Nano. The main problem for the TATA's remains the deadline of durga pooja when they want to roll out their model Nano in to the market and expects the market to boom that time. But the long standing problem is creating lot of sleepless nights for Ratan Tata.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
2008 BMW 3 Series Coupe 328i
BMW 3 Series is one of the most anticipated cars of this year, with the arrival of many cars this year this can be said to be a good year for the customers. This is year of intense competition with evaryone trying to outwit each other.
Standard Engine:
3.0L I6, 24 valve, 230 hp @ 6500 rpm
* 6 speed manual (standard) or 6 speed automatic transmission
* 19 mpg city / 28 mpg hwy more info
* Green Rating: 62
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Lehman to sell $40bn in real estate
Lehman brothers is in talks with potential buyers over the sale of its $40bn portfolio of commercial real estate assets and securities in an effort to replenish its balance sheet.In a move to lure buyers, Lehman has offered to shoulder the first $5bn of any losses suffered on the portfolio’s assets following a sale
Las Vegas
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Phelps wins second gold
Abhinav Bindra wins first gold
Saturday, August 9, 2008
China wins first gold
Friday, August 1, 2008
solar eclipse
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Olympic protest zones
Beijing will set up specially designated zones for protesters during next month's Olympics, a security official said Wednesday, in a sign China's authoritarian government may allow some demonstrations during the games.The overall effect is that while Beijing looks cheerful, with colorful Olympic banners and new signs, the city feels tense.Visa rules have been tightened to keep out foreign activists.
Monday, July 21, 2008
Hamilton wins German GP
McLaren's Lewis Hamilton won the German GrandPrix on Sunday to forge four points clear clear of Ferrari's Felipe Maasa at the top of the F1. Brazilian rookie Nelson Piquet finished an astonishing second place for Renault ahead of Maasa. Hamilton lead from the pole position and the victory was 2nd in a row and 8th of his career.The defending champion Kimmi Raikkonen finished 6th in this race.
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Obama’s Visit Renews Focus on Afghanistan
Senator Barack Obama arrived in Afghanistan on Saturday, on a high-profile foreign trip in a country that is increasingly the focus of his clash with Senator John McCain over whether the war in Iraq has been a distraction in hunting down terrorists.Even as Mr. Obama met privately with American troops, military leaders and Afghan officials in the eastern part of the country, Mr. McCain was questioning his judgment on foreign policy. In a radio address on Saturday, he said Mr. Obama had been wrong about the increase in troops in Iraq, a strategy Mr. McCain said should be the basis for addressing deteriorating conditions in Afghanistan as well.
As the American presidential campaign unfolded across borders and time zones, Mr. Obama received support from an unexpected corner: Iraq’s prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, told a German magazine that he endorsed the Obama plan to withdraw most American troops in a gradual timeline of 16 months.While the Iraq war has been one of the dominant issues in the presidential campaign, Afghanistan has moved to the forefront of the foreign policy plans of both candidates. President Bush’s agreement to a “general time horizon” for withdrawing American troops in Iraq has opened the door to new consideration of strengthening the American and NATO presence in Afghanistan, which Mr. Obama and Mr. McCain agree on in principle.
For months, Mr. McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, has criticized his rival for failing to visit Afghanistan and taking only one trip to Iraq. Even on Saturday, in a radio address, Mr. McCain renewed his criticism and sought to minimize Mr. Obama’s trip. “In a time of war,” Mr. McCain said, “the commander in chief’s job doesn’t get a learning curve.”
Mr. McCain, whose campaign spokeswoman suggested that Mr. Obama was embarking on a “campaign rally overseas,” said his rival was not going to Afghanistan and Iraq with an open mind. “Apparently,” Mr. McCain said in his radio address, “he’s confident enough that he won’t find any facts that might change his opinion or alter his strategy. Remarkable.”
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Changing Face of Beijing, a Look at the New China
Mr. Foster’s airport terminal, the world’s largest, is the purest expression of China’s embrace of the Modernist creed. Its swooping form, which suggests two boomerangs placed side by side, has been compared to a dragon. Yet its real precedent is Tempelhof Airport in Berlin, a monument to air travel conceived by Albert Speer in the 1930s as a gateway to a new Europe. Both are part of a vision of a mobile society, one that extends back through Grand Central Terminal to the great train halls of Paris.
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Turkey suspects al-Qaida in attack on US consulate
Turkish and U.S. officials publicly labeled the shooting a terrorist attack and a police official in Istanbul told The Associated Press that authorities suspected al-Qaida was behind it. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief journalists on the investigation.
The U.S. ambassador to Turkey and Turkey's foreign ministry said security around all American diplomatic missions in Turkey had been increased.
Yavuz Erkut Yuksel, a bystander, told CNN-Turk television the attackers emerged from a vehicle and surprised the guard.
"One of them approached a policeman while hiding his gun and shot him in the head," Yuksel said.
Footage from a security camera at the site showed four armed and bearded men emerging from a car and killing a traffic policeman, then running toward a guard post some 50 yards away as other policemen fired back, the Dogan news agency reported.
The shootout caused panic and scattered people who were waiting in a line for visas. U.S. security personnel went inside the compound because they are not authorized to engage in armed action on Turkish soil, Dogan said.
A fourth policeman and the driver of a towing vehicle were wounded in the attack, Istanbul Gov. Muammer Guler said.
U.S. Ambassador Ross Wilson said the consul general in Istanbul, Sharon Wiener, told him that that consulate staff were "safe and accounted for."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Wednesday that she did not know who was responsible and for the attack and she would soon talk with Turkey's foreign minister.
"Obviously first of all the United States deeply regrets the loss of life and condolences go out to the families of those who were killed," Rice saida as she traveled to Tbilisi, Georgia. "I know that some policemen were among those who died and we very much appreciate what was clearly a very rapid and proper response from the government to try to deal with the security situation in front of our consulate."
At least two of the attackers were Turkish nationals, Guler said. Police said they were pursuing at least one attacker who escaped in a car after the attack outside the high-walled consulate compound in the residential Istinye district around 11 a.m.
NTV television, citing police sources, said officials feared the car might be loaded with explosives. Police would not confirm that report.
Interior Minister Besir Atalay said at the scene that there had been no claim of responsibility and police would not reveal the identities of the attackers and their possible affiliations for the sake of the investigation.
Television footage showed four people lying on the ground at the foot of the consulate's wall before officials removed the bodies.
"The Turkish police responded quickly and effectively. We are deeply grateful for the work that they do to protect our official U.S. government establishments here," Wilson said. "It is, of course, inappropriate now to speculate on who may have done this or why. It is an obvious act of terrorism. Our countries will stand together and confront this, as we have in the past."
The secure U.S. consulate building was built after homegrown Islamic militants linked to al-Qaida carried out suicide bombings in 2003 that targeted two synagogues, the British Consulate and a British bank in Istanbul. Those attacks killed 58 people.
"There is no doubt that this is a terrorist attack," said Guler, who described the three slain policemen as "martyred."
Sunday, July 6, 2008
California wildfires strain state's resources
A slew of wildfires, most ignited by lightning two weeks ago, has burned more than 800 square miles of land throughout California. The blazes have destroyed at least 69 homes and other buildings and contributed to the death of a firefighter who suffered a heart attack while digging fire lines.
About 1,400 fires have been contained, but more than 330 still burned out of control Saturday.
Schwarzenegger said the state's top priority was in the coastal region of Santa Barbara County, where nearly 2,700 homes were threatened by a four-day-old fire in the Los Padres National Forest that has consumed about 13 square miles.
Cooler, moist air Saturday kept the fire sluggish and helped firefighters trying to surround it, said Pat Wheatley, county spokeswoman. Evening fell without the return of the late afternoon "sundowner" winds that had sent flames racing up to homes on Friday evening, she said.
"We've been pleased by some cooperative weather," Wheatley said. "The 'sundowners' that we were afraid could happen did not happen much tonight so that gave us an opportunity to fight the fire without fighting the winds."
The fire was 24 percent contained, she said.
More than 2,600 homes were under mandatory evacuation Saturday, and residents in another 1,400 were warned to be ready to flee if the flames gathered speed.
Wheatley said the mandatory evacuation orders were partially lifted later Saturday, allowing many residents to return home, but she did not know how many homes were affected.
The fire, which was burning in 15-foot-high, half-century-old chaparral, still had the potential to roll through a hilly area of ranches, housing tracts and orchards between the town of Goleta and Santa Barbara, keeping firefighters on their toes.
"They're feeling very good about this, but they are not taking this fire lightly at all," Wheatley said.
Temperatures were expected to dip to around 60 degrees in the area overnight, but were forecast to reach the mid-70s on Sunday.
Nearly 1,200 firefighters struggled to surround the blaze while a DC-10 air tanker and other aircraft dumped water and fire retardant along ridges and in steep canyons.
Investigators think the fire, which began Tuesday, was human-caused. The U.S. Forest Service on Saturday asked for public help in determining who set it and whether it was sparked accidentally or on purpose.
Meanwhile, cooler weather helped crews attacking a two-week-old blaze that has destroyed 22 homes in Big Sur, at the northern end of the Los Padres forest, but the fire continued to grow slowly on all flanks Saturday night.
The fire, which had blackened more than 110 square miles, was only 5 percent contained with full containment not expected until the end of the month, but morning fog that moved in from the sea helped prevent it from advancing on Big Sur's famed restaurants and hotels.
"We're gaining ground, but we're nowhere near being done," said Gregg DeNitto, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service. "There's still a lot of potential out there. The fire has been less active the last couple of days. We've had favorable weather; they are taking every opportunity to get some line on it."
But the weather was expected to become hotter and drier over the next couple of days, he said, with winds and temperatures rising and humidity dropping.
"The fire still has the potential for movement and the potential to get out of our containment lines," he said.
A homeowner near Big Sur was arrested Friday after officials said he refused orders to stop setting his own backfires.
The governor noted that he recently ordered 400 National Guard troops to be trained in wildfire fighting so they could help fight the state's blazes. He also urged lawmakers to adopt his budget plan for a $70 million emergency surcharge on home and business insurance policies to buy more firefighting equipment.
California now has a year-round fire season and needs the money from the fee, which should cost the average homeowner about $1 a month, Schwarzenegger said.
Meanwhile, residents of Crown King, Ariz., who had left their homes for nearly a week because of a wildfire were allowed to return Saturday night. A thunderstorm that drenched the area Friday evening helped fire crews working to get a line around the blaze, which consumed more than 15 square miles of forest.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Germany Beats Portugal 3–2 in Euro 2008 Soccer
Portugal won it's first two matches, and fielded a team of substitutes for its final round match. Thus, its starters are well rested and ready.
Germany won most of its matches convincingly but not spectacularly. The team seemed not to be playing at full capacity in its qualifying matches.German Head Coach Joachim Löw had to watch the game from the stands, as he was suspended for a game due to "constant bickering" with the Austrian head coach during their match.
The German team averages several inches taller than the Portuguese squad. While this could grant an advantage in aerial play, it might have meant that the Germans would be slower on the ground.
Germany finally looked like a championship team, and while Portugal played well, Germany made fewer mistakes and capitlaized on its opportunities, and earned a spot in the semi-finals.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Spears paparazzo blamed for having foot run over
The photographer, who was not identified in the report, filed a criminal complaint against Spears in early May, nearly six months after the alleged incident. A copy of the police complaint was not immediately available Monday, but it sought a felony charge of failing to stop after an accident involving an injury.
Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley's office reviewed a videotape and photos of the incident, which don't show the photographer being hit. The report also describes a chaotic scene surrounding Spears, with photographers on all sides of her car and "a lot of noise and confusion."
The report describes Spears' as "driving at an extremely slow rate of speed and in a straight path."
The 26-year-old pop star has had her share of trouble behind the wheel, including a highly publicized incident in 2006 where she was photographed driving with her son on her lap.
A misdemeanor hit-and-run charge stemming from a 2007 parking lot crash was dismissed after she settled with the car's owner. In October, she pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor charge of driving without a valid license, and earlier this year was involved in a minor fender-bender on a Los Angeles freeway.
Also Monday, documents were released detailing a request from Spears' father for payments relating to his conservatorship arrangement.
The document filed on behalf of James Spears seeks an undisclosed amount of money for helping his daughter shop for groceries, handle custody issues with her husband, Kevin Federline, and visiting her in the hospital in February and March. The filing also states that he held meetings to shore up security at Spears' homes and occasionally cooked meals.
James Spears has temporary control of his daughter's finances. A hearing about that conservatorship is scheduled for Tuesday morning in Los Angeles
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Free and Flush, Russians Eager to Roam Abroad
One of the most enduring changes in the lives of Russians in recent years has occurred not in Russia itself, but in places like this coastal region of Turkey, where an influx of Russian tourists has given rise to a mini-industry catering to their needs. A people who under Communism were rarely allowed to venture abroad, and then lacked money to do so when the political barriers first fell, are now seeing the world. And relishing it.
There is perhaps no better symbol of the growth in Russian tourism than the very resort where Ms. Kasyanova was staying, the Kremlin Palace Hotel, a kind of Las-Vegas-does-Moscow-by-the-shore extravaganza whose buildings are replicas of major sights at the Kremlin complex and nearby neighborhood. Why go to any old spot when you can frolic by the pool while gazing at the reassuring onion domes of a faux St. Basil’s Cathedral? (No need to bundle up against the cold, either!)
Ms. Kasyanova, 51, a health-care aide from the Kaluga region, 125 miles southwest of Moscow, has been to Egypt, Hungary and Turkey in the last few years and has Western Europe in her sights. For her and other Russians interviewed here, foreign travel reflects not just Russia’s economic revival under Vladimir V. Putin, but also how the country has become, in some essential ways, normal.
If you have some time and a little money, you can travel. Just like everyone else in the world.
“It is now so easy — buy a package tour for $800, and here we are, in paradise,” said Ms. Kasyanova, who, like many Russians here, was amused by the resort’s trappings but also interested in exploring the mountains and other places nearby. “It speaks of the high standard of life in Russia, of the improvement in life in Russia.”
The Russians are coming from all over. At the local airport here, the arrivals screen was like a primer in Russian geography, with charter flights from Moscow, Rostov-on-Don in the south, Kazan in the center, Novosibirsk in Siberia and other cities in between.
The number of Russian tourists visiting countries outside the former Soviet Union grew to 7.1 million in 2006, the last year statistics were available, from 2.6 million in 1995, according to the Russian government.
A record 2.5 million Russians visited Turkey in 2007, up 33 percent from 2006, Turkish officials said. Only Germany, that paragon of European wealth, sends more tourists to Turkey. (By contrast, in 1988, a few years before the collapse of the Soviet Union, all of 22,000 Soviet citizens visited Turkey.)
The Russian tourism boom is happening as new low-cost airlines in Europe have spurred a sharp increase in tourism across the Continent. But for the Russians, the chance to travel is especially prized.
For the first time in Russian history, wide swaths of the citizenry are being exposed to life in far-off lands, helping to ease a kind of insularity and parochialism that built up in the Soviet era. Back then, the public was not only prevented from going abroad; it was also inculcated with propaganda that the Soviet Union was unquestionably the world’s best country, so there was no need to leave anyway.
People who desired foreign travel in Soviet times typically had to receive official approval, and if it was granted, they were closely chaperoned once they crossed the border. Even before they left, they often were sent to classes to be indoctrinated in how to behave and avoid the perils of foreign influence. Those who were not in good standing with the party had little chance of going.
The controls on travel were particularly onerous given Russia’s long and dark winters.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Pakistan Angry as Strike by U.S. Kills 11 Soldiers
American air and artillery strikes killed 11 Pakistani paramilitary soldiers during a clash with insurgents on the Afghan border on Tuesday night, a development that raised concerns about the already strained American relationship with Pakistan.The strikes underscored the often faulty communications involving American, Pakistani and Afghan forces along the border, and the ability of Taliban fighters and other insurgents to use havens in Pakistan to carry out attacks into neighboring Afghanistan.
The attack comes at a time of rising tension between the United States and the new government in Pakistan, which has granted wide latitude to militants in its border areas under a new series of peace deals, drawing criticism from the United States.
NATO and American commanders say cross-border attacks in Afghanistan by insurgents have risen sharply since talks for those peace deals began in March.
Although Pakistani government officials softened their response through the day on Wednesday, the Pakistani military released an early statement calling the airstrikes “unprovoked and cowardly.”
Shaken by the initial Pakistani reaction, administration officials braced for at least a short-term rough patch in relations with Islamabad.
“It won’t be good,” said a Pentagon official who followed developments closely throughout the day. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.
The precise circumstances surrounding the reported deaths remained unclear, and American officials said an American-Pakistani investigation was expected to begin immediately.
But according to accounts from American officials, the incident started when Taliban fighters from Pakistan crossed about 200 yards into Kunar Province, on the Afghan side of the border, and attacked American-led forces with small-caliber weapons and rocket-propelled grenade fire.
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Sun Goes Longer Than Normal Without Producing Sunspots
The sun has been laying low for the past couple of years, producing no sunspots and giving a break to satellites.That's good news for people who scramble when space weather interferes with their technology, but it became a point of discussion for the scientists who attended an international solar conference at Montana State University. Approximately 100 scientists from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa and North America gathered June 1-6 to talk about "Solar Variability, Earth's Climate and the Space Environment."
The scientists said periods of inactivity are normal for the sun, but this period has gone on longer than usual.
"It continues to be dead," said Saku Tsuneta with the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, program manager for the Hinode solar mission. "That's a small concern, a very small concern."
The Hinode satellite is a Japanese mission with the United States and United Kingdom as partners. The satellite carries three telescopes that together show how changes on the sun's surface spread through the solar atmosphere. MSU researchers are among those operating the X-ray telescope. The satellite orbits 431 miles above ground, crossing both poles and making one lap every 95 minutes, giving Hinode an uninterrupted view of the sun for several months out of the year.
Dana Longcope, a solar physicist at MSU, said the sun usually operates on an 11-year cycle with maximum activity occurring in the middle of the cycle. Minimum activity generally occurs as the cycles change. Solar activity refers to phenomena like sunspots, solar flares and solar eruptions. Together, they create the weather than can disrupt satellites in space and technology on earth.
Saturday, June 7, 2008
Amazing Thailand Grand Sale 2008
Enjoy discounts of 5-70% and other privileges during the Amazing Thailand Grand Sale at Leading Department Stores, Shopping Complexes, King Power Duty Free Shops, Airlines, Hotels, Spas, Golf Courses, Online Travel Agencies, Hospitals, Jewelry Shops and participating retail merchants in selected provinces, including Bangkok, ChiangMai, ChiangRai, Hua-Hin, Pattaya, Nakhon Ratchasima, Udorn Thani, Phuket, Krabi, Hadyai and Samui Island.
Just look for this sign at participating outlets to get special discounts and other privileges from 1 June to 31 August 2008.
Amazing Thailand Grand Sale Promotion
Firstly, Thai and Tourist shoppers will enjoy a wide range of quality products and services on offer at special prices with discounts ranging from 5-70% at more than 1,000 participating merchants in selected provinces and:
Enjoy discount and other benefits at over 1,000 special locations. Simply spend 500 Baht with your Visa card and double your chances to win an all expense paid holiday back in Thailand. “7 packages for 7 days each”
Bonus : Enjoy a special treat from McDonald’s for every qualifying Visa transaction.
Welcome to the Amazing Thailand Grand Sale 2008
During the Amazing Thailand Grand Sale period, Thai and Tourist shoppers from all over the world will find a wide range of quality products and services on offer at special prices with discounts ranging from 5-70%
Thailand is truly fortunate to have a rich variety of attractions and destinations waiting to be discovered. This year, the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) has its own campaign "Amazing Thailand" with the theme of "Seven Amazing Wonders" of Thailand covering products and services in many different market segments which include:
1. Thainess : Experience the art and grace of Thai Living.
2. Treasure : The historical gems of Thailand, centuries of heritage and beauty.
3. Beaches : The world's best beaches for sun, fun, surf and serenity.
4. Nature : Encounter the sheer beauty of Thai nature.
5. Wellness : Thailand's preventive and curative cultural therapies.
6. Trends : Excite yourself with a myriad of Thai trends.
7. Festivities : Enchant yourself with international festivities.
Car bombings in Baghdad leave at least 6 dead
A suicide car bomb and another car packed with explosives targeted Iraqi police patrols Saturday on opposite sides of Baghdad, killing at least six people, police said.The suicide attacker rammed into a police patrol mid-afternoon in Nisoor Square on the capital's west side, killing a civilian and a policeman, police said. Another five people were wounded.
The other explosion took place nearly simultaneously across town at a crowded bus stop where passengers were lining up to catch rides to eastern Shiite neighborhoods, though police said the target was the passing convoy of a top Iraqi police general.
Four people were killed and 18 wounded, Brig. Gen. Nazar Majeed among them, said an officer on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to media. Three of the dead were policemen, he said.
The area includes shops that sell spare auto parts and tires, and is frequently used as a shortcut for Interior Ministry convoys trying to avoid traffic jams on another main street leading to government buildings, the officer said.
Tareq Salman, who owns a tea stall nearby, said he heard a huge explosion and then saw smoke spewing from the bus station.
"I saw several passengers running and several minibuses on fire. I saw wounded men screaming for help and police cars taking some seriously wounded to the hospital," 54-year-old Salman said. "There were blood stains and one burned body."
"Most of my tea cups were broken and some car parts shops were damaged," he said.
Such blasts — once a somber but daily feature of life in Iraq's capital — have become far less frequent since a U.S. troop buildup last year. A truck loaded with rockets exploded Wednesday in northeast Baghdad, killing 18 people in the deadliest single blast in more than two months.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Blasts kill 20, 40 injured in Colombo blast
At least 20 people were killed and 40 injured when a powerful bomb ripped through a packed bus near a university on the outskirts of the Sri Lankan capital on Friday, the Defence Ministry said.
The bomb went off at about 7.30 am near the Moratuwa University, about 20 km south of Colombo on the Pilyandala-Kaddupedda road.
''LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam) terrorists exploded a bomb targeting a crowded public transport bus close to the Shailabimbaramaya Buddhist temple at Katubedda, Moratuwa on Friday morning. Twenty people, including 12 men and eight women, have been killed while over 40 are injured,'' the Defence Ministry said in a statement.
''According to the police, the bomb was exploded using a remote controlled device. The bus was travelling from Kottawa to Mount Lavinia,'' it added.
Military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said police and military teams have been rushed to the blast site to carry out a search operation while the injured have been sent to hospitals in Kalubowila and Lunawa.
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Chelsea suffer fresh blow with Spalletti snub
Chelsea's search for a new manager endured another setback last night when Luciano Spalletti, the impressive Roma coach, followed Carlo Ancelotti's lead by becoming the second Italian to distance himself from the vacant position at Stamford Bridge in successive days.
Spalletti, who has implemented an attractive brand of attacking football since assuming the reins in the Italian capital three years ago, has led Roma to runners-up spot and the Champions League quarter-finals in each of the past two seasons, which had alerted Roman Abramovich's advisers to his quality. Most eye-catching was last season's elimination of Real Madrid in the knockout stage.
His agent, Vlado Lemic, is understood to have held informal talks with Chelsea officials in Paris. However, the 49-year-old manager has since made it clear privately that he does not wish to proceed with discussions. He apparently feels he is not yet experienced enough to take on a challenge of the size of Chelsea and has expressed concern at his lack of English.
The language barrier had also appeared to rule out any interest from Chelsea in the World Cup-winning Italy coach Marcello Lippi, though the club would have been confident of prising Spalletti - whose previous coaching experience came largely at Udinese, whom he took into the Champions League - from the Stadio Olimpico, with Roma a club rendered vulnerable by considerable debts.
The club's parent company, Italpetroli, is reported to be saddled with debts or about £300m. The manager was due to meet Roma officials yesterday to discuss what remains of his transfer budget for next term, though he may yet lose influential players such as Alberto Aquilani and the Brazilians Juan and Mancini to richer suitors this summer.
Chelsea remain "comfortable" with the way their selection process is progressing, though focus is increasingly falling upon the Portugal head coach, Luiz Felipe Scolari, who will not consider his own future until after the European Championship. The London club are prepared to wait that long to secure the right man, though any hopes that Ancelotti could still be persuaded to leave Milan are receding.
James Bond smashes sales figures
Devil May Care, the new James Bond novel by Sebastian Faulks, has become Penguin's fastest selling hardback fiction title ever, with 44,093 copies sold in the four days since it hit the shops.
The figures follow a publicity campaign of true Harry Potter proportions, which saw pre-release announcements of Sebastian Faulks's stint as Ian Fleming reaching the news pages of all the major newspapers.
Waterstone's alone sold over 19,000 copies, with the £100 special souvenir edition selling out in one morning. Queues began outside the chain's Piccadilly store from 4.30pm the previous day. A luxury edition, designed by Bentley and costing £750, also sold out its 300-copy print run in under two hours in the UK.
While JK Rowling has regularly exceeded the Devil May Care sales figures - the final book in her Harry Potter series, Deathly Hallows, sold three million copies in its opening weekend - the Rowling is something of an anomaly. Elsewhere, only Terry Pratchett and Martina Cole, genre writers with an enormous loyal fanbase, come close, regularly shifting 30,000-40, 000 copies in the first week. Among literary authors such as Faulks, such figures are unheard of.
Following in the footsteps of Thomas' Harris's Hannibal, published in 1999 and selling 1.5m copies that year, Penguin's success with their new Bond obviously owes a debt to the new lease of life given the Bond film franchise since 2006's Casino Royale.
Biofuel bonanza not so sweet for Brazil's sugar cane cutters
Half a million jobs and 500 years of tradition are to be phased out in Brazil's booming sugar cane industry to satisfy western demands for more socially acceptable work practices in the biofuel sector.
Sugar cane cutters who have been working Brazil's land since 1525, when Portuguese colonialists first experimented with growing the crop, are to make way for mechanisation.
The Brazilian Sugar Cane Industry Association (UNICA) said 80% of the 500,000 jobs would be gone within three years and admitted that moving to a tractor-based system would cause pain and upheaval for its migrant workforce.
"This will not solve the problem of migration — there will still be a social problem," Marcos Jank, the president of the association, told a briefing on biofuels in Sao Paulo, adding the group had signed a new "social" and "green" protocol with the government to improve overall conditions in the field.
The condition of sugar workers was rarely noticed when the commodity was exported for sugar but the position has changed now that Brazil is the world's second-largest exporter of sugar-based ethanol to use as a biofuel in petrol.
Behind the move to phase out sugar cane cutters are tales of exploitation that have damaged the image of Brazilian biofuels in big importing countries such as Sweden and potentially in Britain, where the government has mandated that 2.5% of all petrol come from biofuels.
Critics have accused Brazil's sugar cane industry of presiding over child labour, high accident rates and workers earning as little as $1.35 (67p) an hour. Employers insist that pay is three times that level.
Manual labour is also blamed for poor environmental practices such as crop wastage and the burning of stubble. Mechanised systems will be able to harvest more of the crop and allow Brazil to use by-products for powering electricity plants, argues UNICA.
Brazilian ethanol output grew by nearly a quarter during 2007 to a record 22bn litres, with around 4bn being exported.
The government believed it was going to be able to build a huge new export industry around biofuels. But that dream is under threat as the emerging crop-based fuel sector becomes mired in arguments over "food for fuel" and the idea that rising food prices can be attributed to farmers using land to grow fuel crops.
There are also claims that biofuels are causing deforestation in sensitive areas such as Brazil's Amazon Basin, seen by scientists as the lungs of the world because the trees there absorb so much carbon.
UNICA says subsidies in America and Europe for farmers and biofuels may be one element of the rising price of food which has caused riots in Haiti and other countries. But Jank insists Brazil is not contributing to that development because only 1% of arable land is used for ethanol production.
He is also adamant that increased ethanol production is not affecting the Amazon, claiming the area is too wet to grow sugar and insisting other farming is not being pushed into the rain forests to make way for ethanol elsewhere.