Showing posts with label World News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World News. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Michele Bachmann


Michele Bachmann stole the spotlight Monday night in New Hampshire, using the second GOP presidential debate of the season to announce that she is indeed running for president.
The Minnesota congresswoman and leader of the House Tea Party Caucus had telegraphed a campaign for weeks, but she made it official in her opening statement – triggering the early headline of the evening. Ms. Bachmann then delivered a strong debate performance, articulating her conservative views, demonstrating her status as an activist member of the House, and introducing herself to voters.
The most eye-popping point on Bachmann’s résumé: She and her husband have been foster parents to 23 children, in addition to raising five children of their own. She pointed this out twice Monday night.
“Bachmann ... pleased with her performance, with reason,” University of Virginia politics-watcher Larry Sabato tweeted at the end of the debate.
The second winner of the evening was Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts. The early front-runner for the Republican nomination could have faced “incoming” from other contenders, particularly over his Massachusetts health-care reform – a model for President Obama’s reform – and his changed views on abortion. But the six other candidates on stage took a pass.
Instead, former President Reagan’s 11th Commandment – “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican” – got a good workout. And Mr. Romney was allowed to look calmly in command and to repeat his explanation for why “Romneycare” was a legitimate initiative at the state level but not an appropriate model for the entire country.
“Ours was a state plan, a state solution, and if people don't like it in our state, they can change it,” Romney said. “That's the nature of why states are the right place for this type of responsibility. And that's why I introduced a plan to repeal Obamacare and replace it with a state-centric program.”
One big question of the evening was whether former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty would go after Romney on health care. On “Fox News Sunday” the day before, he had coined the term “Obamneycare,” a ready-made sound bite to fling again at the front-runner, this time to his face. But Mr. Pawlenty backed away, despite the efforts of moderator John King of CNN to spark a fight. “Minnesota nice” prevailed again, as it had in the first debate on May 5.
The early line from pundits was that Pawlenty missed a golden opportunity to go after Romney and begin to build a profile as a fighter. After all, many asked, if he is not willing to take on the front-runner, how would he behave toward Mr. Obama in the general election?
An alternate view is that Pawlenty remains largely unknown to most voters, and that he chose to take the biggest opportunity to date to introduce himself to the public in a positive light. There are at least seven months to go before the first nominating contests, and Pawlenty still has time. The bad news for the Minnesotan is that he didn’t distinguish himself in other ways during the two-hour event. Romney even beat him in dropping a reference to the Boston Bruins – noting they were up 4-0 in Game Six of the Stanley Cup finals, winning a big cheer from the New Hampshire crowd.
Another loser of the evening was businessman Herman Cain. He won big during the first debate, speaking bluntly and plainly as the only nonpolitician in the field, and he has seen his poll numbers rise steadily since then. But Mr. Cain, former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, got tangled up in his explanation of a previous statement of why he would not be “comfortable” having a Muslim in his administration.
“I would not be comfortable because you have peaceful Muslims and then you have militant Muslims, those that are trying to kill us,” Cain said. “And so, when I said I wouldn't be comfortable, I was thinking about the ones that are trying to kill us.”
When pressed by Mr. King on whether he would have a “loyalty test” for a Muslim seeking to serve in a Cain administration, he said: “I would ask certain questions, John. And it's not a litmus test. It is simply trying to make sure that we have people committed to the Constitution first in order for them to work effectively in the administration.”
Romney was handed the followup, and steered clear of the “loyalty test” issue. “I think we recognize that the people of all faiths are welcome in this country,” he said. “Our nation was founded on a principle of religious tolerance. That's in fact why some of the early patriots came to this country and we treat people with respect regardless of their religious persuasion.”
Romney did not mention his own faith – Mormonism – but his answer reflected his view that his religious beliefs should not be a factor as voters judge his fitness for the presidency. Some voters, especially evangelicals, say they’re not comfortable with the idea of a Mormon president, an issue that could hurt Romney in the primaries.
Another question heading into the New Hampshire debate was how former House Speaker Newt Gingrich would perform. Most of his senior staff resigned last week over his unorthodox strategy, which is light on in-person campaigning and heavy on social media and debates.
Mr. Gingrich probably did himself no favors. When asked about his recent assertion that the GOP plan for Medicare, authored by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, was “right-wing social engineering” – a comment he later backed away from – he offered this:
“If you're dealing with something as big as Medicare and you can't have a conversation with the country where the country thinks what you're doing is the right thing, you better slow down,” Gingrich said. “Remember, we all got mad at Obama because he ran over us when we said don't do it. Well, the Republicans ought to follow the same ground rule. If you can't convince the American people it's a good idea, maybe it's not a good idea.”
The Ryan plan would turn Medicare into a voucher system, ending it as a fee-for-service entitlement. Public opinion on the idea is negative, and Democrats have used it as a blunt instrument to attack Republicans. But Gingrich’s critique has injected a discordant note within the GOP, and his continuing defense of it Monday night reignited that issue.
In the end, though, the night belonged to Bachmann and Romney. As a sitting member of Congress, Bachmann could speak in the present tense about her actions to fight the Obama agenda.
“I was the very first member of Congress to introduce the full-scale repeal of Obamacare,” she said.
It’s way too soon to say whether the GOP nomination race will boil down to Bachmann versus Romney. But there’s certainly a path to that outcome. Bachmann, who is originally from Iowa, could be a strong contender in the Iowa caucuses, where social conservatives often win the day. Caucus-goers could hesitate over the fact that she’s only a member of the House – not a typical launch pad for winning the presidency.
Bachmann has many miles to go as a full-fledged candidate for voters to determine her viability. But she speaks the tea party and social conservative language fluently, and thus she’s a force to watch.

Flag Day


If you're not sure of the significance of June 14, you're not alone. Flag Day tends to fly under the radar.
The holiday commemorates the adoption of the U.S. flag by the Second Continental Congress on June 14, 1777, uniting the newborn nation under one symbol.
While the 1777 Congress specified 13 stripes and 13 stars on a field of blue, it didn’t dictate an exact pattern for the new flag’s star-spangled corner. As a result, there’s some variety among the flag designs of the Revolutionary War era. Historians say Betsy Ross’ circle of stars is probably one of the oldest.
Americans have been celebrating the flag on June 14 since the 1800s, but it wasn’t until 1916 that a President, Woodrow Wilson, proclaimed the day of recognition. Congress officially established June 14 as Flag Day in 1949.
Coming as it does midway between the patriotic holidays of Memorial Day and the Fourth of July, Flag Day is often overlooked. It doesn’t help that it’s not one of the 10 federal holidays – so nobody has off work.
Only in Pennsylvania, home of Betsy Ross, is June 14 a state holiday.
But plenty of groups will be honoring the flag today in recognition of the holiday. Rich Corcoran ofAmerican Legion Post 232 in Barnegat said the veterans’ group and local boy scouts take time each Flag Day to retire the flag and raise a new one in its place.
Tonight's ceremony begins at 7 p.m. at the post, 499 Route 9, after which the old flag will be respectfully burned – the proper way to dispose of an American flag no longer in use.
“Most people don’t know about it,” he said of the holiday. “I think we need to get the word out.”
Lowering your own flag tonight, but can't remember from your school days how to properly fold Old Glory? USFlag.orghas instructions:
  1. Begin by holding the flag waist-high with another person so that its surface is parallel to the ground.
  2. Fold the lower half of the stripe section lengthwise over the field of stars, holding the bottom and top edges securely.
  3. Fold the flag again lengthwise with the blue field on the outside.
  4. Make a triangular fold by bringing the striped corner of the folded edge to meet the open (top) edge of the flag.
  5. Turn the outer (end) point inward, parallel to the open edge, to form a second triangle.
  6. The triangular folding is continued until the entire length of the flag is folded in this manner.
  7. When the flag is completely folded, only a triangular blue field of stars should be visible.

Lunar Eclipse June 2011


The longest and darkest total lunar eclipse of the century will occur on Wednesday, giving sky enthusiasts all over the country an opportunity to witness the event.
An unusually long lunar eclipse with the Moon immersed deeply inside the umbral (darker) shadow of the Earth will occur Nehru Planetarium Director N Rathnasree said.
“The total phase of this lunar eclipse will last 100 minutes. The last eclipse to exceed this duration was in July 2000,” she said.
The next such eclipse will only take place in 2141.
The total lunar eclipse will begin at 00:52:30 IST and end at 02:32:42 IST. The partial eclipse will begin at 23:52:56 IST and end at 03:32:15 IST.
The eclipse will be visible completely in Africa and Central Asia. It will be visible rising over South America, Western Africa and Europe, and seen setting over Eastern Asia, and Australia, C B Devgun from Science Popularisation Association of Communicators and Educators (SPACE) said.
The magnitude of the one of the relatively rare total lunar eclipse will be 1.70 magnitude, N Sri Raghunandan Kumar of Planetary Society of India said.
The next lunar eclipse to be viewed in India will be in December this year.
Also, a star named 51 Ophiuchi will be occulted during the eclipse.
Sky enthusiasts can witness the whole sequence of the occultation in the zodiacal constellation of Ophiuchus.
At 11:29 PM, the Moon will occult (hide) behind the star 51 Ophiuchi. The star will reappear after 90 minutes at 01:01 AM of June 16, Kumar said.

WBJEE 2011 Results


The results of the West Bengal Joint Entrance Examination (WBJEE) 2011 are declared on June 14, 2011.
The results can be checked at official website. Due to heavy traffic the official site is not working. Students can click here to see the links of other websites who have announced the results.
The WBJEE board conducts the entrance examination every year for admission to engineering colleges in the Indian State of West Bengal.
Students desiring for admission to undergraduate courses in Engineering/Technology/ Medical/Dental and Pharmacy in Universities in West Bengal have to appear for WBJEE Entrance Exam.
The counseling process will begin in July after the results. In last year counseling, the first phase was up to WBJEE General Rank 60,000.
To check WBJEE 2011 result, students will have to enter enrollment no in the form provided.
We wish the WBJEE 2011 students all the best.

Earthquake Malaysia


TWO earthquakes hit northern Sumatra on Tuesday morning, sending tremors that were felt in Selangor, Malacca, Negri Sembilan, Perak, Putrajaya and Kuala Lumpur.
The first 5.5-magnitude earthquake hit Sumatra at 8.08am and the second 5.6-magnitude quake hit the same place at 11.01am on Tuesday.
Calls came pouring in from Selayang Hospital, KLCC building and other highrises in the Klang Valley as many residents ran out of their buildings.
However, there was no tsunami threat, said the Malaysian Meteorological Department.
A fire official said the tremors were more intense from the eighth floor upwards, but added that there were no reports of damage.

Sumatra Earthquake


These are e-mails sent to The Star Online from Malaysians who felt the tremors from the Sumatra earthquake on Tuesday.
"I felt the tremors when I was sitting at my work station. I noticed vibrations in the water dispenser and slight movement of a file on my desk." - Meor Anas, 46, engineering executive at the Sungai Selangor water treatment plant.
" I felt the tremors around 11am. I was sitting and yet my chair was swaying. It seemed to last quite long, probably around 10-15 seconds. This is the strongest tremor I've ever felt in the Klang Valley." - Edmund of Mercury Securities, 7th floor, Solaris Mont Kiara.
"I and the students felt the tables shaking and some complained of dizziness." - Teacher Daniel Chin from Kapar.
"After having spent several years in Japan, the tremor 'is just shaky and intermittent' but still quite scary." - Ahmad Badri
"We were having examinations when we were told to leave the building when the tables started shaking." - Inti college student Y.S. Yan
"Somehow I didn't feel much of the tremor but I did realise that things were slightly shaky. For a millisecond, I think, the chair I was sitting on suddenly felt as if I was using the Ogawa ez-Loop machines." - Noni Awang, 21st floor in an office located in Jalan Khidmat Usaha, Kuala Lumpur.
"I was walking up the staircase when I felt a bit dizzy. As soon as I knew something was wrong I ran back downstairs. By then many office workers were already rushing downstairs. Quite scary." - Chong, Putrajaya.

Swami Nigamananda


A 34-year-old ascetic, Swami Nigamananda , died here after fasting for two and a half months to save the river Ganga from pollution, yoga guru Baba Ramdev said Tuesday.

Nigamananda died here Monday at the same hospital where Ramdev was being treated until his discharge Tuesday.

"The saint was fasting for the Ganga since the last many days. He laid down his life for the Ganga. I pay my tribute to Swami Nigamananda," Ramdev told reporters.

Ramdev was admitted to the hospital June 10, the seventh day of his nine-day long fast, after his health deteriorated.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Heo Yoona


Korean newspapers reported on the bulk former member of girl group LGP - Pork Yoona met a car accident near Banpo Bridge (Seoul) on the 10 th.
Reportedly, management of Yoona is the driver. But he did not notice the red light in front so I should launch vehicle.Consequently, the collision occurred relatively strong that the car was washed into a roadside.

Both were immediately taken to hospital for examination. Pretty bad for Yoona as she is currently preparing for his solo career. Since the accident, must have all plans will be forced to move again untilYoona really well.

Corpus Christi


A dispute over the treatment of a dog resulted in a fight between neighbors that ended with one man being arrested Saturday, Corpus Christi police said.
Officers met with Henry Miller, 49, in the 1500 block of Caldwell Street at 7:17 p.m. Miller told police he felt threatened by his neighbor's dog and attempted to strike him with a stick he was carrying. Miller said he missed and hit his neighbor's truck.
Miller's neighbor told police his dog was tied up and Miller kept hitting and agitating the dog. When he arrived to stop Miller, the 49-year-old neighbor said Miller struck him in the chest, breaking the stick with the blow.
Police said both men were treated for minor injuries at the scene by Corpus Christi fire department medics.
Miller is in Nueces County Jail on a $50,000 bond for aggravated assault.

University Of Phoenix


University of Phoenix, the nation’s largest private university, announced the appointment of Dr. Mary Sortino as director of Academic Affairs for the University’s Delaware campus.
In her new role, Sortino will be responsible for hiring and managing faculty members, creating the academic program calendar and managing student inquiries.
“Mary brings a wealth of higher education leadership experience to our new campus,” said Tim Gilrain, campus director of University of Phoenix Delaware. “We are very pleased to welcome her and I’m confident she will be a tremendous asset and advocate for our students and faculty.”
Before joining University of Phoenix, Sortino served as department chair for human services and social sciences at the Delaware Technical & Community College Terry Campus. With more than a decade of experience in higher education administration, Sortino began her career as assistant program director of the Wesley College Center for Adult Studies in New Castle and also served as dean of graduate and professional studies at Rosemont College in Philadelphia, Pa.
“I’m excited to join the University of Phoenix family here in Delaware and help deliver on the University’s overall commitment to provide a relevant, rigorous and real-world education for today’s working learner,” Sortino said. “The new Delaware campus provides such a unique resource to students throughout Delaware and the surrounding area, and I look forward helping our students reach their higher education goals.”
Sortino earned her doctoral degree in clinical psychology from Widener University and bachelor of arts in psychology and sociology from West Chester University. In addition to her work in higher education, Sortino serves as a consultant to the department of health and social services.

Lunar Eclipse


The longest total lunar eclipse since July 2000 will occur on Wednesday (June 15), with skywatchers in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Australia in prime position to witness the moon treat.
The event is the first lunar eclipse of 2011 and one of two total lunar eclipses this year. The eclipse, which will occur during June's full moon, will begin at 1:24 p.m. EDT (1724 GMT) and last until 7 p.m. EDT (2300 GMT), but it will not be visible from North America.
For observers in regions where it will be visible, the eclipse could offer an amazing sight: the period of totality will be 100 minutes. In the last 100 years, only three other eclipses have rivaled the duration of totality of this eclipse, according to SPACE.com's skywatching columnist Joe. Rao. The last lunar eclipse of similar length occured on July 16, 2000 and lasted 107 minutes.
"The entire event will be seen from the eastern half of Africa, the Middle East, central Asia and western Australia," stated the NASA Eclipse Website of the June 15 event. "Observers throughout Europe will miss the early stages of the eclipse because they occur before moonrise." [Video: Inside the June 15 Total Lunar Eclipse]
Total eclipse of the moonTotal lunar eclipses occur when the Earth passes directly between the sun and the moon, casting a deep shadow through which the moon then travels through. [Blood Moon: 2010 Total Lunar Eclipse Photos ]
"From the Earth, the moon will appear to darken and turn a deep red before eventually returning to normal," explained NASA officials at the agency's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in an advisory. "When light from the sun goes by the side of the Earth, it passes through a long and thick layer of Earth's atmosphere. Shorter wavelengths of sunlight, like blue, are scattered by the atmosphere, so by the time the light has finished its trip to the moon, more of the longer wavelengths, like red, are left over. On the Earth, the same thing happens at sunset as the ground you stand on gradually passes into night."
Unlike their solar counterparts, lunar eclipses are safe to view without any special protective glasses or equipment.
Countries in prime viewing positionAccording to NASA's eclipse website, Wednesday's total lunar eclipse will be visible during its peak to skywatchers throughout Europe, with the exception of Scotland and northern Scandinavia.
In eastern South America, Western Europe and the west coast of Africa, the eclipse will occur Wednesday evening, according to Rao. Skywatchers in eastern Brazil, Uruguay and Argentinahave a chance to see the lunar eclipse during its total stage, NASA officials said.
But for some countries, the event will be visible in the wee hours of Thursday (June 16) because the eclipse's region of visibility crosses the International Date Line. The early Thursday viewing times apply to observers in central Siberia, eastern Mongolia, northeast China, and most of Japan, Korea, New Guinea, eastern Australia and New Zealand, Rao explained.
"Eastern Asia, eastern Australia, and New Zealand will miss the last stages of eclipse because they occur after moonset," the NASA Eclipse Website advisory stated.
Wednesday's lunar eclipse is part of a rare three-eclipse series of events occurring in June and early July. It follows the June 1 partial solar eclipse and comes before another partial solar eclipse, which will occur on July 1 but only be visible from a remote region near Antarctica.
The second lunar eclipse of 2011 will occur on Dec. 10 and will also be a total lunar eclipse. That even should be visible from the western United States and Canada.

Myanmar


The U.S. Navy forced a North Korean ship on its way to Myanmar to return home after a standoff two weeks ago, The New York Times reported Sunday.
The Times said the U.S. suspected the North Korean cargo vessel, the M/V Light, was carrying missile technology to Myanmar. The Navy destroyer McCampbell was sent to track its movement.
On May 26, the Times reported, the McCampbell caught up with the ship and asked to board it. The North Koreans refused, and since the U.S. did not want to force its way aboard, it could not confirm whether its suspicions were true.
Nonetheless, a few days after the Navy approached it, the North Korean vessel stopped well short of Myanmar and returned to its home port.
A White House official contacted Sunday by The Associated Press confirmed the substance of the Times story. The official, who was not authorized to discuss the incident, spoke on condition of anonymity.
Joseph Yun, the United States’ deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, visited Myanmar last month and expressed concerns about its military relationship with North Korea.
A UN Security Council resolution bans all North Korean arms exports, authorizes member states to inspect North Korean sea, air and land cargo, and requires them to seize and destroy any goods transported in violation of the sanctions.
Arms experts say Myanmar, which faces an arms embargo from many Western countries, gets weaponry from Pyongyang. Some analysts have suggested North Korea shares missile and nuclear technology with Myanmar, though the evidence is thin.
A recent UN report, obtained last month by The Associated Press, said North Korea remains “actively engaged” in exporting ballistic missiles, components and technology to numerous customers in the Middle East and South Asia in violation of UN sanctions.
The report said prohibited ballistic missile-related items are suspected of being transferred between North Korea and Iran on regularly scheduled flights of Air Koryo and Iran Air, with trans-shipment through a third country that diplomats identified as China. China denies such activity.

Christchurch Earthquake 2011


Two powerful aftershocks have hit the New Zealand city of Christchurch, less than four months after an earthquake that killed 181 people.
Widespread damage has been reported in the quake-damaged city, but there were no initial reports of fatalities.
A magnitude-5.2 tremor was felt at Taylors Mistake beach, six miles from the city centre at 1pm New Zealand time. A second aftershock measuring 6.0 was felt at 2.20pm, destroying at least one building and injuring several people.
The dual quakes are the most powerful to hit since the 6.3-magnitude earthquake on 22 February, which killed 181 people, damaged 100,000 homes and ruined most of the city's downtown area, now largely an off-limits "red zone".
Many of the injuries from this latest quake occurred in the city's downtown, where only construction workers have been allowed to work since February; around 200 people were there when the quakes struck. Over 50,000 houses, mostly in the eastern suburbs hardest hit by the last earthquake, were without power this evening as they headed into a cold winter night.
The tremors forced the evacuation of shopping centres, office blocks and Christchurch airport.
The Hotel Grand Chancellor in the city centre, which slumped dramatically in the February quake, had tipped further towards the ground, said witnesses.
"We are being enveloped with dust," Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker told New Zealand's National Radio. "It is very, very scary."
"All the shops have fallen down," Renee Murray, who works at a Domino's Pizza in a suburb, told The Associated Press. "Half of the roof has fallen in (but) they have not fully collapsed."
The aftershocks were felt as far away as Dunedin in the south and Wellington in the North Island.
February quake
Quake-weary Christchurch residents have been warned that the worst isn't over yet as experts expect further aftershocks in the coming months.
Dozens of residents are expected to leave New Zealand's southern city for good after this latest series of tremors.
"The psychological toll is beginning to tell on people," resident Colin Young told Radio New Zealand. "They really have had enough."

A total of 181 people died in the 6.3-magnitude earthquake in February, which also destroyed hundreds of buildings.
About 10,000 houses and nearly 1,000 commercial buildings will have to be demolished as a result of the February quake.
Recovery and reconstruction costs are expected to total at least NZ$15bn ($11bn; £7bn).

Ship On Juhu Beach


MV wisdom, a 145-metre long cargo vessel bound for Alang ship-breaking yard, sparked a major scare on Saturday afternoon after it broke free from its tug and drifted towards the Bandra-Worli Sea Link.

The unmanned ship eventually ran aground off the Juhu beach “late in the evening”, said coast guard officials.

On Sunday morning, walkers at the beach were greeted with the magnificent view of Wisdom against the monsoon sky. As the word spread, crowd swelled. “Every weekend, the beach sees plenty of visitors.

However, today (Sunday), there was an usually large crowd,” Juhu resident Kumar Pravesh said. “People clicked pictures of the ship and enjoyed light rain.”
Coast guard officials said that the Singapore-flagged ship was “stable”. Arun Singh, the regional operations and plant officer for the coast guard’s western command, said that Wisdom had run aground 2.5 km from the Juhu beach.

He said that the talks were on with its owners. “We will get tugs to drag the ship out,” he said.

The directorate General of Shipping will conduct an investigation into Saturday’s incident. The 9,000-tonne MV Wisdom posed a risk to the Sea Link after it went adrift owing to bad weather.

“If the ship was being taken to Alang (from Colombo), we wonder what she was doing near Mumbai’s coast,” a coast guard official had said on Saturday.

PGIMS Rohtak


PGIMS Rohtak has announcedresults of the entrance examination for MD/MCh/MS/MDS/PG Diploma and DM courses for 2011 on Monday.
Pt. Bhagwat Dayal Sharma Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences (PGIMS) Rohtak has put out results according to the combined merit list - HCMS merit list - open merit list and roll number wise merit list.
The entrance examination for PGIMS Rohtak was conducted by the institute on March 2, 2011.
The results can be accessed at pgimsrohtak.nic.in.

UGC Net Result December 2010


UGC Net Result December 2010
The wait for the candidates who have been waiting for the results of their performance delivered in National Eligibility Test (NET) conducted by UGC in December 2010 may finally be over as UGC is expected to release these results today i.e. 13th June, however there is official confirmation regarding the time of declaration of these results.

The NET results were delayed earlier as these were supposed to come out somewhere in April 2011 after which UGC was pressurized by a high-level delegation of Students Islamic Organization of India (SIO) followed by which UGC assured that results will be released on, if not before, 13th June. These results can be checked on the official website of UGC NET onhttp://www.ugcnetonline.in, when published today.

National Eligibility Test (NET) is conducted twice a year which serves a basic eligibility criteria for the post of lecturers where award for Junior Research Fellowship (JRF) is also determined by this test which means that the information of any event which may cause the delay in declaration of the results should be communicated to the applicants else the whole purpose of conducting the test is defeated as the future of thousands of aspiring lectures rely on the results.

Raviraja Pandian Committee


Raviraja Pandian Committee
Tamil Nadu state private school fee determination committee headed by Justice Raviraja Pandian has submitted the private schools fees structure to the district educational officers on Monday.

Justice Pandian told media persons that the officials will issue the revised fee structure to the school managements on Monday itself.

The committee has refused to disclose the details of revised fee structure before media, instead they have distributed pamphlets that explains the mandatory measures taken for the preparation of new fee structure.

The new school fee structure for more than 6,500 private matriculation higher secondary schools in the state is expected to upload in the department website by Monday evening.

S Arumainathan, president of the Federation of Tamil Nadu Parents and Students Association said that they would be forced to go for protest if the revised fee structure has hiked the school fee in favour of a section of school managements.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Quorum


The new Glenarden City Council can be sworn in Monday, but controversy over results of the May 2 mayoral race continues to delay official results for that seat.
Donjuan Williams, who lost to incumbent Mayor Gail Parker Carter with 204 votes to her 214, tried June 8 to appeal the city’s board of election’s May 19 decision to still count the 26 absentee ballots, some of which he alleges are invalid.
Williams’ concern is that residents who picked up absentee ballots and applications on behalf of their neighbors did not sign affidavits verifying they were picking up a ballot or application for another person. According to state law, residents must do so under penalty of perjury.
Another concern was language on Ward 3 candidate Judy Diggs’ website that stated “Early Voting” was available from April 8 to April 29, even though the city did not offer early voting. Williams was concerned the language may have deceived voters into thinking casting absentee ballots equated early voting.
The new council will be sworn in Monday, but if it had been earlier, there might have been a quorum June 8. Only Council President Margaret Dade (Ward 2) and council members Elaine Carter (At large) and Jennifer Jenkins (Ward 3) attended. One more council member was necessary to come to a vote. Jenkins said people are spending too much time and money on legal advice for there not to be a quorum.
“People have used their resources for this,” Jenkins said.
Councilwoman Carolyn Smallwood (Ward 1) recently had surgery and could not attend. Outgoing council members.
Barbara Armstrong (Ward 1), Deborah Eason (Ward 2) and Irving Haywood (Ward 3) have not attended a meeting since Feb. 14, Dade said.
The three members cited safety as their reason for not attending meetings after a heated Feb. 14 City Council meeting where Ward 1 Councilman-Elect James Herring alleged Haywood pushed him. Herring filed a complaint in Prince George’s County Circuit Court but the Prince George’s County State’s Attorney’s office declined to pursue Herring’s complaint because it did not merit a formal assault charge.
Eason and Haywood said they did not get enough notice about Wednesday’s appeal hearing but said until the city invests in a U.S. marshal or county police officer to observe meetings, they will not feel safe attending.
Dade said Wednesday a U.S. marshal would not sit in on a municipal meeting.
Williams will have to wait until after the new council is sworn in on June 13 to receive a new date for an appeal.
Kevin Karpinski, the Glenarden city council’s attorney, recommended only the six council members be sworn in Monday and not Parker Carter until Williams’ complaints are addressed. According to the city charter, Parker Carter could still take an oath of office in the county’s Circuit Court.
Williams said his next option after getting another hearing is to appeal to the county’s Circuit Court.

Heaven


There is something about the smell of a fresh garden tomato that immediately transports me back in time to when I spent my hot summer afternoons in the garden with my father. I can clearly remember plucking the ripe vegetable, or fruit if you would like to get scientific, and inhaling deeply, my nose pressed to the red skin. For me, nothing says summer gardening like a fresh tomato.
The difference between a store bought and fresh garden tomato is astonishing. No wonder once the temperatures rise, folks run to the nursery to grab up as many plants as they can fit on their property. With so many varieties though, how do you know what to get?
“Most of them are indeterminate,” said sales person and vegetable specialist at Young’s Nursery Lorraine Deniston. Indeterminate tomatoes fruit continuously and grow to have long branches and need to be staked up. Deniston suggests using tomato cages in the beginning, but said that using regular garden stakes and twist-ties is the best way to keep these plants upright.
Determinate tomatoes are more bush-like and do not need any type of additional materials to hold them in place. These plants produce fruit once and then are finished.
Labels on tomato plants usually state which type they are.
Once you decide whether you want staked up or bushy tomatoes, you can then move on to decide which variety of tomato you would prefer. There are the basics: cherry, plum, beefsteak.
I can recall heading down to the local garden shop with my dad and those three varieties were just about as exotic as you could get then. Now, there are funky names on tomato plant labels such as Mr. Stripey and Early Girl.
“I love all tomatoes,” admitted Deniston “but the heirlooms are prettier and more interesting. They make for a lovely presentation.”
Heirlooms are a completely different type of tomato, compared to say a cherry variety. But they make for fantastic colorful additions to salads since they can come in purples and pinks, be striped, and are usually irregularly shaped.
Knowing what you want to use your tomatoes for and going from there is the best way to pick which variety to plant. Do you entertain a lot and want a flashy striped tomato to add to a platter? Or do you dream about summer afternoons relaxing on the hammock, sandwich in hand that is topped with a fresh slice of tomato heaven? Either way, tomatoes are nature’s summer gift that shouldn’t be missed.

Bermuda Triangle


Tales of missing maritime vessels and rumors of drifting, crewless ships have long colored the popular imagination when it comes to legends of the high seas.
Certain locations have become synonymous with unexplained disappearances and for intrepid sailors with a taste for the paranormal, these places can hold a spookily magnetic appeal.
So if you fancy a sailing holiday with a supernatural slant, you'll need to know where the fiction ends and the facts begin. To help you along your way we delve deep into some of the world's most mysterious waters.
Bermuda Triangle
The vast triangular area of ocean with imaginary points in Bermuda, Florida and Puerto Rico -- popularly known as the "Bermuda Triangle" -- has long been associated with mysterious disappearances, paranormal activity and even fissures in the fabric of space itself.
Interest in the region began after a group of military planes carrying 14 men inexplicably vanished somewhere off the coast of southern Florida in December 1945.
Before losing radio contact, it's claimed the flight leader was heard saying: "We are entering white water, nothing seems right."
Almost immediately afterwards, a further 13 crew-members -- dispatched as a flying search party -- themselves vanished. Neither group's remains were ever discovered and the Bermuda Triangle legend was born.
Numerous further disappearances, including a large oil tanker, a pleasure yacht and a small passenger plane were attributed to the area's paranormal forces.
A raft of books, like "The Devil's Triangle," "Limbo of the Lost," and "The Riddle of the Bermuda Triangle" all contained supernatural explanations -- from UFOs to "wormholes" to technology left over from the mythical lost continent of Atlantis.
However, in later years, skeptics have argued that the number of ships and aircraft reported missing in the area is, statistically, no more significant than in any other part of the ocean.
Indeed, the area is today one of the most heavily traveled shipping lanes in the world, and most appear to get by without so much as dipping oar into another dimension.
Sargasso Sea
Next door to the Bermuda Triangle, and stretching far out into the Atlantic Ocean, is the eerily calm Sargasso Sea.
Despite sitting in the middle of the otherwise freezing Atlantic, the water in the Sargasso is warm and embroidered with sargassum -- the dense seaweed from which it gets its name.