Science
News This Week:
1) Octobot
uses webbed arms to swim faster:
Fish in
Mediterranean Sea follow alongside the robot. Webbed underarms can turn a
sluggish robotic octopus into a speed demon.
A squishy
membrane connecting the machine’s eight arms helps the bot scoot through water
nearly twice as fast as octobots without webs, researchers reported at the
IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems on
September 15.Inspired by Octopus vulgaris, the well-known sea creature with
arms connected by a fleshy, skirtlike mantle, computer scientist Dimitris
Tsakiris and colleagues decided to give a makeover to the robotic octopus they
had previously developed. The earlier, webless version could propel itself at
up to 100 millimeters per second by slowly opening stiff plastic arms and then
snapping them together.
But with
arms and a web made of soft silicone, the shoe box–sized bot swam at up to 180
millimeters per second. The web helps the octobot generate more force, so it
can push through water faster than using arms alone.Skittish sea animals seem
unfrightened by the lifelike bot, said Tsakiris, of the Foundation for Research
and Technology- Hellas in Heraklion, Greece. When researchers took the faux
octopus for a swim in the Mediterranean, tiny fish tagged along.Tsakiris thinks
biologists could use the robot to observe marine ecosystems. “We want to put a
camera on it and see what we can do.” SPEEDY SWIMMER Adding a soft silicone web to a small robotic
octopus helps the machine hit the gas. The first robot shown propels itself by
snapping shut rigid plastic legs. The second bot uses flexible silicone legs
and moves at about the same speed. The third robot zips along faster, using
silicone arms and a web that helps it push through water.
2) Soft
robotics 'toolkit' features everything a robot-maker needs:
A New
resource unveiled today by researchers from several Harvard University labs in
collaboration with Trinity College Dublin provides both experienced and
aspiring researchers with the intellectual raw materials needed to design,
build, and operate robots made from soft, flexible materials.With the advent of
low-cost 3D printing, laser cutters, and other advances in manufacturing
technology, soft robotics is emerging as an increasingly important field. Using
principles drawn from conventional rigid robot design, but working with pliable
materials, engineers are pioneering the use of soft robotics for assisting in a
wide variety of tasks such as physical therapy, minimally invasive surgery, and
search-and-rescue operations in dangerous environments.The Soft Robotics
Toolkit is an online treasure trove of downloadable, open-source plans, how-to
videos, and case studies to assist users in the design, fabrication, modeling, characterization,
and control of soft robotic devices. It will provide researchers with a level
of detail not typically found in academic research papers, including 3D models,
bills of materials, raw experimental data, multimedia step-by-step tutorials,
and case studies of various soft robot designs."The goal of the toolkit is
to advance the field of soft robotics by allowing designers and researchers to
build upon each other's work," says Conor Walsh, Assistant Professor of
Mechanical and Biomedical Engineering at the Harvard School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences (SEAS) and a Core Faculty Member at the Wyss Institute for
Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University.
By
creating a common resource for sharing design approaches, prototyping and fabrication
techniques, and technical knowledge, the toolkit's developers hope to stimulate
the creation of new kinds of soft devices, tools, and methods.
According
to Walsh, who teaches a popular course in medical device design at SEAS and is
founder of the Harvard Biodesign Lab, soft robotics is especially well suited
to shared design tools because many of the required components, such as
regulators, valves, and microcontrollers, are largely interchangeable between
systems.Dónal Holland, a visiting lecturer in engineering sciences at SEAS and
graduate student at Trinity College Dublin, is one of the lead developers of
the toolkit and is especially interested in the toolkit's potential as an
educational resource."One thing we've seen in design courses is that
students greatly benefit from access to more experienced peers -- say, postdocs
in a research lab -- who can guide them through their work," Holland says.
"But scaling that up is difficult; you quickly run out of time and people.
The toolkit is designed to capture the expertise and make it easily accessible
to students."Just as open-source software has spurred far-flung innovation
in computing, "open design" hardware platforms -- coupled with
advances in computer-aided engineering and more accessible prototyping
capabilities -- have the potential to foster remote collaboration on common
mechanical engineering projects, unleashing crowdsourced creativity in robotics
and other fields."Open design can have as disruptive an influence on
technology development in this century as open source did in the last,"
says Gareth J. Bennett, assistant professor of mechanical and manufacturing
engineering at Trinity College Dublin and a coauthor of a paper in Soft
Robotics that describes the toolkit development. Additional coauthors are
Evelyn J. Park '13, a SEAS research fellow in materials science and
engineering, and Panagiotis Polygerinos, a postdoctoral fellow in the Harvard
Biodesign Lab at SEAS and the Wyss Institute.
Much of
the material included in the toolkit sprang from the labs of Robert J. Wood,
Charles River Professor of Engineering and Applied Sciences at SEAS, and
chemist George M. Whitesides, Woodford L. and Ann A. Flowers University
Professor, two researchers whose work has helped establish Harvard as a leader
in soft robotics. Wood and Whitesides are also core faculty members of the Wyss
Institute
3)
Hadrosaur with huge nose discovered: Function of dinosaur's unusual trait a
mystery:
ll it the
Jimmy Durante of dinosaurs -- a newly discovered hadrosaur with a truly
distinctive nasal profile. The new dinosaur, named Rhinorex condrupus by
paleontologists from North Carolina State University and Brigham Young
University, lived in what is now Utah approximately 75 million years ago during
the Late Cretaceous period.Rhinorex, which translates roughly into "King
Nose," was a plant-eater and a close relative of other Cretaceous
hadrosaurs like Parasaurolophus and Edmontosaurus. Hadrosaurs are usually
identified by bony crests that extended from the skull, although Edmontosaurus
doesn't have such a hard crest (paleontologists have discovered that it had a
fleshy crest). Rhinorex also lacks a crest on the top of its head; instead,
this new dinosaur has a huge nose.
Terry
Gates, a joint postdoctoral researcher with NC State and the North Carolina
Museum of Natural Sciences, and colleague Rodney Sheetz from the Brigham Young
Museum of Paleontology, came across the fossil in storage at BYU. First
excavated in the 1990s from Utah's Neslen formation, Rhinorex had been studied
primarily for its well-preserved skin impressions. When Gates and Sheetz
reconstructed the skull, they realized that they had a new species."We had
almost the entire skull, which was wonderful," Gates says, "but the
preparation was very difficult. It took two years to dig the fossil out of the
sandstone it was embedded in -- it was like digging a dinosaur skull out of a
concrete driveway."Based on the recovered bones, Gates estimates that
Rhinorex was about 30 feet long and weighed over 8,500 lbs. It lived in a
swampy estuarial environment, about 50 miles from the coast. Rhinorex is the
only complete hadrosaur fossil from the Neslen site, and it helps fill in some
gaps about habitat segregation during the Late Cretaceous."We've found
other hadrosaurs from the same time period but located about 200 miles farther
south that are adapted to a different environment," Gates says. "This
discovery gives us a geographic snapshot of the Cretaceous, and helps us place
contemporary species in their correct time and place. Rhinorex also helps us
further fill in the hadrosaur family tree."When asked how Rhinorex may
have benefitted from a large nose Gates said, "The purpose of such a big
nose is still a mystery. If this dinosaur is anything like its relatives then
it likely did not have a super sense of smell; but maybe the nose was used as a
means of attracting mates, recognizing members of its species, or even as a
large attachment for a plant-smashing beak. We are already sniffing out answers
to these questions."
4) The
future face of molecular electronics:
The
emerging field of molecular electronics could take our definition of portable
to the next level, enabling the construction of tiny circuits from molecular
components. In these highly efficient devices, individual molecules would take
on the roles currently played by comparatively bulky wires, resistors and
transistors. A team of researchers from five Japanese and Taiwanese
universities has identified a potential candidate for use in small-scale
electronics: a molecule called picene. In a paper published September 16 in The
Journal of Chemical Physics, from AIP Publishing, they characterize the
structural and electronic properties of a thin layer of picene on a silver
surface, demonstrating the molecule's potential for electronic applications.
Picene's
sister molecule, pentacene, has been widely studied because of its high carrier
mobility -- its ability to quickly transmit electrons, a critical property for
nanoscale electronics. But pentacene, made of five benzene molecules joined in
a line, breaks down under normal environmental conditions.Enter picene, in
which these same five benzene rings are instead bonded together in a W shape.
This simple structural change alters some of the molecule's other properties: Picene
retains pentacene's high carrier mobility, but is more chemically stable and
therefore better suited to practical applications.
To test
picene's properties when juxtaposed with a metal, as it would be in an electronic
device, the researchers deposited a single layer of picene molecules onto a
piece of silver. Then, they used scanning tunneling microscopy, an imaging
technique that can visualize surfaces at the atomic level, to closely examine
the interface between the picene and the silver.
Though
previous studies had shown a strong interaction between pentacene and metal
surfaces, "we found that the zigzag-shaped picene basically just sits on
the silver," said University of Tokyo researcher Yukio Hasegawa. Interactions
between molecules can alter their shape and therefore their behavior, but
picene's weak connection to the silver surface left its properties
intact."The weak interaction is advantageous for molecular [electronics]
applications because the modification of the properties of molecular thin film
by the presence of the [silver] is negligible and therefore [the] original
properties of the molecule can be preserved very close to the interface,"
said Hasegawa.
A
successful circuit requires a strong connection between the electronic
components -- if a wire is frayed, electrons can't flow. According to Hasegawa,
picene's weak interactions with the silver allow it to deposit directly on the
surface without a stabilizing layer of molecules between, a quality he said is
"essential for achieving high-quality contact with metal
electrodes."Because picene displays its high carrier mobility when exposed
to oxygen, the researchers hope to investigate its properties under varying
levels of oxygen exposure in order to elucidate a molecular mechanism behind
the behavior.
5) Monster
galaxies gain weight by eating smaller neighbors:
Massive
galaxies in the Universe have stopped making their own stars and are instead
snacking on nearby galaxies, according to research by Australian scientists.
Astronomers looked at more than 22,000 galaxies and found that while smaller
galaxies are very efficient at creating stars from gas, the most massive
galaxies are much less efficient at star formation, producing hardly any new
stars themselves, and instead grow by eating other galaxies.
Dr Aaron
Robotham, who is based at the University of Western Australia node of the
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), said smaller 'dwarf'
galaxies were being eaten by their larger counterparts."All galaxies start
off small and grow by collecting gas and quite efficiently turning it into
stars," he said."Then every now and then they get completely
cannibalised by some much larger galaxy."The study was released today in
the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, which is
published by Oxford University Press.
Dr
Robotham, who led the research, said our own Milky Way is at a tipping point
and is expected to now grow mainly by eating smaller galaxies, rather than by
collecting gas."The Milky Way hasn't merged with another large galaxy for
a long time but you can still see remnants of all the old galaxies we've
cannibalised," he said."We're also going to eat two nearby dwarf
galaxies, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, in about four billion
years."
But Dr
Robotham said the Milky Way is eventually going to get its comeuppance when it
merges with the nearby Andromeda Galaxy in about five billion
years."Technically, Andromeda will eat us because it's the more massive
one," he said.
Almost
all of the data for the research was collected with the Anglo-Australian
Telescope in New South Wales as part of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA)
survey, which is led by Professor Simon Driver at ICRAR.The GAMA survey
involves more than 90 scientists and took seven years to complete.This study is
one of over 60 publications to have come from the work, with another 180
currently in progress.Dr Robotham said as galaxies grow they have more gravity
and can therefore more easily pull in their neighbours.He said the reason star
formation slows down in really massive galaxies is thought to be because of
extreme feedback events in a very bright region at the centre of a galaxy known
as an active galactic nucleus."The topic is much debated, but a popular
mechanism is where the active galactic nucleus basically cooks the gas and
prevents it from cooling down to form stars," Dr Robotham said.Ultimately,
gravity is expected to cause all the galaxies in bound groups and clusters to
merge into a few super-giant galaxies, although we will have to wait many
billions of years before that happens.
"If
you waited a really, really, really long time that would eventually happen but
by really long I mean many times the age of the Universe so far," Dr Robotham
said.
Movies News
This Week:
The story
follows a boy named Thomas who wakes up in a strange place called the Glade
with no memory aside from his first name. The Glade is an enclosed structure
populated by other boys, and is surrounded by tall, stone walls that protect
them from monsters called Grievers that live in the Maze, which surrounds the
walls around the Glade.
Every
day, some of the kids who are Runners venture into the labyrinth trying to map
the ever-changing pattern of walls in an attempt to find an exit.As soon as
Thomas arrives, unusual things begin to happen and the others grow suspicious
of him. The Maze seems familiar to Thomas, but he's unable to make sense of the
place despite his extraordinary abilities as a Runner.When the first girl
arrives in the Glade, she brings a message that she will be the last one to
ever arrive in the Glade, as the end is near.
In the
Ming Dynasty, there lives four orphans, Ying, Sao, Yuanlong and Niehu. Raised
in Taoyuan Village, the four are as closed as brothers. Their exceptional
martial arts skills allows them to reach the highest rank within the imperial
guards. After the four successfully killed the Japanese troop leader, the
Emperor orders Ying to escort the Golden Wheel of Time from Sindu (now India)
back to the capital, which is said to have the power of time travel and foresee
into the future. Now in 2013, Squire Tang, funded by a mysterious financer,
digs up three ancient icemen from the outskirt of China; they are Ying, Sao and
Niehu. As he is transferring the icemen to Hong Kong for further studies, the
vehicle involves in a traffic accident which, unexpectedly, defrosts Ying...
Two young
orphans in the Tirolian Mountains come under siege by a vicious band of
hunters. Frightened of being separated by child services following the death of
their mother, a self-sufficient 16-year-old girl (Sophie Lowe) and her
10-year-old brother (Maximilian Harnisch) - who hasn't spoken a word since
seeing his father killed by the mayor (Peter Stormare) - strive to live off the
land in peace. Their innocence is shattered, however, when a group of hunters
led by the mayor's son brutalizes and rapes the free-spirited girl. Later, when
a well-meaning social services worker arrives too late to protect the
terrorized siblings, the girl and her brother prepare to take a stand against
their ruthless attackers.
A soldier
introduces himself to the Peterson family, claiming to be a friend of their son
who died in action. After the young man is welcomed into their home, a series
of accidental deaths seem to be connected to his presence
Reclaim
is a story of shocking twists and turns that starts out with Steven (Ryan
Phillippe) and Shannon (Rachelle LeFevre), a young, happy-go-lucky American
couple, who travel to Puerto Rico to finalize the adoption of their new
seven-year-old daughter, a Haitian orphan named Nina. Charmed by the
picturesque island and eager to bond with their new daughter, Steven and
Shannon take advantage of their time in Puerto Rico to explore the idyllic
coast and see the sights as a family, confident they are just days from
returning home to begin their new lives together.
Events
take an alarming turn, however, when Steven clashes with an intimidating local
(John Cusack) and things go from strange to absolutely terrifying when Nina
disappears from her bed one night. Despite frantic efforts to recover their
daughter, the young couple hit roadblock after roadblock and become
increasingly desperate once their trusted connection from the adoption agency
(Jacki Weaver) also goes missing. Their only ally seems to be Commandante Diaz
(Luis Guzman). As the couple find themselves further entwined in a perplexing
web of lies and confusion, their own relationship begins to unravel and things
take an even more startling turn toward the unexpected.
Political
News This Week:
1) Al
Qaeda trying to enter Assam: Gogoi:
Days
after Al Qaeda issued a video threatening to carry out its campaign in India,
Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on Saturday said the terror group is trying to
set up base in the state and had “tacit understanding” with United Liberation
Front of Asom.
“We have
got some information that Al Qaeda is trying to gain access to Assam. We have
taken steps to prevent any such development and asked all concerned to remain
cautious,” Gogoi told a press conference.
The
global terrorist outfit had earlier too tried to set up links in the north east
and Assam in association with insurgent groups here but failed to do so, he
said.Asked specifically if Al Qaeda has any link with the banned ULFA, Gogoi
said, “I think they have links. Even if there is no direct link as of now, they
have tacit understanding ... They never criticise each other.”
The chief
minister said security forces have received intelligence report that there are
possibilities of some incidents during the forthcoming Durga Puja.Asked if
repeated violence in Bodoland Territorial Area Districts and other parts of the
state, where primarily one community has been affected in recent years, are to
be blamed for Islamic fundamentalist groups like Al Qaeda’s possible entry to
Assam, Gogoi said “These are in any case disturbing factors. These incidents
help them.”
Earlier
this week, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said Indian Muslims will live and
die for the country and would not dance to the tune of Al Qaeda.On September 4,
the Centre had sounded a country-wide alert after an Al Qaeda video surfaced in
which the terror outfit threatened to carry out campaign in India and the
initial assessment of Intelligence Bureau found the tape to be genuine.The US
media and intelligence agencies had said Al Qaeda has established a new branch
to wage ‘jihad’ in India, return the Islamic rule and impose sharia in the
Indian sub-continent.
2) Four
militants killed in gunbattle with security forces:
Four
militants were on Saturday killed in an encounter with security forces near the
Line of Control in Tangdhar sector of Jammu and Kashmir.
“Four militants
were killed in an intelligence-based operation in Tangdhar sector of Kupwara
district near LoC,” said a defence spokesman.
He said
four AK 47 rifles and ammunition were recovered from the scene of the gunbattle
that began in the wee hours. “The identity and group affiliation of the
militants are being ascertained,” the spokesman said.
He said
the information available so far does not suggest that it was an infiltration
bid.
3)
Jadavpur University website 'HACKED'!:
With
Jadavpur University students demanding the Vice Chancellor’s resignation over a
molestation case, an apology message attributed to the VC was on Saturday
posted on the varsity website, which official sources denied claiming the
website has been hacked.“I am sorry” - was the message posted on the website in
VC Abhijit Chakrabarti’s page.
Registrar
Pradip Ghosh clarified that he had spoken to the VC and the latter had not said
anything of that sort. “We have not done that. I have spoken to the VC who said
he has not posted anything. The website is hacked. We will look into the
matter,” Ghosh said.Despite repeated attempts to get his comments, the VC
remained incommunicado as his cell phone was switched off.JU students have been
boycotting classes demanding the VC’s resignation over the ongoing stalemate in
the August 28 molestation case in campus following a police crackdown on
agitating students.
The
agitating students have held the VC responsible for police action against them
on campus in the wee hours of September 17 when they had gheraoed the VC,
Registrar and other officials seeking a fresh probe panel into a molestation
case.
4) Xi
invites Modi to visit his hometown Xi'an in China:
Buoyed by
his visit to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state Gujarat, Chinese
President Xi Jinping in a reciprocal gesture invited him to his hometown Xi’an,
where the famous Buddhist monk Hiuen Tsang spent his last years after his
return from India some 2,000 years ago.
Xi
invited Modi on Wednesday to visit his hometown Xi’an, the famous tourist town
which showcases the Terracotta warriors. Xi said the seventh-century Chinese
monk stayed in India for 16 years to seek Buddhist scriptures.“When he came
back to China, he stayed in my hometown, Xi’an, to translate and spread
Buddhist thoughts to Chinese people,” official media quoted Xi as
saying.According to historical records, Hiuen Tsang, also known as Xuan Zang,
started his travels at the age of 28 in 629 AD and recorded his travels in
Gujarat, where he describes towns and cities like Bharuch, Malwa, Idar and
Valabhi.
Modi
earlier said that the monk also stayed in his home town Vadodara.Xi’an is the
home of Wild Goose Pagoda, built to highlight Xuan’s efforts to visit India in
645 AD through the ancient Silk Road and return home after a 17-year long
sojourn with precious Buddhist scriptures.He translated the works into Chinese
which helped popularising the Buddhism in China which till date remained the
most cherished link between both the countries. The pagoda was built to
highlight his achievement.
Vice
President Hamid Ansari visited the pagoda during his visit to China in June
this year. The Chinese media also highlighted the India-China agreement to
strengthen culture and personnel exchanges during Xi’s current visit to
India.China will help India train 1,500 Chinese-language teachers. China and
India will each send 200 youths to visit the other each year. The two nations
will also set up culture centres in the other's territory. Next year will be
“Visit India” year in China, and 2016 will be “Visit China” in India.
Sealed
with a kiss: China's First Lady has all in smiles at Delhi school
“Keep working hard so you can contribute to your country,” this was the message by China’s First Lady Peng Liyuan to the students as she interacted with the children, even humming a song with them.
“Keep working hard so you can contribute to your country,” this was the message by China’s First Lady Peng Liyuan to the students as she interacted with the children, even humming a song with them.
During
her 45-minute visit to a school in South Delhi, 51-year-old Peng, who is also a
renowned singer, shared with the students some personal glimpses of her life,
leaving a lasting impression on the young minds. “I started learning
calligraphy when I was young and as little as 5 years old. I was instructed by
my father,” she said while applauding the lessons on yoga imparted by the
school.Peng also had words of appreciation for Indian women. “She (Peng) told
me that she had a lot of respect for Indian women. They are beautiful,
hard-working and can keep the family together,” Meenakshi Sen, principal of
TagoreInternationalSchool, said quoting Peng.
5) It's a
matter of pride, says Sushma at inauguration of Nalanda University:
External
Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj formally inaugurated Nalanda University in Bihar
on Friday. Inaugurating the university, Swaraj called it a historic occasion
for her as well as the country.“It is a matter of pride for me to inaugurate
the academic session of the university after a gap of over 800 years,” she
said. She also planted saplings on the sprawling premises during her visit to
the site,where the university will come up in Rajgir, 12 km from where the
ancient Nalanda University stood till the 12th century.
Ambassadors
of two countries and diplomatic representatives of 16 countries also attended
the inauguration of the university, said the Gopa Sabharwal, the vice
chancellor of the university.Economist and Padma Bhushan awardee Lord Meghnad
Desai and Bihar’s Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi were also present at the
function. However, former Bihar CM Nitish Kumar, who played a substantial role
in setting up the university, was absent at the function. The classes at the
revived NalandaUniversity started on September 1 after a year break of over 800
years with 15 students and six faculty members.
Sabhrawal
said the academic session for the school of historical sciences and the school
of environment and ecology have started for the first session 2014-15 in the
international convention centre at the
Buddhist pilgrim town of Rajgir, about 100 km from here.She said that till now
15 students have been enrolled in the university and more will enrol in the
coming days, as the process of applications and interviews are still on.The
fully-residential university, to be completed by 2020, will eventually have
seven schools, all for post-graduate and doctoral students, offering courses in
science, philosophy and spirituality, and social sciences.
6) JU
students boycott classes, block registrar and pro-VC's entry:
Jadavpur
University students on Friday did not allow the Registrar and Pro-Vice
Chancellor to enter the campus and boycotted classes for the second consecutive
day in protest against police action on them two days ago.
Registrar
Pradip Ghosh, Pro Vice-Chancellor Professor Siddhartha Datta, along with other
officials, sat outside the university entrance gate with students blocking
their entry and shouting slogans against the varsity authorities."They had
called the police that day inside the campus and we were beaten up. The VC has
no right to remain in office anymore and he must immediately resign. If they
have to enter the campus they have to walk over our bodies," the students
said.The Registrar said since he was not being allowed to go to his office, he
would wait outside till the agitation was over."What can I do if they do
not let me in?" he told reporters.When contacted, Vice Chancellor Abhijit
Chakrabarti, who has been advised bed rest for 4-5 days by doctors, refused to
comment.
On the
intervening night of September 16 and 17, the students had gheraoed the
university's VC, Registrar and other members of the Executive Council demanding
a fresh probe panel on alleged sexual harassment of a girl student inside the
campus last month.The VC had said he feared for his life and called the police
which freed him in the early hours of September 17 and also arrested 35
protesting students.Many of the students alleged they were brutally beaten up
by the police inside the campus.
7)
BJP-Sena Mahayuti's fate to be decided on Sunday:
A day
after the ice was broken, Shiv Sena and Bharatiya Janata Party leaders on
Saturday held talks to end the tangle over seat-sharing for Maharashtra
Assembly polls but failed to reach an agreement. The two oldest NDA allies,
however, insisted they did not want the alliance to come apart.
Leader of
Opposition in the Legislative Council Vinod Tawde said Shiv Sena has proposed
to contest 155 seats, leaving 125 for BJP, while the remaining of state's 288
seats would go to the smaller allies. "This is unacceptable to us,"
Tawde, a BJP leader, said.September 27 is the deadline for filing of
nominations for the October 15 polls."There will be clarity on the
alliance issue in the next 24 hours," Tawde said.After days of frosty
silence, Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray had last night sent his 24-year-old
son Aditya Thackeray and senior leader Subhash Desai for talks with BJP's
Maharashtra election incharge O P Mathur and then sent a seat-sharing formula
to the ally. State BJP core committee members today considered the proposal
holding two rounds of meetings where Mathur and party general secretary
incharge of Maharashtra Rajiv Pratap Rudy were present. Subhash Desai also held
talks with state BJP president Devendra Fadnavis.Shiv Sena has, meanwhile, said
a decision on the alliance may be taken on Sunday.
"Uddhavji
has been authorised by the party to take a call on the alliance. Shiv Sena
executive committee is meeting on Sunday and an announcement is likely to be
made," Sena spokesman and MP Sanjay Raut said.Tawde also said BJP
president Amit Shah wants the alliance to continue."I spoke to Uddhav
Thackeray on Friday. Today, Fadnavis and Desai met. BJP president Amit Shah is
also insisting that the alliance should remain," Tawde said.
"We
are doing all we can to keep the alliance intact. It is a bond of 25
years," Tawde said, adding "we feel that it should not break over
issues like which party gets how many seats and which leader becomes the chief
minister." Tawde said BJP was stressing on discussing the 59 seats Shiv
Sena and 19 seats BJP had contested but did not win in the last five elections.
"There needs to be a restructuring so the party which can win these seats
should field its candidate there," he said. "Our aim is that we
should win at least 200 of the 288 seats to give 11.88 crore people of Maharashtra
a progressive government," he said.Meanwhile, senior Sena leader Anil
Desai insisted there is no threat to the alliance between the two parties which
"is going to stay".
"We
are aware of the fact that the Mahayuti is very important for Maharashtra. The
alliance between us is definitely going to stay. More than the offer (of
seats), alliance is important. Uddhavji will announce his decision within 24
hours," he told reporters after meeting the Sena chief. "Media
reports that our alliance will break is a fiction. We are only working out the
finer points before we announce our seat-sharing formula," he said.
Sports News
This Week:
1) Asian
Games 2014: Day one - As it happened:
So end of
the Day 1 at Incheon. After Shweta Chaudhry opened India's account with her
bronze medal, world No.1 shooter Jitu Rai gave India their first gold at the
2014 Asian Games. At Incheon, India aim to improve upon their 14 gold won in
the 2010 Games in Guangzhou. There are as many as 439 gold medals up for grabs.
Badminton:
India beat Thailand in the women's team QF to set up a date with South Korea in
the semis.
Jitu Rai
won India's first gold medal at the Asian Games on Saturday, clinching the
men's 50 metre pistol event after his closest opponent cracked under pressure.Success
in shooting is not unusual for India, whose marksmen are among the most
accomplished in the world. Rai is one of their best, a soldier with a cool head
and a steady hand.He needed all those attributes to win gold on Saturday after
a wretched week for India's shooters.
Rai was
among the favourites before the competition after finishing runner-up at the
recent world championships but was off target early.The 27-year-old qualified
just seventh for the final as South Korea's Jin Jong-oh set the early pace. Jin
is a master of his sport, having won three Olympic gold medals and setting a
world record to beat Rai at the world championships.But Saturday was not his
day and he faltered quickly in the finals, where the scores were re-set, wiping
out the advantage he had from the preliminaries.He was the second man
eliminated, a result made all the disappointment because his country is hosting
the Games."I'm sorry that I wasn't able to live up to lots of people's
expectations," he said."But I'll do my best at tomorrow's 10m air
pistol event, and keep devoting myself to my athletic career."The
defending champion, China's Pu Qifeng, also bowed out early as Rai was steadily
finding his aim. But with one shot to go, Rai was still in second place behind Vietnam's
Hoang Phuong Nguyen.
This is
the moment that tests the nerves of all shooters. Rai shot straight but Nguyen
was slightly off, scoring just 5.8 points. Gold to India.Rai, who also won gold
at the Commonwealth Games in Scotland a few months ago, received his medal from
the International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach.It was a golden end
to a messy week for India's shooters.Instead of flying directly to South Korea,
most of them were forced to return home from world championship in Spain
because their entries had not been sent on time, wasting precious time when
they should have been on the range.
2) Sania
Mirza-Cara Black reach finals of Pan Pacific Open :
Putting
up yet another dominating performance, defending champions Sania Mirza and Cara
Black outclassed Jelena Jankovic and Arantxa Parra Santonja 6-3 6-2 to reach
the summit clash of the WTA Toray Pan Pacific Open, in Tokyo on Friday. The top
seeded Indo-Zimbabwean pair took only 63 minutes to overcome the unseeded
Serbian-Spanish combo in the semifinals of the USD 1,000,000 hard court event.
Sania and
Cara played tremendous service games, winning 24 of the 30 first service
points. They surrendered serve only one time while saved four break
chances.Jelena and Arantxa could capitalise on only one of the five chances
they got in the contest.
Sania and
Cara will now taken on the winners of the other semifinal match between the
second seeded American pair of Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears and fourth
seeds Spaniards Garbiñe Muguruza and Carla Suarez Navarro.From Tokyo, Sania
will fly straight to Incheon in Korea to compete in the Asian Games.
3) Sardar
Singh to be India’s flag bearer at Asian Games opening ceremony:
Ending
the suspense over who would be the Indian contingent’s flag bearer at
tomorrow’s 17th Asian Games opening ceremony, men’s hockey team captain Sardar
Singh was today bestowed with the honour.“The flag bearer will be Sardar Singh,
captain of the men’s hockey team. Actually all the people were asked and we have
been trying to ask the coaches about who is available.
They all
have matches the next day or the day after and none wanted to stand outside the
stadium from 12 noon to 4 pm (before the parade). Sardar does not have a match.
He was happy to do so,” said Chef-de-Mission Adille Sumariwalla.
“There
were so many contenders, we asked them. Wrestlers are not there, boxers are not
there. The badminton event is starting the day after and so do the
shooters.”The former national sprint champion and Olympian explained why the
focus should not be on the flag bearer, which was just symbolic, but on winning
honours at the Games.“I don’t see why we are focusing so much on the flag
bearer. We are here to win medals. Flag bearer is symbolic; focus should be on
medals. Any great athlete can do it and we have many of them.“It will be a
great boost to hockey and I hope we can win the gold, they (men’s team) has
been playing well,” he added.Sumariwalla also said because of the restrictions
imposed by the organisers, each country cannot field more than 130 persons in
the parade.
“Size is
limited to 130, it can be less not more for the opening parade. I don’t even
know. For example Nikolai (Sneserev of Belarus, coach of middle distance
running) has said ‘though my wards’ events are later my athletes won’t be
participating’.”
He also
said the strength of the contingent was 722, which included 541
competitors.“350 of them have come so far out of 541. Total number of officials
is 181 – made up of doctors, physios, coaches, managers and video analysts,” he
added.
4) How ‘we
need you Lee’ plea got Leander Paes right back on court :
It was at
Wimbledon that Rohan Bopanna made an appeal to Leander Paes to return to Davis
Cup. The World Group play-off scheduled for Bangalore was then over two months
away — but the 34-year-old hoped Paes would agree to jam with him while taking
on Serbia, the second-ranked Davis Cup team in the world. “He simply said ‘Lee,
we need you,’” recalls Paes. Soon team captain Anand Amritraj had joined the bandwagon
that attempted to convince the 41-year-old to play the crucial tie.
The duo
played in one of the most sensational comebacks against Serbian pair of
Zimonjic-Bozoljac and helped India finish with a 3-2 scoreline.
“The
surface was submerged in about two inches of water. So we didn’t run, but we
practiced our drills while it rained
While his
teammates upped the pressure to convince him to return, the 2013 US Open men’s
doubles champion had been looking at ways to regain his match sharpness. Four
months away from the circuit had taken its toll as Paes claims he’d rapidly
lost the physical fitness and match awareness needed to compete at a high
level. And so it happened that the Indian pair, which had not played together
since 2012, would be seen practicing on a rain drenched court in Bangalore.
“The surface was submerged in about two inches of water. So we didn’t run, but
we practiced our drills while it rained. Just some shots our opponents would
throw at us. Reflex volleys, 30 odd serves and returns. Eventually it all
worked out,” he recalls.
The
hiatus on court came as a result of an ongoing custody battle for daughter
Aiyana. Court hearings would take precedence over his sporting commitments. The
entire process, including the anxiety about the outcome remained with him even
during the Davis Cup. Subsequently, the win against Serbian pair Nenad Zemonjic
and Ilija Bozoljac — the team that beat the illustrious Bryan brothers at the
tournament last season —a was an important win for him on a personal front. It
was also a win he rates his best ever in the doubles category, with only the
singles win against Goran Ivanisivic in 1995 being the one he holds higher.
Paes’
return to the court, that too with Bopanna as his partner, holds a significance
in the run-up to the 2016 Rio Olympics. The former has mentioned at a press
conference that he is open to the idea of pairing up with the latter for the
next Olympics.
“We both
have shots in our individual repertoire which makes us a formidable team. We
just haven’t played enough matches together,” says Paes.In the interim, with
Paes doubles ranking at 35 and Bopanna at 27, the pair will have to look for
higher ranked partners in order to compete at Grand Slams and get their
rankings up
5) KXIP
skipper George Bailey lauds Glenn Maxwell, Thisara Perera for win :
Kings XI
Punjab captain heaped praise on Glenn Maxwell and Thisara Perera after the
five-wicket win against Hobart Hurricanes on Thursday and promised his team
will get better in the Champions League T20. “A terrific innings from Maxy and
TP (Perera) there, it takes some courage to come out when your team is in a bit
of trouble and go for your shots,” said Bailey, who stayed unbeaten alongside
Perera (30 runs off 25 balls) to take the past Hurricanes 144 for six in 17.4
overs.Kings had started the chase badly and were 51 for four in eighth over.
Maxwell’s innings of 43 changed the game.Bailey (34 off 27), who plays for
Hurricanes in the Big Bash League back home, was as kind to his Australian team
as the his IPL side.
“I think
Hobart have a very nice team, they lost today but they can challenge,” he said
of the team which is also playing its first CLT20.Bailey lauded the effort put
by Kings bowlers, especially medium pacer Anureet Singh.“Anureet Singh didn’t
get much of a chance in the IPL with a broken thumb, he was outstanding with
the ball, that one over at the death. We (Kings XI) slotted back in really
quickly, not our best game with the bat but we will get better.”Hurricanes
skipper Tim Paine said: “Didn’t get off to a good start with the bat… with the
ball we gave it a good crack …”
Book of
This Week:
Chowringhee
: by Sankar, Arunava Sinha:
'Here,
day and night were interchangeable. The immaculately dressed Chowringhee,
radiant in her youth, had just stepped on to the floor at the nightclub.' Set
in 1950s Calcutta, Chowringhee is a sprawling saga of the intimate lives of
managers, employees and guests at one of Calcutta's largest hotels, the
Shahjahan. Written by best-selling Bengali author Sankar, Chowringhee was
published in 1962. Predating Arthur Hailey's Hotel by three years, it became an
instant hit, spawning translations in major Indian languages, a film and a
play. Its larger-than-life characters - the enigmatic manager Marco Polo, the
debonair receptionist Sata Bose, the tragic hostess Karabi Guha, among others -
soon attained cult status. With its thinly veiled accounts of the private lives
of real-life celebrities, and its sympathetic narrative seamlessly weaving the
past and the present, it immediately established itself as a popular classic.
Available for the first time in English, Chowringhee is as much a dirge as it
is a homage to a city and its people.
born in
Bonogram, Jessore, British Indian Ocean Territory December 07, 1933.
Shankar's
real name is Mani Shankar Mukherjee. Sankar is a very popular writer in the
Bengali language. He grew up in Howrah district of West Bengal, India.
Shankar's
father died while Shankar was still a teenager, as a result of which Shankar
became a clerk to the last British barrister of the Calcutta High Court, Noel
Frederick Barwell. The experience of working under Mr. Barwell provided the
material for his first book Koto Ojanare (কত অজানারে),
translated as The Great Unknown.During 1962, Shankar conceived the idea of
writing the novel Chowringhee on a rainy day at the waterlogged crossing of
Central Avenue and Dalhousie - a busy business district in the heart of
Kolkata.Many of Shankar's works have been made into films. Some notable ones
are - Chowringhee, Jana Aranya (জন-অরণ্য, translated as The Middleman) and Seemabaddha
(সীমাবদ্ধ, out of which the last two were directed by Satyajit Ray
Good Post and informative one. Thank you for sharing this good article.
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