Science
News This Week:
1) Gut
microbes less diverse in humans than in apes:
The
microbes living in people's guts are much less diverse than those in humans'
closest relatives, the African apes, an apparently long evolutionary trend that
appears to be speeding up in more modern societies, with possible implications
for human health, according to a new study. Based on an analysis of how humans
and three lineages of ape diverged from common ancestors, researchers
determined that within the lineage that gave rise to modern humans, microbial
diversity changed slowly and steadily for millions of years, but that rate of
change has accelerated lately in humans from some parts of the world.
People in
nonindustrialized societies have gut microbiomes that are 60 percent different
from those of chimpanzees. Meanwhile, those living in the U.S. have gut
microbiomes that are 70 percent different from those of chimps."It took
millions of years, since humans and chimpanzees split from a common ancestor,
to become 60 percent different in these colonies living in our digestive
systems," said Howard Ochman, professor of integrative biology at The
University of Texas at Austin and co-author of the study. "On the other
hand, in apparently only hundreds of years -- and possibly a lot fewer --
people in the United States lost a great deal of diversity in the bacteria
living in their gut."That rapid change might translate into negative
health effects for Americans. Previous research has shown that compared with several
populations, people living in the U.S. have the lowest diversity of gut
microbes. Still other research has linked a lack of microbial diversity in
human guts to various diseases such as asthma, colon cancer and autoimmune
diseases.The results of this latest study, carried out by researchers from The
University of Texas at Austin, Yale University, the University of Pennsylvania
and elsewhere, appear this week in the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. The lead author is Andrew Moeller, a visiting scholar at
The University of Texas at Austin and a graduate student at Yale University.
One
possible explanation for humans evolving to have less diversity in their gut
microbiomes is that they shifted to a diet with more meat and fewer plants.
Plants require complex communities of microbes to break them down, which is not
as true for meat.
As for
why Americans have experienced much more rapid changes in microbial diversity
compared with people in less industrialized societies, some experts have
suggested more time spent indoors, increased use of antibacterial soaps and
cleaners, widespread use of antibiotics and high numbers of births by Cesarean
section all may play a role. Antibiotics and antimicrobial cleaners can kill
good bacteria along with the bad, and C-section deliveries prevent babies from
receiving certain bacteria from the mother typically conferred during vaginal
births."Declining diversity in the gut has been a trend for a long
time," said Ochman. "It's tantalizing to think that the decrease in
microbial diversity in humans is due only to modern medical practices and other
lifestyle changes, but this research shows other factors over time also must
have played a role."The researchers analyzed the genetic makeup of
bacteria in fecal samples from humans, chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas to
draw their conclusions.
2) Ancient
sea creature took to land and sea:
Primitive
ichthyosaur relative had strong bones, big flippers.The hefty fossil skeleton
of a big-flippered sea creature may bridge the gap between landlubbing and
water-dwelling reptiles of the Triassic period.
The
creature, a primitive relative of the dolphinlike reptile Ichthyosaurus, may
have paddled flexible flippers over sand and used its heavy-duty bones to stand
up to waves crashing on seashores. Paleobiologist Ryosuke Motani of the
University of California, Davis and colleagues describe the find November 5 in
Nature.
Scientists
had guessed that ichthyosaurs’ ancestors were land animals that eventually made
their way to the sea, but the fossil record is sketchy. The new skeleton
belonged to a reptile that’s the earliest to show signs of living both on land
and in water, Motani says. Named Cartorhynchus lenticarpus, the reptilelived
about 248 million years ago on what may have been hot and humid tropical
islands in today’s China.
3) Gamma
rays offer mixed messages on identity of dark matter:
Conflicting
results from Fermi telescope puzzle astronomers. A stream of high-energy gamma
rays from the heart of the Milky Way is teasing scientists about the identity
of the universe’s invisible matter.
The
results of one study add to growing evidence that particles of dark matter,
which collectively have more than five times as much mass as all the visible
matter in the universe, are slamming into each other in the galactic center and
emitting gamma rays. But another study of small, supposedly dark matter–rich
galaxies finds no such gamma ray signal. The clashing results are the latest
wrinkle in the long quest to discover the fundamental units of dark matter.
4) Direct
brain-to-brain connection has been established between humans for the second
time:
Researchers
from the University of Washington in the US have managed to non-invasively
link-up two people’s brains and allowed them to communicate without
speaking.This is the second time they’ve succeeded in creating this
brain-to-brain communication, one year after they first showed it was possible,
and it brings the ability closer to real-world applications.
The new
study involved six people put into pairs. In the experiment, the researchers
successfully transmitted the signals from one person’s brain over the internet
and used them to control the hand movements of their partner, who was 800
metres away, within a split second. Their results are published in PLOS
ONE."The new study brings our brain-to-brain interfacing paradigm from an
initial demonstration to something that is closer to a deliverable
technology," said co-author Andrea Stocco, professor of psychology from
the University of Washington, in a press release. "Now we have replicated
our methods and know that they can work reliably with walk-in
participants."In order to set up the real-time mind link, the researchers
hooked up one person in each pair (the sender) to an electroencephalography
(EEG) machine and read their brain activity. Their brain waves were then
converted into electrical pulses and sent via the web to the person on the
other end of the link (the receiver), who wore a swim cap with a transcranial
magnetic stimulation coil placed near the part of the brain that controls hand
movements.
This
meant that the thoughts of the first person could be translated into hand
movements in the second. The pairs in each experiment were placed into separate
buildings around 800 metres apart, and they were unable to interact with each
other in any way other than via their thoughts.In the study, the three senders
were playing a computer game where they had to fire a cannon in order to
intercept rockets and defend a city. But they couldn’t actually perform the
task themselves, they just had to think about it and then the signal would
hopefully cause the receiver in the other room to hit the fire button at the
right time.The receivers couldn’t see the game and simply had their hands
hovering over a random touch pad until they were triggered to move by the
senders thoughts - something that took less than a second.The accuracy of the
canon firing varied among the pairs, ranging from 25 to 83 percent, but most misses
were due to a sender failing to accurately execute the “fire” command. The
researchers were able to quantify the exact amount of information that was
being transferred between the two brains.Using the setup, the messages of the
receiver were transferred into hand movements in less than a second.Research by
french and spanish scientists earlier this year also showed a direct link
between participants in India and France, but this is the first time
brain-to-brain connection has been replicated in more than one pair of
participants.The group have now received a $1 million grant in order to develop
their connection further so that they can convey images and even information
from brain to brain.They’re hoping in the future they’ll be able to monitor
whether airplane pilots are getting sleepy, and then use this brain-to-brain
link to stimulate the copilot’s brain.They’re also hoping it could help people
teach others via their thoughts."Imagine someone who's a brilliant
scientist but not a brilliant teacher. Complex knowledge is hard to explain -
we're limited by language," said Chantel Prat, a psychologist and
co-author of the paper, in the release.
5)
Researchers hit milestone in accelerating particles with plasma:
Scientists
from the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and the
University of California, Los Angeles have shown that a promising technique for
accelerating electrons on waves of plasma is efficient enough to power a new
generation of shorter, more economical accelerators. This could greatly expand
their use in areas such as medicine, national security, industry and
high-energy physics research. This achievement is a milestone in demonstrating
the practicality of plasma wakefield acceleration, a technique in which electrons
gain energy by essentially surfing on a wave of electrons within an ionized
gas.Using SLAC's Facility for Advanced Accelerator Experimental Tests (FACET),
a DOE Office of Science User Facility, the researchers boosted bunches of
electrons to energies 400 to 500 times higher than they could reach traveling
the same distance in a conventional accelerator. Just as important, energy was
transferred to the electrons much more efficiently than in previous
experiments. This crucial combination of energy and efficiency had never been
reached before. The results are described in a paper published today in the
journal Nature.
"Many
of the practical aspects of an accelerator are determined by how quickly the
particles can be accelerated," said SLAC accelerator physicist Mike Litos,
lead author of the paper. "To put these results in context, we have now
shown that we could use this technique to accelerate an electron beam to the
same energies achieved in the 2-mile-long SLAC linear accelerator in less than
20 feet."Plasma wakefields have been of interest to accelerator physicists
for 35 years as one of the more promising ways to drive the smaller, cheaper
accelerators of the future. The UCLA and SLAC groups have been at the forefront
of research on plasma wakefield acceleration for more than a decade. In a 2007
paper, researchers announced they'd accelerated electrons in the tail end of a
long electron bunch from 42 billion electronvolts to 85 billion electronvolts,
causing a great deal of excitement in the scientific community. However, fewer
than 1 billion of the 18 billion electrons in the pulse actually gained energy
and they had a wide spread of energies, making them unsuitable for experiments.
In this
experiment, researchers sent pairs of electron bunches containing 5 billion to
6 billion electrons each into a laser-generated column of plasma inside an oven
of hot lithium gas. The first bunch in each pair was the drive bunch; it
blasted all the free electrons away from the lithium atoms, leaving the
positively charged lithium nuclei behind -- a configuration known as the
"blowout regime." The blasted electrons then fell back in behind the
second bunch of electrons, known as the trailing bunch, forming a "plasma
wake" that propelled the trailing bunch to higher energy.Previous
experiments had demonstrated multi-bunch acceleration, but the team at SLAC was
the first to reach the high energies of the blowout regime, where maximum
energy gains at maximum efficiencies can be found. Of equal importance, the
accelerated electrons wound up with a relatively small energy
spread."These results have an additional significance beyond a successful
experiment," said Mark Hogan, SLAC accelerator physicist and one of the
principal investigators of the experiment. "Reaching the blowout regime
with a two-bunch configuration has enabled us to increase the acceleration
efficiency to a maximum of 50 percent -- high enough to really show that plasma
wakefield acceleration is a viable technology for future accelerators."
The
plasma source used in the experiment was developed by a team of scientists led
by Chandrashekhar Joshi, director of the Neptune Facility for Advanced
Accelerator Research at UCLA. He is the UCLA principal investigator for this
research, a faculty member with the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering
and Applied Science, and a long-time collaborator with the SLAC group.There are
more milestones ahead. Before plasma wakefield acceleration can be put to use,
Hogan said, the trailing bunches must be shaped and spaced just right so all
the electrons in a bunch receive exactly the same boost in energy, while
maintaining the high overall quality of the electron beam.
Movie Release this Week:
With our time on Earth coming to an end, a team of explorers undertakes the most important mission in human history; traveling beyond this galaxy to discover whether mankind has a future among the stars.
Directed
and co-written by Christopher Nolan ("Inception," "The Dark
Knight" Trilogy), the production will travel the globe and utilize a
mixture of 35mm anamorphic and IMAX film photography to bring to the screen a
script based on the combination of an original idea by Nolan and an existing
script by Jonathan Nolan, originally developed for Paramount Pictures and producer
Lynda Obst.
From Walt Disney Animation Studios comes “Big Hero 6,” an action comedy adventure about brilliant robotics prodigy Hiro Hamada, who finds himself in the grips of a criminal plot that threatens to destroy the fast-paced, high-tech city of San Fransokyo. With the help of his closest companion—a robot named Baymax—Hiro joins forces with a reluctant team of first-time crime fighters on a mission to save their city. Inspired by the Marvel comics of the same name, and featuring comic-book style action and all the heart and humor audiences expect from Walt Disney Animation Studios, the CG-animated “Big Hero 6” hits theaters in 3D on November 7, 2014.
Oscar-nominated
writer-director Nacho Vigalondo (The ABCs of Death, Timecrimes, V/H/S Viral)
creates an action-packed world of voyeurism and suspense in his thriller OPEN
WINDOWS. Nick (Elijah Wood, Maniac, The Lord of the Rings) is excited to
discover that he's won a dinner date with his favorite actress, Jill Goddard (Sasha
Grey, Would You Rather, The Girlfriend Experience). But when Jill refuses to
honor the contest, her manager Chord (Neil Maskell, Wild Bill, Pusher) makes an
offer he can't refuse: the ability to view Jill secretly via computer. Nick
begins watching the unknowing star on her webcam, not realizing that this
decision will put both himself and Jill at risk as they enter a terrifying
world of cat-and-mouse where nothing-and no one-are as they seem.
After losing her fiancé in a horrific accident, Jessabelle is forced to recuperate at her father’s ruined Louisiana mansion, where she discovers a strange gift from her long-dead mother, and a terrifying presence determined to destroy her.
Leaving her seemingly glamorous Hollywood life on hold, Evie Lee is forced to return to her small hometown of Balsam Falls, Tennessee and her family's once-thriving Christmas tree farm to attend her father's unexpected funeral. As the eldest sibling, she finds herself executor of an estate that owes a massive inheritance tax, much to her younger brother's dismay. Torn between pursuing her music career and saving her family's legacy, she must decide what it really means to find her place in the world. Charleene Closshey stars amidst a colorful cast including Robert Loggia, Tyler Ritter, Booboo Stewart and Naomi Judd in this heart-warming musical holiday tale about facing your past, rediscovering your voice, and fulfilling your dreams.
Hindi
Movie Release This Week:
Rang
Rasiya is an Indian drama film based on the life of the 19th-century Indian
painter Raja Ravi Varma. The film is directed Ketan Mehta, produced by Deepa
Sahi and Aanand Mahendroo. It stars Randeep Hooda, Nandana Sen and a newcomer
Triptha Parashar in the lead roles. Mehta chose to make a film on the
19th-century painter, Raja Ravi Varma's life. Incidentally both these movies
were based on a subject from the 19th century. His new film is an adaptation of
a Marathi writer Ranjit Desai's biographical novel Raja Ravi Varma. This
bilingual in English and Hindi is titled as Colour of Passion and Rang Rasiya
respectively.
Mehta thought that Varma was the most fascinating artist of that era and his character, persona and paintings fascinated him from his days at Film and Television Institute of India. After reading Desai's novel, he formulated the story of his new film
Mehta thought that Varma was the most fascinating artist of that era and his character, persona and paintings fascinated him from his days at Film and Television Institute of India. After reading Desai's novel, he formulated the story of his new film
Political
News This Week:
1) Ground
Zero report: How Bangladeshis infiltrate into India:
Taki in
West Bengal’s North 24 Parganas district is the last Indian outpost on the
border with Bangladesh. It is one of hotspots for Bangladeshi infiltration into
India. While most poor Bangladeshis cross over to look for work, terror groups
take advantage to ferry their men and material into India.Taki, a town under
Hasnabad police station in the northern fringe of West Bengal bordering
Bangladesh, is one of the most popular tourist sites for the people of
Kolkata.With the river Ichhamati separating the town from the Bangladesh
district of Khulna, Taki is known for its non-communal bearing and has been a
peaceful home to Hindus and Muslims for years.However, despite the positives,
this picturesque township has often been used by Bangladeshi infiltrators as an
easy gateway into India.It is alleged that in 2011, more than 100,000
Bangladeshis had sneaked into India on Dashami (the last day of Durga Puja)
amid the milieu of bisarjan (immersion) on the India, Bangladesh banks of
Icchamati.
Immersion
of Durga idols has always been a gala affair at Taki since Independence.On the
last day of the festival, idols from the two Bengals used to be ferried in
boats to the narrowest stretch of the river with border forces on both sides
keeping a watch.But in 2011, security seemed to have gone haywire. Else so many
people could not possibly have crossed over.Since then, cross-border immersion
at Taki has been stopped and security beefed up.
It has
been made even tighter recently subsequent to the Bardhaman blast on October
2.Investigations revealed that cadres of the terror outfit Jamat-ul-Mujahideen
Bangladesh, who had illegally migrated to Bengal a few years back, were
involved in the explosion.With infiltration issue hitting the headlines
thereafter, we wanted to find out how protected is this important border town
of Taki at present.How successful are the Border Security Force personnel in
tackling the problem? Do the people living here feel safe?
2) Modi
named 15th most powerful world leader:
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi has made his debut among the world's most powerful
people, ranked 15th on the Forbes list topped by Russian President Vladimir
Putin who pipped his US counterpart Barack Obama for a second year in a row. On
Modi, Forbes said "India's newest rock star doesn't hail from Bollywood.
He is the newly elected Prime Minister who sailed into office in May with a
landslide victory, ushering the Bharatiya Janata Party into power after decades
of control by the Gandhi dynasty."
"Modi
is credited with massive reconstruction projects in his home state of Gujarat.
His administration promises to bring economic rejuvenation to other beleaguered
parts of India. The world is as impressed as the citizens of India: So far he's
toured the US and China and met with his Southeast Asian neighbours," the
magazine said. The list of 72 most powerful people in the world has 12
newcomers on the list, including Modi and Egypt President Abdel el-Sisi. Forbes
says: 'We took some heat last year when we named the Russian President as the
most powerful man in the world, but after a year when Putin annexed Crimea,
staged a proxy war in the Ukraine and inked a deal to build a more than $70
billion gas pipeline with China (the planet's largest construction project) our
choice simply seems prescient. Russia looks more and more like an energy-rich,
nuclear-tipped rogue state with an undisputed, unpredictable and unaccountable
head unconstrained by world opinion in pursuit of its goals.'Forbes says:
'Heading into the second half of his second term, Obama seems stymied both by
the West African Ebola breakout and a blood-thirsty militia named ISIS, which
threaten to undo all the gains of a 9-year war in Iraq that cost the lives of
4,500 Americans. At home, racially charged images of unrest in Ferguson,
Missouri mock his 2008 message of "Change." On the plus side,
unemployment is at its lowest level since the Great Recession and the markets
continue test new highs.'
3) Burdwan
blast accused remanded to 10-day NIA custody:
A city
court on Wednesday remanded Burdwan blast accused Abdul Hakim to 10 days'
National Investigation Agency custody after he was produced before it following
his release from hospital, where he was undergoing treatment for injuries
suffered during the blast.
Chief
judge, city sessions court, M Mumtaz Khan granted Hakim's custody to the NIA
until November 14, following a prayer by the agency for 15 days' custody so
that it can interrogate him in connection with the blast.
The other
three arrested in connection with the case -- Hasem Mollah, Rajia Bibi and
Alima Bibi -- were remanded to judicial custody till November 20 on a prayer by
the NIA counsel.
Hakim was
released from the state-run SSKM Hospital on Wednesday after being treated for
splinter injuries.The other three were already in judicial custody. Two persons
were killed in the accidental blast in a house at Khagragarh in Burdwan
district on October 2 while hand grenades were being manufactured there,
leading to the unearthing of an international terror racket.
4)
President dissolves Delhi assembly, fresh polls soon:
The Delhi
assembly was on Wednesday dissolved, paving the way for fresh elections that
will end the political hibernation since the Aam Aadmi Party government fell in
February.A notification issued by the home ministry said that President Pranab
Mukherjee has dissolved the "legislative assembly of the National Capital
Territory of Delhi with immediate effect" on November 4.
The union
cabinet had on Tuesday recommended the dissolution of the Assembly following
recommendation of LG Najeeb Jung after talks on Monday with the Bharatiya
Janata Party, the Congress and the AAP which expressed inability to form
government and sought fresh mandate.
While the
fresh elections may be held early next year, the process for the November 25
by-elections to three constituencies, for which last date of nominations is on
Thursday, was revoked by the Election Commission.
5) US
midterm elections: Republicans win control of Senate; Democrats suffer massive
setback:
In a
debacle for Barack Obama and the Democratic Party, Republicans today gained
control of the United States Senate and increased its majority in the House of
Representatives in a sweeping midterm election win that could complicate the
President's final two years in office.As strong Democratic leaders tumbled
across the country, political analysts termed it as a Republican wave.Elections
were held for the entire 435 House of Representatives seat, 36 of the 100
senate seats and gubernatorial elections in 36 of the 50 American States.The
Republican Party has occupied 52 of the 100 senate seats as against the 43 of
the Democratic Party. In the current Congress, Democrats have 53 seats, while
the Republicans have 45 seats.Republicans were headed to a substantial gain in
the House of Representatives and were leading in 235 seats with a net gain of
10 seats, while the Democrats had 157 seats with a net loss of eight seats.In
the current House, the Democratic Party has 199 seats and Republicans have 233 seats.
A
Republican majority in the US Senate, for the first time in eight years, would
make governance and key administrative reforms a tough task for Obama during
the remaining two years of his second term.Some political analysts have already
started calling him a lame duck, a phrase which was strongly resented by the
White House.a general resentment against the current Obama Administration,
people in large number voted for the Republican Party, who not only increased
their majority in the House of Representatives but also gained control of the
powerful Senate.candidates ousted Democratic incumbents in North Carolina,
Arkansas and Colorado and sailed into the open seats of retiring Democrats in
West Virginia, South Dakota and Montana.Republican candidate Joni Ernst won the
highly competitive Iowa Senate Seat. The party also won gubernatorial elections
in several strong Democratic States.
Political
analysts said that the very fact that Republicans won the gubernatorial
elections in the traditional Democratic stronghold of Maryland and Illinois is
a clear indication of a Republican wave sweeping the country.House Majority
Leader, Harry Reid, congratulated Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell."I'd like to congratulate Senator McConnell, who will be the new
Senate Majority Leader. The message from voters is clear: they want us to work
together," Reid said in a statement."The American people have put
their trust in the Republican Party. I want to congratulate all our candidates
tonight," Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said in a
statement."Our party's principles and message resonated with voters across
the country. This was a rejection of President Obama's failed policies and
Harry Reid's dysfunctional Senate," he said.
"For
too long, this administration has tried to tell the American people what is
good for them and then blame somebody else when their policies didn't work
out," McConnell said in a victory speech.House Speaker John Boehner said
he is "humbled by the responsibility the American people have placed with
us.""Americans can expect the new Congress to debate and vote soon on
the many common-sense jobs and energy bills that passed the Republican-led
House in recent years with bipartisan support but were never even brought to a
vote by the outgoing Senate majority, as well as solutions offered by Senate
Republicans that were denied consideration," he said."I've also put
forth a five-point roadmap for harnessing the emerging energy boom in America,
resetting our economy and restoring the American Dream for our children and
grandchildren. It calls for fixing our tax code, solving our spending problem,
reforming our legal system, reforming our regulatory system, and improving our
education system," Boehner said."The change in power means that Obama
will spend the last two years of his presidency dealing with an emboldened
all-Republican Congress that intends to challenge him on major legislation and,
in the words of McConnell, take the country in a 'new direction'," said
political analysts.At the national level, Americans sent a clear message that
they want to change the direction of the country, said Texas Governor Rick
Perry."Instead of higher taxes to fuel ever-expanding government programs,
they chose fiscal sanity and voted to allow people to keep more of their own
hard-earned money. Now it is time to lead and craft common-sense policies that
make America energy independent, bring sanity to our tax code, and secure our
border once and for all," he said.
"The
landscape means Republicans will have new powers to challenge Obama's agenda in
the final two years of his term, able to launch investigations and hold
hearings from both chambers; hold up key appointments; and pass GOP-favoured
legislation, if only to force the president to employ his veto pen," said
political analysts.
6)
REVEALED! The US soldier who shot down Osama:
A
decorated ex-Navy SEAL Robert O’Neill has been unmasked as the man who pumped
three shots to the head of elusive Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden during a
top-secret 2011 raid on his hideout in Pakistan.O’Neill, 38, is the SEAL Team
Six member who fired the three shots to the head of the Al Qaeda leader during
the raid.He grew up in Montana mining town and is now facing possible legal
action for giving out the tightly held secret. He is expected to reveal himself
during a two-part Fox News TV special next week.
O’Neill
was one of 23 SEALS who flew into the Pakistani garrison city of Abbottabad on
the night of May 2, but the last to see bin Laden alive.It had previously been
unclear precisely how the terrorist leader was killed and how many servicemen
had been involved in his death.O’Neill, who is married with children, was last
year interviewed by Esquire magazine, which did not publish his name. He told
how he joined the army at the age of 19 as a reaction to his then-girlfriend
leaving him.
O’Neill
served more than a dozen tours of duty in active combat, including Iraq and
Afghanistan, undertaking 400 separate combat missions.For his service he has
been decorated 52 times, up to the level of senior chief petty officer before
he left. He was awarded two Silver Stars -- the military’s third highest honour
-- as well as four Bronze Stars.
Sports News
This Week:
1) Messi
masterclass papers over Barca cracks:
Lionel
Messi enjoyed another landmark European night as he equaled the Champions
League scoring record against Ajax but doubts remain over Luis Enrique's
Barcelona side after a stuttering start to the season.The coach found himself
in the eye of a storm after Barca suffered back-to-back La Liga defeats and
although they beat Ajax 2-0 on Wednesday to book a place in the last 16, their
football was far from fluid, especially in the first half.Messi came to the
rescue with a double that saw him draw level with Raul on 71 goals at the top
of the Champions League all-time scoring charts.Cristiano Ronaldo is one adrift
having missed out on the chance to add to his tally in Real Madrid's 1-0 win
over Liverpool on Tuesday.
"I
am happy for Leo, for the work he does for the team and because he is the
number one, the best," midfielder Xavi told reporters.Barca have nine
points from four games in Group F and are a point off leaders Paris St Germain,
who beat them in France."In the first half, they (Ajax) were in control
but after that we played better and got three points which will give us
confidence."We need to keep going and winning matches. We needed to win
this game and we played some good football at times. We also had some difficult
moments but we were playing away and in the Champions League."Ajax played
pressed high up the pitch and it is normal that it would not be easy but the
result is a boost."
2) Indian
eves play out 2-2 draw against New Zealand:
The
Indian junior women's hockey team put up a brave fight to hold New Zealand 2-2
in their second match of a six-match series being played at the TET Multisports
Centre here Thursday.
The hosts
started brightly with Kelsey Smith scoring to put them ahead in the first half
and held on to the lead at the first break.
India
upped the ante in the second half and levelled through forward Anupa Barla.
India's
equaliser intensified the contest as both teams went forward in search of goals
with the visitors pulling ahead.
Jaspreet
Kaur converted a penalty corner, hitting it low to the New Zealand keeper's
right to make it 2-1.
India,
however, failed to hold onto the lead conceding 12 minutes from time with
Rachel McCann scoring a field goal.
In the
last quarter of the keenly contested game, both teams managed to create scoring
opportunities but could not capitalise on the chances.India play their third
match here Nov 8.
3) India's
Mittal wins gold at Asian Shotgun Championship:
India's impressive run at
the 4th Asian Shotgun Championship continued as Ankur Mittal clinched the gold
medal in men's double trap event, giving the country its fourth yellow metal in
the continental event here today.
The 22-year-old shot 141 in the qualification round and 28 each in
the semifinal and gold medal contest to bag the top honours.
Teammate Mohd Asab won the bronze after reaching the finals with a
score of 139 in the qualification. He shot 27 in the semifinal stage and 28 in
the bronze medal match. Elated at the news, NRAI president Raninder Singh said,
"Ankur has come up the junior ranks really well and finished a creditable
16th in a top field at the Shooting World Championships in Granada earlier in
the year. "This is his best in international competition so far and we
expect more improvement and greater things from him going forward. It is
heartening to see youngsters perform with such aplomb in top international
competitions and bodes really well for the future of the shooting sport in
India."
It may be recalled that in the Continental championship that began
on November 1, Seema Tomar had won the woman's trap event and team gold alongside
Shagun Chaudhary and Shreyasi Singh. Then Manavaditya Rathore, son of Olympic
silver medallist Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore, won the junior trap event. India
could have further bolstered its gold tally, but the team event in the double
trap men event was cancelled due to inadequate entries from the Asian
countries.
4) Kerala Blasters FC have an opportunity to capitalise on the home
advantage as they take on FC Goa in their Indian Super League encounter in
Kochi. Kerala Blasters FC 1:0 FC Goa
5) Tendulkar skirts fixing in autobiography:
Sachin Tendulkar has not touched upon the match-fixing scandal
that rocked Indian cricket in the 1990s in his autobiography because he felt it
would be "unwise" to comment on subjects that he was not fully aware
of.
"I think whatever things I knew 100% I have revealed because
I back up those things. But the things I am not aware of fully, it would be
unwise to comment on those," Tendulkar was quoted as saying by PTI on the
eve of the launch of his book, Playing It My Way. "I should have some
evidence, I should know something in detail to talk about it because then it
makes sense and it will be appreciated by people. But if I just start talking
then it will not have any value."The scandal had eventually led to a life
ban for former India captain Mohammad Azharuddin and bans of shorter duration
for Ajay Sharma, Ajay Jadeja and Manoj Prabhakar, all of whom were Tendulkar's
team-mates in the 1990sWhen asked whether he felt some players had
under-performed deliberately during that phase, Tendulkar said: "No, I
mean the guys fail, but who doesn't fail in life, everyone fails. It would be
unfair to just pinpoint someone and say that he was under-performing, didn't
try his best, I can't. I have played the sport for 24 years and failures do
happen."Tendulkar was also questioned about the perception that he rarely
took a stand on major issues in cricket. "If you see in my book, issues on
which people believed I should have taken a stand, the only things which I was
100% sure of I stood for that in my book," he said. "If you have read
some of the articles I have expressed myself whole-heartedly but on things
which were not first-hand information, it is unwise to do that, it is a loose
statement and I didn't want to fire loose statements."
ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
6) Rayudu century puts India 2-0 up
India 275 for 4 (Rayudu 121*, Dhawan 79) beat Sri Lanka 274 for 8
(Mathews 92*, Sangakkara 61, Akshar 2-39) by six wickets
Ambati Rayudu hit a chanceless maiden ODI ton, as India ran down
Sri Lanka's 275 for 8 with six wickets in hand and 33 balls to spare. Rayudu
and Shikhar Dhawan put on 122 runs for the second wicket to set up the chase,
and having come to bat in the seventh over, Rayudu was at the crease to hit the
winning runs and finish on 121 off 118 balls.Sri Lanka's bowlers were short on
menace, but it had been the batsmen who erred first in the game. Early wickets
in their innings made for a measured recovery, and though Angelo Mathews'
unbeaten 92 pushed the score towards credibility, he lacked support from the
middle order, as the team finished at least 30 runs light on a flat Motera
surface, and with dew set to form later in the evening.
Rayudu arrived just as the Sri Lanka seamers appeared to be
hitting a rhythm, but like they had done in the previous ODI, the India batsmen
sought to lay low until the seam grew soft and the changes were rung in. Dhawan
was handed had a life in the eighth over, when he was on 10. Lahiru Gamage
seamed a length ball away and collected his outside edge, but the sound and the
clear deviation escaped the umpire's notice, to Sri Lanka's disbelief.
Once the new-ball bowlers had finished their opening spells, the
batsmen eased out of their vigil and gradually tightened their grip on the
chase. The first acceleration came just as the asking rate clicked over six per
over. Rayudu strode down the track to launch Suraj Randiv over long on in the
17th over, establishing what would become one of the major themes of his
hundred: the effective use of his feet against the spinners.
By the 20th over, the pair had raised the run rate to above four
an over, and the boundaries began to flow more easily. Both batsmen trusted the
pace and bounce of the pitch, stepping out to crash balls in the arc between
cover and midwicket, and using the crease to hit square when the bowlers were
rattled off their lengths. Thisara Perera was blasted for 17 in one over - the
most expensive in a seven-over stretch between the 19th and 26th that yielded
69 runs for India. Mathews switched his bowlers almost manically, attempting to
tamp blaze that had so quickly grown into a wildfire, but as both batsmen
completed half-centuries and surged ahead, India's momentum only grew.
Dhawan was eventually dismissed for 79 off 80, top-edging a sweep
to give Seekkuge Prasanna the first of his three wickets, but at 140 for 2 in
the 27th over, India were well in control. The new batsman Virat Kohli began to
find runs into the outfield almost as easily as Rayudu, and the Sri Lanka
bowlers seemed like little more than fodder.
Rayudu surged as he neared his milestone, hitting a remarkable six
off a Dhammika Prasad short ball before depositing Randiv over the straight
boundary soon after. He clipped one through square leg to breach triple figures
for the first time, off 101 balls. The scoring rate only increased after that.
Kohli had 49 from 44, before driving one straight to Randiv at cover. Suresh
Raina slammed 14 from 6, but the game was long won before he had come in.
Earlier, Kusal Perera's inclusion had failed to ease Sri Lanka's
opening woes as Umesh Yadav trapped him in front for a duck, in the first over.
Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara were visibly short of rhythm in the
early overs, but managed to set Sri Lanka off to a start, before two quick
wickets fell.
Mathews came to the crease at 64 for 3, and forged a 90-run stand
with Sangakkara that was steady, but unremarkable in style. Mathews employed
the sweep to good effect, even venturing a slog-swept six off Ashwin in the
20th over, but both batsmen were largely content for the recovery to tick
along. When Sangakkara reached his fifty off 73 deliveries, he had struck only
three fours.
The Powerplay, taken in the 32nd over, brought the next innings
stutter. Sangakkara took aim at a thigh-high Yadav full toss and hit it down an
outfielder's throat. Prasanna's innings glinted briefly as he attempted to
electrify the innings, but was soon undone playing his favoured sweep.
Sri Lanka continued to lose batsmen as they strove to attack,
perhaps in the knowledge that Prasad at No. 10 was capable of helping Mathews
see the innings out, but the setbacks muted the Sri Lanka captain. He seemed
ready to unleash when he slammed Ravindra Jadeja for three consecutive legside
fours, in an over that went for 20, but the back end of his innings was marked
by restraint, even with a maiden ODI hundred on the cards.
Prasad's unbeaten 30 off 28 in a ninth-wicket stand saw Sri Lanka
finish the innings with some semblance of respectability, but with the Indian
batsmen in ace form, the visitors' score was thoroughly inadequate.
Book Of This Week:
Playing It My Way : My Autobiography :By Sachin Tendulkar:
"I knew that if I agreed to write my story, I would have to
be completely honest, as thats the way I have always played the game and that
would mean talking about a number of things I have not addressed in public
before. So here I am, at the end of my final innings, having taken that last
walk back to the pavilion, ready to recount as many incidents as I can remember
since first picking up a cricket bat as a child in Mumbai thirty-five years
ago." - Sachin Tendulkar
The greatest run-scorer in the history of cricket, Sachin
Tendulkar retired in 2013 after an astonishing 24 years at the top. The most
celebrated Indian cricketer of all time, he received the Bharat Ratna - India's
highest civilian honour - on the day of his retirement. Now Sachin Tendulkar
tells his own remarkable story - from his first Test cap at the age of 16 to
his 100th international century and the emotional final farewell that brought
his country to a standstill. When a boisterous Mumbai youngster's excess
energies were channelled into cricket, the result was record-breaking schoolboy
batting exploits that launched the career of a cricketing phenomenon. Before
long Sachin Tendulkar was the cornerstone of India's batting line-up, his every
move watched by a cricket-mad nation's devoted followers.
Never has a cricketer been burdened with so many expectations
never has a cricketer performed at such a high level for so long and with such
style - scoring more runs and making more centuries than any other player, in
both Tests and one-day games. And perhaps only one cricketer could have brought
together a shocked nation by defiantly scoring a Test century shortly after
terrorist attacks rocked Mumbai. His many achievements with India include
winning the World Cup and topping the world Test rankings. Yet he has also
known his fair share of frustration and failure - from injuries and early World
Cup exits to stinging criticism from the press, especially during his unhappy
tenure as captain.
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