Police constable kills self

3:01 AM |
 An Armed Police Force constable posted at APF Triyuga Battalion in Gaighat, Udayapur district headquarters, committed suicide by consuming poison on Wednesday morning.

The deceased has been identified as police constable Narendra Chaudhary, 24, of Triyuga Municipality-14.

According to sources, Chaudhary was spotted unconscious at the gate of Triyuga Municipality-3 and was rushed to the district hospital in Udayapur for treatment.

Chaudhary was on a leave to see his wife and son, DSP Binod Shrestha said.

Meanwhile, police have been investigating the incident.
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Gold price reaches 63,300 per tola

2:57 AM |
The price of gold has hit new record of Rs 63, 300 per tola on Wednesday, posting an overnight price rise of Rs 3,400 per tola.

The surge in gold price has hit consumers planning to purchase gold amid nearing festive season hard.

Gold dealers have attributed the hike in the bullion price to the depreciation of the Nepali rupees against the US dollar.

Despite the rise, there still lie supply crunch in the market.

The local market demands over 35 kg gold every day. However, the government provision allows supply of only 15 kg a day from commercial banks.
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A Great victory For Arsenal-Qualifies for Champions League

12:52 AM |
English Club Arsenal was selected for UEFA Champions League . It was quickly 17th time when Arsenal was selected for Champions League.
After smashing Turkish Club Finerwatche 2-0 it was selected in Champions League in the second leg of the match.In the first leg of the match Arsenal won by 3-0 and in total by 5-0 .The match was held in hometown of Arsenal where both goals were hitten by Ramshi.

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What happened To Nepali Films?

11:26 PM |
Nepali Films are not being so popular nowadays as expected. All the films are being degraded their standard. Is it due to increasing bollywood films or downhilling Nepali Film Industry? The Question remains in every heart of Nepali Movie Lovers.


Sobhit Basnet,the leading director said "We cannot invest much more in a film because there is no one to watch it . People are being attracted towards Bollywood and Hollywood Films but are forgetting their own" He added" The much better technology and graphics used by Bollywood and Hollywood are the main attracting point of their films".
In the other hand the story of a film remains same that's why it is unliked by Audience.If a porn like film comes in the market then for more than 2 months same type of film releases. The Director and Story maker cannot give the new taste to Nepali Movie Lovers. The first Red 4K camera film "Kathmandu" and first Nepali 3D Film " Vijilante" also did not get required Love from audience. The only new technology cannot make a film successful, Madan Ghimire, a leading Director of Nepali Film said .There should be story, a story that is loved by the viewers.
Is there will be the same way for upcoming films Like "Bouncer", "Gambler" and "Zanjeer"?
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20 held, Youths clash in Dolakha,

3:19 AM |
 Police here have taken under control 20 youths on the charge of vandalism under the influence of alcohol.

It has been learnt that a brawl broke out between two groups of youths and they also vandalised a hotel in Dolakha Bazaar. The incident took place at 2 a.m. Tuesday morning in which two youths were injured. Among the injured the condition of Suresh Gautam of Bhimeshwar Municipality-10 is said to be serious. He has been taken to Kathmandu for further treatment. He has sustained serious injuries in his head.

The local Bhimeshwar Hotel was vandalised by the youths in course of the clash that took place between two groups of drunk youths at the time when the Bhairav Kumari festival was underway in the Dolakha Bazaar.

Meanwhile, Tara Bahadur Sunuwar, a worker at the Khanekhola Hydropower Project at Marbu VDC, died when he was hit by a falling rock in course of work.  Sunuwar of Okhaldhunga Khijichandeshwari-5 died on the way to hospital, police said. RSS
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Dr Wagle returns home: Treatment ‘impossible’

3:16 AM |

Dr  Prasad Sharma Wagle, who had been undergoing treatment for appendix cancer at a New Delhi-based hospital, was discharged on Monday, doctors said his treatment is impossible.

'The cancer cells have spread to my liver and there is a risk of them spreading to my chest,' Dr Chitra Wagle explained of his condition.

After spending 14 months in the Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Hospital, Dr Chitra Wagle flew back to Nepal with his wife and father-in-law. The treatment and the hospital stay cost him around Rs 7 million. The Nepal government had provided Rs 500,000 for his treatment, while the Nepal Medical Association had also extended financial support.

Dr Chitra Wagle had to sell most of his property, including an X-ray machine and medical equipment in his possession, to arrange money for his treatment.

Meanwhile, Nepali people from around the globe have collected around Rs 1.5 million through campaigns on social networking sites to educate the three children of Dr Chitra Wagle.

“I am grateful for all the support that me and my family have received,” he said.

Dr Chitra Wagle, who hails from Rupandehi, had been serving as the medical superintendent in the Arghakhanchi District Hospital before he left for treatment. Under his initiative, the district hospital had started providing round-the-clock service, emergency blood facility and facilities related to child delivery and surgery.

Upon his return, Dr Chitra Wagle said he wishes to dedicate the rest of his life to social service.

“I could offer my service to senior citizens in Ashrams at Devghat, as the place is near the Bharatpur Cancer Hospital, where I could go for my check up regularly.”
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Mahato said : 'Polls on stipulated date at any cost'

2:14 AM |

Chairman of the Sadhbhawana Party, Rajendra Mahato , has said that the election to the second Constituent Assembly would be held at any cost even if the CPN-Maoist stayed out.

At a press conference organised by the Party at Janakpur on Tuesday, Mahato stressed on the need of holding the CA election on the stipulated date even by dissolving the High-Level Political Committee (HLPC) if it was an obstacle to the election .

He said the party would forge alliance in the election with the like-minded parties. RSS
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Leopard terror haunts

3:33 AM |

 leopard preyed on an eight-year-old boy at Bishalpur VDC-2 in Baitadi district on Sunday night.
The man-eater whisked away Dambar Soni, son of Parma Soni, from his house while he was sleeping. The leopard entered Soni’s room through the window and took away the boy while he was sleeping with his mother. Villagers found some body parts of the boy around 500 meters away from the house on Monday.

Leopards mauled two children to death and injured three women in Bishalpur and its vicinity at Talloswarad area in the district within the past two months. Local people said leopards enter the settlements mostly in the evenings and attack children and women. The man-eaters have terrorised locals in eight VDCs in the area for the past few years. Leopards killed 22 people in the area within the past one year. According to the villagers, there could be three or four man-eaters in the area. They said leopards used to attack children earlier, but now they target women.

“The villagers are in living terror. Leopards enter houses and attack people. One cannot even go to toilet alone,” said Jaya Dutta Bhatta of Bishalpur. “Neither fear-stricken children could go to school nor women can come out of houses alone.”  Villagers complained that the authorities concerned always ignored their plight despite repeated requests. The local administration had sent a joint team of Nepal Army, Nepal Police, Armed Police Force, forest employees and experts from Chitwan National Park to the area last year to catch the man-eaters, but to no avail.

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In Afghan, U.S. soldier murder trial declines to withdraw guilty plea

2:48 AM |
 U.S. army soldier who in June admitted the slaughter of 17 Afghan civilians declined to withdraw his guilty plea in a military court on Monday.

U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales made his decision in advance of legal arguments set to begin Tuesday that will determine whether his life sentence will come with the possibility of parole.

The judge, Army Colonel Jeffery Nance, asked Bales whether he wanted to withdraw the guilty plea in light of possible misinformation about the length of time before he could be eligible for parole.

Bales pleaded guilty in June to walking off his base in Afghanistan's Kandahar province before dawn on March 11, 2012, and killing 16 unarmed civilians, most of them women and children, in attacks on their family compounds.

The slayings marked the worst case of civilian slaughter blamed on a single, rogue U.S. soldier since the Vietnam War and further strained U.S.-Afghan relations after more than a decade of conflict in that country.

Lawyers for both sides on Monday signaled the arguments that they would make when the sentencing hearing begins.

But prosecutors hope to show that he engaged in a pattern of bad behavior that predated his multiple deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Bales' attorneys said they would argue that post-traumatic stress disorder and a brain injury were factors in the killings.

Prosecutors also said they intended to play for jurors taped phone conversations between an incarcerated Bales and his wife Kari laughing about the charges leveled against him and discussing a possible book deal for her.

Bales' lawyers argued against playing just snippets of the conversation, saying that the recordings needed to be heard in context. As a result, Nance ruled that the full phone conversations, totaling over two hours, would be played.

The defense also objected to the prosecution calling as an expert witness an Afghan man who has interviewed survivors of the rampage and family members of victims.

Nance said he would permit the expert to testify in general terms about how traumatic events and their aftermaths are dealt with in Pashtun culture but would allow 'no speculation about the specific impact on these specific victims.'
Several survivors are scheduled to speak during the proceedings this week.

Bales, a decorated veteran of four combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, acknowledged the killings upon pleading guilty in June and told the court there was "not a good reason in this world" for his actions.
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'kills hundreds,' Syria gas

2:41 AM |
opposition accused government forces of gassing hundreds of people on Wednesday by firing rockets that released deadly fumes over rebel-held Damascus suburbs, killing men, women and children as they slept.

The council did not explicitly demand a U.N. investigation of the incident, although it said "clarity" was needed and welcomed U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon's calls for a prompt investigation by the U.N. inspection team in Syria , led by Ake Sellstrom.
 
With the death toll estimated between 500 and 1,300, what would be the world's most lethal chemical weapons attack since the 1980s prompted an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council in New York.

An earlier Western-drafted statement submitted to the council, seen by Reuters, was not approved. The final version of the statement was watered down to accommodate objections from Russia and China, diplomats said. Moscow and Beijing have vetoed previous Western efforts to impose U.N. penalties on Assad.

Syria Information Minister Omran Zoabi said the allegations were 'illogical and fabricated". President Bashar al-Assad's officials have said they would never use poison gas against Syria ns. The United States and European allies believe Assad's forces have used small amounts of sarin before, hence the current U.N. visit.

Immediate international action is likely to be limited, with the divisions among major powers that have crippled efforts to quell 2 1/2 years of civil war still much in evidence.

Britain voiced the opposite view: "I hope this will wake up some who have supported the Assad regime to realize its murderous and barbaric nature," Foreign Secretary William Hague said on a visit to Paris.
Russia backed up Syria n government denials by saying it looked like a rebel "provocation" to discredit Assad.

France, Britain, the United States and others called for an immediate on-site investigation by U.N. chemical weapons inspectors who arrived in the Syria n capital only this week. Moscow, urging an "objective" inquiry, said the very presence of that team suggested government forces were not to blame.

U.S. President Barack Obama has made the use of chemical weapons by Assad's forces a "red line" that in June triggered more U.S. aid to the rebels. But previous, smaller and disputed cases of their deployment have not brought the all-out military intervention rebel leaders have sought to break a stalemate.

U.S. Senator John McCain, a Republican critic of Obama's Syria policy, said on Twitter that failure to penalize previous gas attacks had emboldened Assad: "No consequence for Assad using chemical weapons & crossing red line," he said. "We shouldn't be surprised he's using them again."

Images, including some by freelance photographers supplied to Reuters, showed scores of bodies - some of them small children - laid on the floor of a clinic with no visible signs of injury. Some showed people with foam around their mouths.

The United States and others said it had no independent confirmation that chemical weapons had been used. The U.N. chief, Ban, said the head of the inspection team in Damascus was already discussing the latest claims with the government.

'SLEEPING DEAD'

Opposition activists cited death tolls ranging from about 500 to - by one account - some 1,300 after shells and rockets fell around 3 a.m. on Wednesday. In 1988, 3,000 to 5,000 Iraqi Kurds were gassed by Saddam Hussein's forces at Halabja.

Doctors interviewed described symptoms they believe point to sarin gas, one of the agents Western powers accuse Damascus of having in an undeclared chemical weapons stockpile.

An opposition monitoring group, citing figures compiled from clinics in the Damascus suburbs, put the death toll at 494, with 90 percent killed by gas, the rest by bombs and conventional arms. The rebel Syria n National Coalition said 650 people died.

Activists said rockets with chemical agents hit the Damascus suburbs of Ain Tarma, Zamalka and Jobar during a fierce pre-dawn bombardment by government forces. The Damascus Media Office said 150 bodies were counted in Hammouriya, 100 in Kfar Batna, 67 in Saqba, 61 in Douma, 76 in Mouadamiya and 40 in Erbin.

A nurse at Douma Emergency Collection facility, Bayan Baker, said: "Many of the casualties are women and children. They arrived with their pupils constricted, cold limbs and foam in their mouths. The doctors say these are typical symptoms of nerve gas victims."

A video purportedly shot in the Kafr Batna neighborhood showed a room filled with more than 90 bodies, many of them children and a few women and elderly men. Most of the bodies appeared ashen or pale but with no visible injuries.

Other footage showed doctors treating people in makeshift clinics. One video showed the bodies of a dozen people lying on the floor of a clinic. A voice-over said they were members of a single family. In a corridor outside lay another five bodies.

Syria is one of just a handful of countries that are not parties to the international treaty that bans chemical weapons, and Western nations believe it has caches of undeclared mustard gas, sarin and VX nerve agents.
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For house arrest, Mubarak of Egypt's to leave jail

2:37 AM |
Egypt's Hosni Mubarak is expected to leave jail on Thursday after a court ordered him released pending trial, but he will immediately be placed under house arrest.

The court order for Hosni Mubarak's conditional release came on Wednesday, but was quickly followed by a government announcement that he would be placed under house arrest if released.
 
It was unclear when Hosni Mubarak might leave Cairo's Tora prison, or where he would be taken, with sources telling state media that two military hospitals where he has been treated in the past were possible candidates.

Interim prime minister Hazem el-Beblawi, in his capacity as deputy military ruler under Egypt's current state of emergency, ordered Mubarak held, the cabinet said.

"In the framework of the emergency law, the deputy military ruler ordered Mubarak to be placed under house arrest," a statement said.

Mubarak still faces trial on charges including corruption and complicity in the deaths of some of the 850 people who died in the 2011 uprising against him.

His next court session is on Sunday, though he has not always attended hearings in the cases against him in the past.

State news agency MENA said Hosni Mubarak's file would be sent to the prosecutor general on Thursday morning for confirmation that there was no basis for his continued pre-trial detention.

If the prosecutor confirms that, and no new charges are filed, the ex-president will then be flown by military helicopter to house arrest, MENA said.

Beblawi will have the final word on where Mubarak will be held, the agency said.

The decision to grant Mubarak pre-trial release added a volatile new element to the political turmoil that has gripped Egypt since the army ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi on July 3 following massive protests against him.

More than 1,000 people have been killed in the past week in violence following the forcible break-up of two pro-Morsi camps in the capital.

Authorities have arrested dozens of members of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, including its supreme guide Mohamed Badie -- the first time the group's chief has been arrested since 1981.

Morsi himself is being held at a secret location and faces charges related to his 2011 escape from prison and inciting the death and torture of protesters.

Badie and several other Brotherhood leaders are also accused of inciting the deaths of protesters, and are also expected in court Sunday.

Overnight, arrests of Brotherhood leaders continued with authorities detaining Ahmed Aref, a spokesman for the group, in Cairo.

Despite the pressure, a Brotherhood-led coalition has defiantly called for mass rallies on Friday, in a test of its remaining strength as members are arrested.

Egypt has experienced unprecedented political bloodletting since August 14, when security forces stormed two pro-Morsi protest camps in the capital.

The crackdown and resulting violence across the country killed nearly 600 people in a single day, the bloodiest in Egypt's recent history.

Islamists have torched and attacked dozens of Christian churches, schools, businesses and homes -- mostly in the rural south accusing Egypt's sizable Coptic minority of backing Morsi's ouster.

The unrest has prompted international criticism, and EU foreign ministers agreed at an emergency meeting Wednesday to suspend the sale of arms and security equipment to Cairo in response to the mounting violence.

But they expressed concern over the economic situation and said 'assistance in the socio-economic sector and to civil society will continue.'
They issued a statement calling recent operations by Egyptian security forces "disproportionate", while also condemning "acts of terrorism" in the Sinai and attacks on churches blamed on the Muslim Brotherhood.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said., 'We must keep faith with the majority of the people of Egypt who want a stable, democratic and prosperous country for themselves and that means we mustn't do anything that hurts them or that cuts off support to them,'
Washington has also criticised the violence, as well as Badie's arrest, and announced the cancellation of joint military exercises.

But it has stopped short of halting its $1.3 billion annual defence aid package to Egypt, and denied reports it was withholding aid.

Oil-rich Saudi Arabia, which backs the army-installed interim government, has said it would step in with other Arab nations to fill any funding gap if Washington halts aid.
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parliament system of gov- Madhes parties for 10 provinces,

9:40 PM |
With less than three months to go for the Constituent Assembly elections slated for November 19, Madhes-centric parties have started zeroing in on the federal model and form of governance the country should adopt.

The parties are also for a parliamentary system of governance, where the prime minister would be elected from the legislature. However, the Upendra Yadav-led Madhesi Janadhikar Forum-Nepal is in favour of a directly-elected president who will exercise executive powers.

Almost all Madhes parties are pitching for two autonomous provinces in the plains, basing them on the majority report of the State Restructuring Commission that has proposed 10 provinces with  two of them in the Madhes.

According to the General Secretary of the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum-Loktantrik, Jitendra Dev, his party supports an improved form of the parliamentary system. On the federal set-up, Dev, who also heads the manifesto-writing committee of the party, said they are for 10 provinces, along the lines suggested by the SRC. 'Our bottom line is that there should be two autonomous provinces in the Madhes--Madhes province and Tharuhat province,' he said.

He added that his party's manifesto demands that elections for provinces be held within one year of the promulgation of the constitution.The party which split from the MJF-N in July 2009, will be contesting the CA polls for the first time.

Sadhbhawana Party has also pitched for 10 provinces. According to leader Laxman Lal Karna, who heads the manifesto writing committee of the party, the two provinces in the Madhes would be named after consultations with the Tharu community. 'As for the forms of governance, we are for a parliamentary system with executive powers vested on the prime minister,' he said.

The Rastriya Madhes Samajbadi Party, which split from the MJF-L in September last year, also said it favours the parliamentary system, where the prime minister, elected through a parliament, has the executive powers. 'Though our position is for a single province, we could go for two,' said party spokesperson
The Tarai Madhes Loktantrik Party led by Mahanta Thakur said it has a similar take on both these issues.
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Bam Dev Gautam blames Indian imports for bird flu

9:35 PM |
Vice-chairman Gautam has claimed that fowls brought from India are responsible for the bird-flu epidemic in Nepal.

Speaking at an event on Thursday, Bam Dev Gautam, the chairman of the party's All Nepal Peasant's Association, said that lifting the dumping charge on Indian agriculture products was the main reason for the spread. "The chicken of the KFC seized in Dhading was laced with bird-flu,' said Bam Dev Gautam.

Poultry farmers in Dhading had taken two containers of processed chicken under control at Dharke on December 15 last year. The two vehicles with Indian registration delivering chicken for the restaurant chain Kentucky Fried Chicken in the Capital were seized by local farmers.

Bam Dev Gautam also said many chickens infected with bird-flu were being sold in the market. In a statement, the All Nepal Peasant's Association demanded that the dumping of the dead chickens should be done scientifically, affected farmers be compensated and those selling infected fowls booked.
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from Saudi Arabia, 25,000 Nepalis return

9:31 PM |
Almost 25,000 Nepali, working illegally in Saudi Arabia, have returned home under the amnesty programme introduced by the Saudi Arabia government, according to the Nepali Embassy in Riyadh.

The government introduced a three-month amnesty programme in May. The duration was later extended by four months until November 3
The embassy has said nearly 32,000 others have secured travel documents and are looking forward to leaving the country. The undocumented migrants still have nearly two months to either leave the country, or apply for legal status and keep working there.

According to the Saudi government estimates, there are around two million illegal migrants in the country, around 71,000 of whom are said to be Nepalis.
'So far we have issued 280 temporary passports for those wishing to stay and continue working by changing employment sponsorship. A majority of Nepalis living in the country illegally have decided to leave,' said Nepali Ambassador Uday Raj Pandey.

Some of the Nepalis, meanwhile, are having problems leaving the country, though they already received exit permit. The embassy said such cases are associated with the people involved in litigation or facing criminal charges.
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High-level Political Committee agrees, in principle, to hold round-table meet

9:26 PM |

Not knowing what the Cumnist Party in Nepal (CPN)-Maoist exactly wants, the High-level Political Committee(HLPC ) on Thursday agreed ‘in principle’ to hold a round-table conference/all-party meeting if that helps the party in joining the November 19 elections.

According to leaders, the High-level Political Committee agreed to hold the round-table after the Mohan Baidya-led CPN-Maoist gave a ‘positive signal.’

The fate of such a conference, however, largely depends on the CPN-M’s commitment to the polls, which is often “seen wavering.”

Cross-party leaders said they will hold informal talks with CPN-Maoist leaders on Thursday and Friday and find out what exactly the party wants from the round-table. However, if the CPN-Maoist wants to settle all the issues in the roundtable conference and postpone the elections, such a meeting may not take place at all, the leaders said.

High-level Political Committee leaders said a roundtable conference can only discuss contentious issues of the new constitution, while the final call will be taken by the Constituent Assembly.

The High-level Political Committee had earlier said that it is ready to postpone the elections if the poll-opposing parties make a commitment to contest the elections later. Cross-party leaders privy to the developments say there are reasons for them giving the CPN-Maoist such leeway. The first reason is that they want to test the CPN-Maoist’s honesty in being part of the CA election process, while another is to give the party a message that the High-level Political Committee tried its best to bring the party on board. Yet another reason the leaders said was to ‘expose’ the CPN-Maoist’s ‘intention of not wanting the election to take place.’ “The CPN-Maoist, which is demanding cancellation of the election process, changed its mind in the talks  with the High-level Political Committee , saying it is ready to join the election process,' said High-level Political Committee leader Bharat Bimal Yadav. “We agreed on a round-table conference as they were positive about the polls.' High-level Political Committee members—UCPN Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal, CPN-UML Chairman Jhala Nath Khanal, Nepali Congress Vice-chairman Ram Chandra Poudel and Madhesi Janadhikar Forum Nepal-Democratic Chairman Bijaya Kumar Gachhadar—are of the view that Baidya will not join the election, and as such, it should not be postponed.

However, NC President Sushil Koirala, UML leader Madhav K. Nepal and UCPN leader Narayan K.Shrestha are of the view that holding the polls will be difficult without the CPN-Maoist’s participation.

CPN-Maoist leaders, on the other hand, said they have not agreed to join the Mangser 4 election.
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English talent gets left behind as Premier League keeps importing

2:47 AM |

The conversation taking place in a cramped corridor at the Stadium of  Light had turned to the lack of English players on view on Saturday afternoon. Martin Jol barely paused for thought before answering a perennially vexed question. 'It's a problem,' said Fulham's manager. There were only four in the starting XIs as Sunderland were beaten 1-0 by Jol's side - Jack Colback and Adam Johnson for Sunderland and Kieran Richardson and Steve Sidwell for Fulham - but Jol's shrug was one of resignation rather than indifference. "That's typical for the Premier League,' said the Dutchman, at the end of a day which helped mark a record low in terms of the number of English players starting top-flight games on the season's opening weekend.

Rewind to the first day of the inaugural Premier League season in August 1992 and 177 players – or 73.1% – featuring in first XIs held English nationality. The weekend just gone has seen that figure plummet to 75, or 34.1%. The decrease has left the Premier League in a position where it fields significantly fewer indigenous players than Spain's La Liga, Germany Bundesliga, Italy's Serie A or France's Ligue Oneother major leagues around Europe.

Since Coventry in 1992 has a Premier League side kicked off a campaign with an all-English XI but things have reached the point where, of the 61 signings who have cost the elite division's 20 clubs a transfer fee this summer, only 12 have involved Englishmen. The reasons for this growing disconnect are myriad and complex but the situation is exacerbated by the reality that those English players who do smash through our game's "glass ceiling" command radically inflated transfer fees.

Gary Neville, the former Manchester United and England right-back, has acknowledged that, were he starting his career today, he would probably have found himself crowded out of the Old Trafford first-team picture by overseas imports. In an ideal world Neville would like to see positive discrimination for British talent in the form of a quota system.
'Seven or eight years ago at Tottenham I had Michael Dawson, Jermaine Jenas, Aaron Lennon, Tom Huddlestone, all English guys,' Jol said. "But it is impossible to do that nowadays because they are so expensive.'

This idea of potentially good English players becoming lost in the system during an era of foreign managers and reduced domestic scouting networks is something that particularly concerns Alan Pardew. "We all have to abide by rules but the rules aren't fixed so that we have to play English players," said Newcastle United's manager, who could field virtually a complete team of high-quality French players sourced at comparative bargain prices.
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Birth of new star captured by Chilean observatory - video

2:40 AM |
Birth of new star captured by Chilean observatory - video


Images of the birth of a star around 1,400 light years away from Earth is captured by scientists at the European Southern Observatory, Chile. The pictures show the moments the star ejects material into space at speeds of up to 1 million km per hour. The shots show never-before-seen detail of jets of gas as they stream from the new star
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A teacher accused of having sex with 15-y-o male student

8:39 PM |
Kalee Warnick, a 22-year-old English teacher at Wall High School, was arrested Tuesday on charges of aggravated criminal sexual contact and having a sexual relationship with a minor. Her attorney said she will plead not guilty.
An English teacher in Wall, N.J., has been accused of having a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old student.
Kalee Warnick, 22, was arrested Tuesday on charges of third-degree aggravated criminal sexual contact and second-degree having a sexual relationship with a minor, according to the Asbury Park Press.
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Mothers are out of options, not 'opting out'

8:11 PM |
In the United States, mothers are increasingly finding themselves stuck between a rock and a hard place.
'The choice that is not really a choice' is one of the oldest tricks in parenting. Anticipating a tantrum or endless dawdling, the parent offers the babt a limited set of options: 'Would you like to wear the red shirt or the blue shirt? Would you like the carrots or the apple? It's your choice.'
The baby, being a child, feels empowered. He is the one in control; he gets to make the big decisions. But this deception only lasts for so long. Eventually the child grows older and starts to dream beyond his proscriptions. He realises there are not only two options, but a world of dazzling variety. He demands to be part of this world, but his requests are denied. He realises he never had options after all, but that choice itself was an illusion produced by the powerful.

If only his mother would realise the same.

On August 7, the New York Times ran an article called 'The Opt Out Generation Wants Back In' - a follow-up to a 2003 story about highly accomplished, well-educated American women who left the workforce to stay at home with their children. Ten years later, the mothers are seeking work that befits their abilities but most are unable to find it, causing them to question their original decision.
Freshers struggle to land jobs in US.

The NewYork Times piece frames the mothers' misgivings as a result of questionable planning and poor marriage partners, paying mere lip service to the tremendous change in the economy over the past ten years. Whether to work or stay at home is presented as an option that has to do with personal fulfillment and childrearing preferences, divorced from fiscal limitations.

But for nearly all women, from upper middle-class to poor, the "choice" of whether to work is not a choice, but an economic bargain struck out of fear and necessity. Since 2008, the costs of childbirth, childcare, health care, and education have soared, while wages have stagnated and full-time jobs have been supplanted by part-time, benefit-free contingency labour.

The assumed divide between mothers who work inside and outside the home is presented as a war of priorities. But in an economy of high debt and sinking wages, nearly all mothers live on the edge. Choices made out of fear are not really choices. The illusion of choice is a way to blame mothers for an economic system rigged against them. There are no "mommy wars", only money wars - and almost everyone is losing.

The media present a woman's fear of losing her career as the fear of losing herself. But the greatest fear of most mothers is not being able to provide for their children. Mothers with high-paying jobs go back to work to earn money for their kids. Married mothers with low-paying jobs quit to save money for their kids. Single mothers struggle to find work that pays enough to support their kids. Self-fulfillment is a low priority in an economy fuelled by worker insecurity.
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A perspective on principles for Internet surveillance

4:28 AM |
Technology is often double-edged. On the one hand, innovations in communication technologies have increased the possibilities for individuals to share information and ideas beyond borders, access educational material and discover other cultures. On the other hand, the very same tools have also generated opportunities for State surveillance of users' personal exchanges. Such actions not only threaten privacy and the free flow of information, but they can also generate chilling effects on the Internet architecture and undermine the trust that users have in the network as a global, interoperable and resilient platform of communication
In recent weeks we have seen an emerging debate on government surveillance activities and their impact on users' fundamental rights to privacy and freedom of expression. Part of this global debate focused on principles and guidelines that should govern these activities. Whether new principles and guidelines emerge or whether existing ones are being seen with fresh eyes, we observe an increasing interest in exploring ways to provide additional safeguards when it comes to the surveillance of online activities.
 Last week, the Internet Society Board of Trustees took the opportunity at its meeting on the margins of the IETF meeting, in Berlin, to release a statement calling for "the global Internet community to stand together to support open Internet access, freedom and privacy". This statement re-emphasises the concerns of the Internet Society regarding the recently exposed information about government Internet surveillance programs, which risk threatening both the fundamental freedoms of Internet users, as well as the openness of the Internet as a whole.

In the past few weeks, many voices in the Internet community have made the point that security should not be sought at the expense of individual rights, challenging the notion that achieving security by necessity has to be the product of a trade-off with freedom of expression, privacy or social development.
Robert Hinden, Chair of the Board of Trustees, used the setting of Berlin to remind us that human progress and technological innovation are not based on building walls, and that such surveillance activities, including those carried by countries who have traditionally advocated for an open Internet, threaten the trust and confidence that are so important for the Internet ecosystem and the relation between different stakeholders.

The ISOC Board of Trustees endorsed in its statement the initiative by some civil society organizations to promote "International Principles on the Application of Human Rights to Communications Surveillance." These principles, developed over the past year by a set of civil society organisations, are intended to explain how existing human rights standards, international law, and jurisprudence should apply in the context of new capabilities and risks of digital surveillance.

In societies marked by increasing cross-border interactions, adapting the application of existing laws and rights to the online environment, while preserving the Internet's sustainability and openness, seems to be a key challenge. These international principles on communication surveillance offer guidelines and safeguards so that laws are applied to the online environment in a way that is respectful of individual rights.

Released at the April 2013 session of the Human Rights Council - before the revelations about sweeping surveillance by security services made the news worldwide - the latest report of the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression also offers a timely focus on the implications of States’ surveillance of communications on the exercise of the human rights to privacy and to freedom of opinion and expression.

The report underlines the need to further study new modalities of surveillance and calls for a revision of national laws regulating these practices in line with human rights standards.
"Generally, legislation has not kept pace with the changes in technology. In most States, legal standards are either non-existent or inadequate to deal with the modern communications surveillance environment. As a result, States are increasingly seeking to justify the use of new technologies within the ambits of old legal frameworks, without recognizing that the expanded capabilities they now possess go far beyond what such frameworks envisaged"
The report also contends that changes in technology have been paralleled by changes in attitudes towards communications surveillance. The example that is given is the practice of official wiretapping in the U.S., which was first conducted on a restricted basis and only reluctantly sanctioned by the courts given its serious impact on privacy. The report goes on to argue that declining costs of technology and data storage have now eradicated financial or practical disincentives to conducting surveillance, which as a result is more invasive and on a greater scale than ever before. Hence, the report's call for additional safeguards.

While government plays an important role in protecting its citizens, and acknowledging the fact that national security sometimes involves secretive actions, real security can only be realized within a broader context of trust and the respect of fundamental rights, such as privacy
As the Internet Society stated before, large scale surveillance activities underscore the importance of an open and inclusive global dialogue regarding online privacy in the realm of national security and the need for all stakeholders to abide by the norms and principles outlined in international agreements on data protection and other fundamental rights. Cooperation among stakeholders is indeed essential to reach efficient and legitimate solutions in an ecosystem marked by cross-border interactions and dependencies.

A trust-enabled infrastructure, fostering trusted interactions in cyberspace, is critical not only for the future of the global interoperability and openness of the Internet, but also for continued innovation, economic and political progress and a vibrant global community.


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Tibet General Information

4:07 AM |

Tibet is a most unusual and beautiful place. The majority of its land rests above 4000 meters (13,000 feet) and is surrounded bymapTibet Map tibet mountain ranges on three sides. The awe-inspiring Himalayas are the highest in the world, as is the never-ending Tibetan plateau. It is a place for the rugged adventurer as well as the spiritual wanderer Tibet is a land held back in time, housing many secrets. Nomads remain much the same as they did one hundred years ago. Roaming the plateau from winter and summer camps the nomads still mainly subsist from their yak herds. Then, there are the monasteries, which are striving to find a place in a country that's suddenly facing the 21st century. 
The Tibetan people and their religion have been inseparable. Even in their earliest myths one finds references to Tibetan religious beliefs. Originally, the Bon religion dominated Tibet. After the introduction of Buddhist statues and later, Sanskrit documents from India, Buddhism crept increasingly into Tibetan culture. Tibetan Buddhism is the culmination of some early Bon beliefs, Indian Buddhist texts and several great lamas. Buddhism and politics had been interwoven since King Songsten Gampo married a Chinese and a Nepali princess, who were both intergral in the emergence of Buddhism. It was the Fifth Dalai Lama who actually built the Potala Palace as the government seat and religious center. A theocracy had prevailed until 1951. Tibet (Tibet Autonomous Region) is situated in the southwest of China bordering the internal provinces of Xinjiang, Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan. Externally it is bordered by India, Burma, Bhutan, Sikkim and Nepal. It covers a vast area of 120 sq km. (29,652 acres), standing the second after Xinjiang in China. But it only owns the thinnest population of 2.6 million, more than 90% of which are the Tibetans themselves; other nationalities like Han, Hui, Mongol also found in the two biggest cities of Lhasa, Shigatse and other cities and towns. At the average altitude of over 4,000 m. (13,123 ft.), this region boasts of many huge mountains like Mt. Nyainqentanglha, Karakoram Mountains, Gangdise and Himalayas. 
The peculiar landscape gives rise to the cold and dry plateau climate in almost all of Tibet except some regions in the south and east like Nyingchi. Despite the adverse conditions, the year-round snow-clad highest mountains still exert a strong pull to mountaineers, adventurers and sightseers near and afar. Tibet is also magically endowed with many other natural wonders like the twin group of sacred mountain and holy lake - Mt. Kailash and Lake Manasarova, the Heavenly Lake Namtso among others. It is also the cradle of many large rivers such as China's Yangtze River, Yellow River, Yarlong Tsangpo River and India's Indus and Ganges. Most geographical features are on a grand scale and one necessarily feels small and insignificant as one stands before the spectacular canyons, valleys, glaciers, and basins and so on in Tibet. Tibet is actually a land of natural treasures. A number of natural reserves within the region are the home to many rare and valuable wild animals and plants like lesser pandas, yaks, cranes and virgin cypress, spruces and snowdrops among others. The land also produces large amounts of minerals, water energy, wind energy, terrestrial heat and solar energy. Yangpachen is just the first research center for terrestrial heat in China.
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Scandal Season 3 First Look: Kerry Washington Is Exposed in New Poster:

3:46 AM |
 Scandal's highly-anticipated third season premieres on Oct. 3 and fans were finally given a juicy little tease for Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and Co.'s return as ABC unveiled the first poster for the new season via Twitter on Tuesday.

The artwork features our head gladiator Olivia looking down with the caption, "The secret is out." Of course, this refers to Olivia being revealed as Fitz's (Tony Goldwyn) mistress in the final moments of the shocking season two finale. Better armor up, gladiators, 'cause it's going to be one crazy ride of a season!
The Scandal cast vots to break Twitter with the season three premiere!

ABC unleashed  the hot new poster as a reward after fans retweeted the cast's posts about the series over 10,000 times. 
"These first couple of episodes back are all about the drama of Olivia has been outed by someone," Jeff Perry recently teased. "How did this leak? Who leaked it? Who sent it? Is it possible anyone will actually admit to it? If they do, what will that mean?"

"ScandalRecruitment Alert! Get us to 10k combined retweets and we'll show you the new poster," Scandal's official Twitter page posted. "Follow all cast members and RT!" Washington added, "+Gladiators! Want to see the new +ScandalABC poster? Get us to 10,000 RT + you'll see it first! +Scandal S3 starts10/3! #
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Japanese Girls in Seven Steps Popular How ?

10:28 PM |
I think I speak for all of the male writers here at kantepur news when I say that we have no trouble finding dates. For example, I’m so attractive that I have to beat women off with a stick. Or, was it that the last woman I asked out beat me with a stick? Sorry, my memory is a little fuzzy these days. Probably from being hit in the head with sticks. But for our loyal readers who lack my powerful pheromones, we present seven tips for attracting girls in Japan, as originally compiled by Niconico News.

1. Help her out
Women like a man who will help them in pinch. In order to show this side of your personality, you can carry their bags for them, or help them reach things in high places. The women surveyed were also impressed when men drove off (or squashed) any bugs that showed up to spoil the mood, proving that the responsibility of insect-killing falling to men is a cultural phenomenon that transcends national borders.
2. When you’re out with a girl, remember, ladies first
Open doors for her, and when waiting in line, let her go ahead of you. Oh, how very gentlemanly of you!

3. Protect her
Of course, unless you’ve got some pretty unique taste in date locations, you’re unlikely to run across any super villains or war zones. But even mundane dates offer the opportunity to protect her from the elements by holding an umbrella for her so she doesn’t get wet or offering her the shady seat at an outdoor café on a sunny day. When walking in the rain, staying on the side of the sidewalk closest to the street will keep her from getting splashed by passing cars, plus allow you to use yourself as a human shield should one jump onto the curb.

4. Be sexy
Among other things, the women surveyed said they found guys sexy when they were smoking, taking off their neckties, and unbuttoning their shirts. Apparently, nothing drives them wild like a lung cancer patient prepping for surgery.

5. Act like a caring older brother
The women surveyed said that from a young age they liked being treated like they were cute and having someone watching over them, such as an older brother taking care of his kid sister. Of course, it’s important for the man to at least maintain the appearance of chasteness in this.

6. Be attentive to those around you
Of course, being a helpful person isn’t limited to taking care of your date. Many Japanese men like a woman who is sensitive to the needs of those around her, and Japanese women appreciate this same quality in a guy. If you’re riding an elevator, ask the other passengers which floor they’re headed to and hit the button for them. If you’re at a restaurant for diner that serves family-style, ask everyone else what they’d like to eat before you charge ahead and ask the waiter for the cured ham, mixed sausage plate, and ginger pork. And if you’re out for drinks and spot someone in the group who needs a refill, offer to get one for them when you put in your next order.

7. Show some skin
If you’ve got confidence in your bod, you can score some points by showing it off. On a hot day, strip down to a tank top. Likewise, if your outer layers get wet from the rain, you can peel them off and walk around in your undershirt. In less formal situations, such as barbeques, a sudden shift to complete nakedness from the waist up can really excite the girls. That said, the survey revealed no instances where it’s OK to suddenly remove your pants in the middle of a date.

By now, our more socially-astute readers have probably noticed that some of this advice, particularly “act like her older sibling” and “spontaneously get naked,” seem to carry a huge risk of getting you shot down, if not reported to the police. Our friends at Esuteru picked up on this too, and gave this important qualifier to all of their advice:
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The III most unattractive women’s hairstyles (according to Japanese style with video)

9:15 PM |
The top Three Ladies hairstyles that turn off Japanese men

There’s nothing ladies than a bad haircut, especially if you are a girl. If you dare to cut your hair short and the results are more Miley Cyrus than Emma Watson, it’s going to be a rough couple of months of hat wearing. But what happens when you step out of the salon feeling amazing, only to find that your boyfriend hates your new ‘do? If you’re living in Japan, get your notepads ready! According to a survey conducted by Niconico News, the following are the top three least attractive haircuts for women, as chosen by men in Japan.

“My friend got straight bangs which she thought looked unique, but I didn’t think it looked good at all. I made the mistake of telling her that.” (male, 32)

“I feel like girls are trying too hard to be artsy when they get their bangs cut super straight.” (male, 26)

”If a girl has a chiseled face and thick, straight bangs, she looks like a Japanese doll.” (male, 27)

Bangs so long and straight that they completely cover a woman’s eyebrows came in at number three on our countdown of the least attractive haircuts for women, according to men. This is also a very popular style in Japan right now, making many men cringe as they walk down the street to a sea of their most hated hairstyle. To men, women with this hairstyle don’t look down to earth, often seeming to be trying too hard. Maybe the men are afraid of all those secrets they are hiding in those long frontal locks. The cut also reminds guys of a Japanese doll, which contrary to what you might think, is a turn off for them.

“It makes a girl’s head look strangely big.” (male, 46)

“If you’re not attractive, you’re going to just look like a man, so it’s best not to get this hairstyle if you can’t call yourself beautiful.” (male, 29)

The second least favorite cut of the bunch was the “very short” style. It’s understandable why this style is a turn off for men; no one wants to have the same haircut as their girlfriend. This is also a very bold style that is extremely hard to pull off, requiring women to have just the right features and face shape to look attractive with ultra short locks.

“When a girl with black hair has a bob cut, it reminds me of a kappa. I don’t like it at all.” (male, 26)
“For some reason, I feel like this cut isn’t flattering on a girl.” (male, 26)

Coming in at number one was the bob cut. It seems that men in Japan aren’t into the shorter, helmet head hair on their ladies. This cut is coming back in the Western world and is also quite popular in Japan, but it reminds many Japanese men of the Kappa, a mythological creature with a bowl-haircut that is often completely bald in the middle of its head. The kappa isn’t exactly associated with being sexy or cute, serving as a complete turnoff for guys in Japan. No one wants to see their girlfriend as a smelly green river imp, right?



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gives reason that shocks Japan, Sixth-grade girl torches house(with video)

9:07 PM |
 As the summer heat wears on, people are mostly dealing with it well. There’s kakigori, ice cream, and giant chunks of ice to help you get through the hot months. And, just think! Autumn weather is only a few weeks away! We hope!
But one grade-school girl in Chiba Prefecture finally reached her snapping point and…set her family’s house on fire?
Aside from the mother who suffered light injuries from smoke inhalation, it seems that no one was injured. The girl was taken into custody by the police after admitting to starting the fire and has been questioned regarding her motives. According to officials, the grade-school student said, “I was irritated because of the heat. And I was sick of living with my mother.”
On August 12, it seems that a sixth-grade girl took a lighter and set fire to one of the traditional sliding doors in her family’s one-story, wooden house. As you might imagine, the 645.8 square foot building burst into flames and was burned almost entirely to the ground. The blaze took approximately one hour to extinguish.
In addition to the sixth-grade girl and her 45-year-old mother, her 13-year-old elder sister and mother’s ex-husband were also residing in the house. Last year, police reported the mother to child protective services for child-neglect for not preparing food. The girl is currently in the custody of child protective services.

Japanese Twitter users reacted strongly to the news.

    She was irritated from the heat and thus started a fire?? What a thing to do for a sixth-grade girl.

    Scary!Both this girl and the heat!

 For an elementary school student, especially a little girl, to start such a fire…and her mother is my age. Such a shock.

    Setting your own house of fire? What the hell?

    Sixth-grade girl sets fire to her own house because she’s irritated from the heat. What has our country come to?
We’re very happy to hear that everyone made it out of the house safely and we sincerely hope that the girl will soon be in a better situation.
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Sexy guys and English lessons make for one heck of a bizarre shampoo ad campaign(With Video)

8:59 PM |
 This really is a story that involves hot guys, floral-scented shampoo and English lessons. But, you may be wondering, how did such an unlikely combination come about? Well, ladies and gentlemen, meet Ricky, Matt and Justin, the “hot English teachers” who are now promoting Herbal Essences shampoo in Japan by giving offbeat English lessons in a series of videos brought to you courtesy of P&G. And these most definitely are not your typical language lessons.

Believe it or not, there are seven English lesson videos in all, each on a separate theme. In each video, one of the three “hot teachers” introduces English phrases, mostly pick-up lines, that are related to the theme that women may (or may not) want to use in various situations when traveling abroad. Parts of it are in Japanese, but since they’re just explaining the English phrases, we think you’ll be able to get the gist of what they’re saying.
Sure, I know these guys are just doing their jobs, but these videos have to be some of the most hilarious  stuff I have seen … EVER, and we just had to share it with you. Presenting: the “Hot-looking Teachers’ Dreamy English Lessons
How weird and funny is that? Especially the introduction showing the three men striking crazy poses at the beginning of each video.

All right, maybe some of the phrases are worth learning if you’re studying English, and there’s no denying the three teachers are all good-looking and seriously ripped, but do they really have to give their lessons bare-chested? Well, according to P&G, they actually went through some serious physical training before shooting the videos, so I guess we have to at least give them credit for the effort they put in. It can’t be easy getting into that kind of shape, after all.

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Mars Society Calls for Students Worldwide to Compete

9:41 PM |
The U.S.-based Mars Society called on university students around the world to help advance plans for a manned mission to the planet during the 16th Annual International Mars Society Convention in the U.S. state of Colorado.

It has been about six months since the non-profit Inspiration Mars Foundation, founded by space tourist and multi-millionaire Dennis Tito, proposed launching a manned mission toward Mars in five years. The plan calls for one man and one woman to fly within 160 kilometers of Mars and return to Earth.   

While the crew is slated to be American, the process of getting to Mars is an international endeavor.

The president of the Mars Society, Robert Zubrin, announced a competition that calls on teams of students around the world to design a two-person Mars flyby mission that could be launched in 2018.

Designs will be judged on their cost, quality, simplicity and ability to launch in five years. The U.S. space agency, NASA, the Mars Society and Inspiration Mars will choose the judges.

Zubrin said both the contest and a Mars flyby have the power to spur innovation.

"We need to mobilize the talent of the world in support of this mission," said Zubrin. "Inspiration Mars, in part, was set up to inspire people and show how the challenge of humans to Mars could inspire a new generation to want to develop their minds to become scientists, engineers, technological entrepreneurs and researchers."

A Mars Society press release says the design competition is open to university engineering students worldwide. While teams can include alumni, professors and others, the bulk of the teams must be made up of students. Finalists would present their ideas at NASA's Ames Research Center in California.

Zubrin notes that he is not part of Inspiration Mars, but he considers its mission to be "bold yet realistic," with enough resources to succeed.
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Manned Mock Mars Mission Wrapping up in Hawaii

9:38 PM |
The Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation (HI-SEAS) is nearing the end of its 120-day mission on the northern slope of Mauna Loa.

Since mid-April, six people have been living in a space habitat located 8,000 feet (2,440 meters) above sea level, on a barren lava field that is as Mars-like an environment as you can find on Earth. They've acted as though they were the first human explorers on Mars, not only conducting various science experiments and going out into the field dressed in simulated spacesuits, but also making meals with food that could survive the long voyage to the Red Planet.
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Millionaire seeks an assist for Inspiration Mars mission

9:31 PM |
 As the clock ticks toward a 2018 launch, the millionaire who's funding the Inspiration Mars effort to send a man and woman around the Red Planet is reaching out for support from students, from rocket companies — and from NASA.

"We're going to have to do it with NASA, and probably a certain amount of government funding," said Dennis Tito, the investment guru and one-time space passenger who kicked off the Mars flyby project earlier this year. "But probably within the scope of the current budget."

Tito and other leaders of Inspiration Mars provided an update on their plans on Friday at the Mars Society's annual convention at the University of Colorado in Boulder. In cooperation with the Mars Society and NASA's Ames Research Center, they also announced an engineering design contest that gives student-led teams a chance to lay out proposed mission architectures for the 501-day flyby.

The top-rated team gets $10,000, plus an expense-paid trip to next year's Mars Society meeting. There'll also be cash prizes for four runner-up teams. Check out the Mars Society website for deadlines and details.
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Minister Shrestha to inspect TIA runway

1:53 AM |
Minister for Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation Ram Kumar Shrestha was scheduled to inspect the rnunway at Tribhuvan Interational Airport at 11 am on Sunday.

The runway of the country's only international airport fell apart multiple times forcing the management to divert or cancell the flight operation.

Sources said that the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority had pressurise the ministry for the inspection.
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Drunken hubby beats his wife to death

1:51 AM |

A woman died after she was mercilessly beaten up by her husband in the district on Saturday night.

Inebriated husband Sundar Khadka-37 y, of Goshwara VDC Wd No.5 of Lamjung Dist. killed his wife Sushila Khadka, 35 y, over a minor dispute, said the Dist. Police Office Parsa.

The couple has been living in Birgunj in course of their employment.

Husband Khadka has been working as a security guard in Sundar Steels Factory.

The dead body has been kept at Zonal Hospital for postmortem. Police have nabbed the murderer for further action. RSS
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Foreign investment needed for development of hydropower:

1:34 AM |
Minister for Energy Umakanta Jha has said that there is a need for foreign investment for the development of hydropower sector in the country.

Addressing the 28th anniversary of Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) in the capital on Saturday, he said that although the government had allocated over Rs. 30 billion for the sector in the new budget, it is not sufficient for the development of the sector.

Similarly, Energy secretary Bishwa Prakash Pandit said that there is a need for long-term plan for the development of the sector and relieve the country from power outage.

Meanwhile, despite a 20 percent hike in the power tariff, the authority incurred a loss of Rs. 4.56 billion in the fiscal year 2012/13.

However, NEA’s managing director Rameshwar Yadav said that NEA has reduced the annual loss by around 50 percent in 2012/13 compared to the previous year
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Philippines suspends hunt for ferry disaster survivors

1:32 AM |
Bad weather has forced diving teams in the Philippines to suspend their search for survivors of Friday's ferry disaster. The Philippines' transport and communications secretary has been giving the latest on the operation.

"Latest account - there are 629 survivors, 31 casualties. So far what has been accounted for is six hundred and sixty, six-six-zero. Missing is 171. There were foreigners on board. I heard (from) particularly Administrator Mejia that the reports coming from the area are that all the foreigners are OK. So there are no accounted casualties among the foreigners. There is, I heard, a New Zealander who is now in the hospital," said Joseph Abaya, Philippines Transport & Communications Sec.

The spokesman says the passenger ferry was about to enter the port of Cebu City, about 570 kilometers south of Manila, when it hit a cargo ship. The ferry sank within minutes, in waters around 33 meters deep.

It's thought some of the passengers still unaccounted for could still be trapped inside the vessel. The captains of both ships survived and are being questioned. The Philippine government says it’s ready to offer assistance to the victims, and is promising an immediate investigation into the incident.
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Iran: Labor and student protests in Ahvaz and Tehran

12:42 AM |
File photo: A workers protest in IranNCRI - Some 200 laid off textile workers in city of Ahvaz gathered in protest in front of city’s labor department to protest lack of unemployment insurance, according to reports from inside Iran,

Workers at the city's First District municipality gathered outside the city's municipality to protest delay in payment of their wages. Suppressive agents of State Security Forces were stationed in the area to prevent the escalation of the protest.

Moreover, applicants who wanted to enter university in Tehran assembled in outside Education Assessment office. On August 14, around 100 young men and women gathered to protest allocation of quotas and gender discrimination at universities.

In the past few years by orders from senior authorities, the clerical regime has initiated segregation, discrimination and setting quotas based on gender for some educational branches. Gender-based restrictions in the codes of some higher-education branches in recent years have always been a matter of protest of university applicants.

In universities many courses are either only available to only male applicants or are accessible to few female applicants.
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iPhone Kills Chinese Woman

6:03 AM |
A Chinese woman has been killed by her iPhone, the 23 year old died after she was electrocuted when she answered her iPhone. The phone was plugged into the wall charging at the time, when the lady named as Ma Ailun answered the call.


According to Ma Ailun brothers, the handset had been bought from an official iPhone store and was not a fake device. He said that the device had been to Chinese authorities for examination. There are many fake handsets and chargers on sale in China, with many faults which could be dangerous.

Many people were alerted to the former flight attendants death who was due to be married later on in the year when her sister posted a warning on the internet:

‘Ma collapsed and died, while using her charging iPhone I want to warn everyone else not to make phone calls when your mobile phone is recharging,’

The news spread like wildfire across the internet, which is thought to be another blow to Apples reputation in China and the world after numerous bad press articles.

There are a number of theories on why poor Ma Ailun was electrocuted through her iPhone, including a faulty charger, poor wiring in her home and excessive temperatures damaging wires, although death by electrocution from a charging phone is extremely rare.

Apple said in a statement: “We are deeply saddened to learn of this tragic incident and offer our condolences to the Ma family. We will fully investigate and co-operate with authorities in this matter.”
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Garima Panta- Nepali Actress/Model/Celebrity Photo Gallery

7:32 AM |



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Keki Adhikari- Nepali Actress/Model Photo Gallery

7:31 AM |










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Air Sex Championships:

10:14 PM |
Men & Women Simulate Their Favorite Positions an Air Sex Championships:

" Air Sex World Championships "
Air Sex World Championships
Mary Sledd















A Mickey Mouse Act of Lust at the Air Sex Championships
" Mickey Mouse Man at Air Sex Championships: Austin "


Mickey Mouse Man at Air Sex Championships: Austin
Mary Sledd

It doesn't take much imagination to guess what act this woman is simulating... and it's not stealing gasoline.

This is one of the competitors at the Air Sex World Championships event in Austin, Texas at the Alamo Drafthouse.







Sparks can fly during air sex.
Joel Kieth
 
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