Friday, August 31, 2007

bobby labonte

In 2000, Ricky Rudd joined Robert Yates Racing as the full-time driver of the #28 Texaco Havoline Ford. Rudd had signed on with Yates after a six-year stint as a car owner and driver in the NASCAR Cup Series and was eager to make his debut with his new team. Due to a pole win in 1999, Rudd was eligible for the 2000 Budweiser Shootout at Daytona International Speedway which was a 25-lap exhibition race for pole position winners from the previous season.


Rudd’s new teammate, Dale Jarrett began the shootout near the rear of the 15-car race but after ten laps when the rest of the field chose to pit, Jarrett decided to stay out on the track along with Bobby Labonte. Once the pit stops had cycled through, Rudd was in second while Jarrett was behind him in third as Sterling Marlin was the race leader. With two laps remaining, Jarrett caught up to Rudd along the back straightaway and as the duo began to exit Turn four, Jeff Gordon ran the high line to pass them. Jarrett was able to catch Gordon for the win, but the finish wasn’t as rewarding for Rudd.

Marlin and Labonte tapped into each other as they raced to the checkered flag and as they touched Labonte got loose and spun sideways in front of Rudd. Rudd careened off the wall coming out of Turn four and ended up flipping over onto his roof, sliding for about 600 feet before coming to a stop just short of the start/finish line.

"Coming off turn four, I couldn’t tell exactly what happened but I knew that somebody started checking up," explained Rudd of the events that led to his crash. "The guys in front of me got three-wide and I was back in fourth place at the time as we were all coming around to the finish. I started to move up into a hole in front of me and next thing I knew I was upside down."

After the #28 Texaco Havoline Ford came to a stop, Rudd was able to climb out of the car and was uninjured.

Memorable Moments:

661st Career Start; Rudd’s last career start as a NASCAR Cup Series car owner

The NAPA 500 on November 21, 1999 at Atlanta Motor Speedway Drove the #10 Tide Ford owned by Rudd Performance Motorsports for the final time Rudd started the race from 15th and finished in seventh Completed all 325 laps at the 1.5-mile speedway Won a total of $61,955

2000: Rudd joins Robert Yates Racing

Became the driver of the #28 Texaco Havoline Ford Recorded one win in 2000 in the Gatorade Twin 125 Qualifiers for the Daytona 500 Rudd also finished fifth in the final NASCAR Cup Series driver championship standings for the season

700th Career Start:

The Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 on March 18, 2001 at Darlington Raceway Drove the #28 Texaco Havoline Ford for Robert Yates Racing Started the race from 10th and finished in eighth Completed all 293 laps Won a total of $71,187 Listed as sixth in the NASCAR Cup Series driver point standings following the race

Thursday, August 30, 2007

DVD that can Store upto 1TB Data?

Even as the world is hard put to decide whether it's HD-DVD or Blu-ray coming next, a Jerusalem-based company called Mempile has reportedly introduced an optical disc about as thick as a standard DVD or slightly thicker, which it claims can store up to 1TB or 1,000GB of data.

What's more, the company claims that once the transition to blue lasers is done, the optical disc will be able to store up to 5TB of data.
Mempile's 1TB DVD sports 200 distinct layers, each offering 5GB of storage space. Unlike in regular DVDs, the layers in this DVD are not stuck together or stacked physically. Mempile claims the discs are made from a polymer variant called polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), which is a mixture of Perspex, Lucite, and Plexiglass. Incidentally, the discs derive their Yellow color from this compound.

Also unlike typical DVDs wherein 2 dimensions are used to store data, Mempile claims it's DVDs use 3 dimensions in the polymer to store data. Mempile's new technology is currently restricted to WORM or write once, read many. However, the company intends to make read/write drives available in future.

While Mempile's concept is not entirely new, the company claims it's prototypes are already reaching 600GB to 800GB of storage, with 1TB storage expected soon.

However, from an industry perspective, Mempile needs to get it's discs/drives to market soon enough for these not to be overtaken by heavyweight rivals -- HD DVD and Blu-ray...

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Nelson Mandela statue unveiled in Parliament Square


August 29, 2007

A statue of former South African leader Nelson Mandela has been unveiled in a ceremony attended by UK premier Gordon Brown and the Lord Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone in Parliament Square.

In a speech Gordon Brown, who had private "catch up" talks with Mr Mandela on Tuesday, paid tribute to the 89-year-old, calling him the "greatest and most courageous leader of our generation".

The statue was unveiled and Mandela was assisted to a podium by Mr Brown and others, where he made a speech. Addressing Mr Brown, Mandela said he wished him "strength and great wisdom for your term of office".

He went on to say it was an honour to have a statue in Parliament Square alongside Winston Churchill and Benjamin Disraeli, and he hoped it would "symbolise all those who have resisted oppression, especially in my country".

Mandela then annnounced that his international AIDS campaign, called "46664" after his prison number during his 25-year incarceration in South Africa, was to hold a concert in Hyde Park, London, on 27 June 2008, in honour of his 90th birthday. He declared he would be returning to England to see it. Mr Mandela ended his speech with "I thank you" before a musical gospel-style group performed.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

25 August 2007 Hyderabad bombings


Two bombs exploded almost at the same time on 25 August 2007 in Hyderabad, capital of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The first bomb exploded in Lumbini Amusement Park at 19:45 hrs IST. The second bomb exploded five minutes later at 19:50 in Gokul Chat Bhandar, a popular eatery about 5 kilometres (3 mi) away. At least 44 people were reported to have died in the two bombings.[1] Two more bombs were defused in other parts of the city. According to initial reports, the banned Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami militant outfit of Bangladesh is suspected for the serial blasts.

Victims

Among the victims were seven students from 'Amritwahini' college at Sangamner in Ahmednagar District in Maharashtra. A group of 45 students, who were visiting Hyderabad on a routine industrial tour, were enjoying the show at Lumbini Park Laserium when the auditorium was struck by the devastating explosion. The group was accompanied by four faculty members. [3] Bodies of five of the students arrived at the Pune airport on 26 August afternoon and was received at the airport by a large crowd.

Suspected perpetrators

Central security agencies said that the banned Harkat-ul-Jehadi Islami (Huji) militant outfit from Bangladesh was possibly behind the twin blasts. It was suspected that Shahid and Bilal, who were the masterminds of the Mecca masjid blast were also behind Saturday's explosion. Shahid is reported to be in Karachi and is instrumental in recruiting people for arms training from Hyderabad. Shahid Ilyas Bilal, who is also linked to the Mecca Masjid attacks is a high-ranking Lashkar-e-Taiba operative who has lately been working with HuJi.[7][8]

The government of Andhra Pradesh blamed terrorist groups based in Bangladesh and Pakistan for the two blasts. After an emergency meeting of the state cabinet, Chief Minister Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy told reporters that "the available information points to the involvement of international terrorist organisations in Bangladesh and Pakistan".[9]

Police Commissioner Balwinder Singh told PTI that 42 people died and 54 were injured in the attacks. As investigators searched for clues, an expert said the explosives used in yesterday's blasts and the Mecca Masjid attack were different. "In the Mecca Masjid blasts, it was a RDX and TNT mixture...here it is entirely different (as some) ammonium nitrate-based chemical (was used)," said T Suresh, chief scientific officer of the CLUES bomb detection squad.[9]

On August 26, Foreign Affairs Adviser of Bangladesh Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury, rejected the claim of Bangladesh link with these bombings, describing them as 'baseless'[10].

Unexploded bombs

A day after the blasts, police discovered 19 unexploded bombs — most fitted with timers and placed in plastic bags — at bus stops, by cinemas, road junctions and pedestrian bridges and near a public water fountain across Hyderabad. [11]

Reactions

Such vicious attacks prove that cities like Hyderabad and Bangalore, emerging icons of a vibrant nation, are firmly in the cross-hairs of terror groups which have made India a country with perhaps the highest number of civilian victims of terror (leaving aside war-torn countries like Iraq). – Times of India.[8]

President Pratibha Patil, Vice President Hamid Ansari and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh condemned the Hyderabad blasts and expressed shock over the loss of innocent lives. [12]

In the light of the twin bomb blasts in Hyderabad, eminent forensic scientist P. Chandra Sekharan has urged the Government of India to establish a “National Explosives Control Bureau (NECB)” on the lines of the Narcotics Control Bureau.[13]

India has since 2004 lost more lives to terrorist incidents than all of North America, South America, Central America, Europe and Eurasia put together. [14]

Many in India’s strategic community fear that the bombings in Hyderabad — the first major strike directed at non-Muslim civilians since the Mumbai serial bombings of 2006 — mean that Islamist terror groups have broken their shackles. They have little doubt that General Musharraf’s domestic travails have strengthened pro-jihad hawks in Pakistan — a trend reflected in the unusually high level of infiltration across the Line of Control this summer. – Editorial in The Hindu.

Monday, August 20, 2007

BioShock PC Demo Due Tonight


2K is releasing a BioShock demo for PC owners tonight at 7pm EST. Which means, if you want to get all technical, it's tomorrow for us UK residents, with the demo available at midnight over here.

If you're a real eager beaver you can get a pre-download over on Fileplanet. Otherwise, keep your eyes on Cult of the Rapture, BioShock's official site, for download locations.

If the 360 BioShock demo that was released last week is anything to go by, however, don't expect the PC demo to download too quickly. High levels of demand led to some lengthy download times.

You can find out more about BioShock on SPOnG's dedicated game page, and read our interview with developer Irrational's head, Ken Levine

Friday, August 17, 2007

First daughter Jenna gets engaged


Jenna Bush, one of President Bush's twin daughters, is engaged to her longtime boyfriend, Henry Hager, the White House announced Thursday.

Asked if the two were getting married in the Rose Garden, Sally McDonough, press secretary for first lady Laura Bush, replied: "They have not set any details, date or place।"

Jenna Bush, 25, and Hager, 29, were engaged in Maine on Wednesday, she said। They have been dating for several years.

Hager's father, John Hager, is chairman of the Republican Party in Virginia.

No doubt: Stefani wants more kids

Gwen Stefani says she wants more children -- but not while she's on tour and not until she's done another No Doubt record।

Her 1-year-old son, Kingston, has been traveling with the 37-year-old singer on her "The Sweet Escape" tour।

"He's just getting into music। He does the whole head-bouncing thing," Stefani tells InStyle in its September issue, on newsstands today.

"Obviously I'm in a race to have another, but I don't want to do it while on tour," Stefani says. "And I want to do another No Doubt record."

Rapper charged with BlackBerry assault

Foxy Brown's temper seems to have gotten her in trouble again: The 27-year-old rapper, who is on probation for attacking two manicurists at a nail salon in 2004, has been charged with assault and possession of a weapon -- her cell phone -- for allegedly hitting a neighbor with her BlackBerry.

A year older

Actor Robert DeNiro is 64. Singer Belinda Carlisle is 49. Actor Sean Penn is 47. Guitarist Gilby Clarke (Guns N' Roses) is 45. Singer Donnie Wahlberg is 38.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Elvis devotees light up Graceland

Some 75,000 people have taken over Elvis Presley Boulevard, which is a six-lane highway, waiting to enter Graceland and file past the late star's grave.

It's an amazing sight. People are camping out on the boulevard. They've got their picnic hampers, tables and chairs, bottles of beer, and a lot of them have bought their own home-made pictures of Elvis, as well as floral tributes.

And they've brought little tea lights, spelling out "Elvis". It's the glow of candlelight which is the most special thing. It's very surreal to see this busy boulevard taken over by so many Elvis fans.

There is a really happy atmosphere. People know they're going to have to queue for hours, but nobody seems to be bothered. They are hanging out with other Elvis fans and having a good time, while his music plays all the time in the background.

Everywhere you turn there are Elvis impersonators, in their jumpsuits and sporting sideburns.

Other fans are stopping and asking to have their photographs taken with them - "Mr Elvis, can I have my photo taken with you?"

The first fans went through the gates at about 2030 local time (0230 BST) and it will take until 0500 or 0600 (1100 or 1200 BST) for all the fans to go through - they say everyone who turns up will get the chance to look at the burial site.

The fans move along in single file, all holding a candle - it's the only time fans are allowed to walk up to the Graceland mansion. If you go on a tour, they bring you up on a shuttle bus.

Seasoned pros

The opening ceremony was cut short as it is the middle of a massive heatwave and the organisers were concerned about people queuing.

Some of the fans have been many times before - seasoned pros who have come every year for 10 or 15 years.

For many it's the first time. One British fan I spoke to is only 29, so wasn't even born when Elvis died.

I asked him why he became a fan, and he said he heard Elvis on the radio one day and it completely grabbed his heart, so he started listening to his music and became hooked.

He's not a stereotypical "anorak" - he's a successful guy who runs his own business. But he just loves Elvis. He's had a fantastic time.

He got very emotional on the tour of Graceland, feeling the presence of Elvis in every single room.

There is a huge British contingent, there must be five or six companies bringing coach loads here. The Brits must be the biggest contingent by far. I think that's always been the case, they've always been among the most fanatical fans.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Peru earthquake toll rises


A massive 7.9-magnitude earthquake rocked Peru today, reportedly killing at least 72 people and prompting evacuations in Peruvian and Colombian coastal cities amid fears of a tsunami.

More than 680 people were also injured, according to a provisional count released by Carlos Cordova, according to government officials.

The earthquake, which struck off the coast of central Peru, was felt as far as neighbouring Ecuador and temporarily triggered a tsunami warning for South America's Pacific coast.

At least 15 people died and more than 150 were injured as buildings collapsed in the southern Peruvian coastal cities of Ica and Pisco, local media reported.

Many of the dead appeared to have been worshippers inside Ica's Senor de Luren church, which collapsed during the earthquake, media reported.
But President Alan Garcia said the earthquake did not appear to have caused catastrophic damage.

"Thank you God Almighty, these terrible quakes did not cause a high death toll like in other years," he said in a nationally televised address. He did not give a death toll, but said there were at least 70 confirmed injured.

Tsunami warning cancelled

The quake, which measured 7.9 on the moment magnitude scale, struck just offshore 148 kilometeres south-southeast of Lima at a depth of
40 kilometeres at 2341 GMT (0941 AEST Thursday) according to the US Geological Survey.

A 5.9 magnitude earthquake struck about hour and 20 minutes later near the same location and at a depth of 10 kilometeres .

Peru's Seismology Institute measured the first quake at 7.7 on the Richter scale.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre had issued a tsunami warning and watch for 11 Latin American countries but cancelled the alerts about an hour later.

The Colombian government ordered evacuations in the port cities of Tumaco and Buenaventura and the coastal town of Bahia Solano, while Peruvian authorities told residents of La Punta district to leave their homes.
Peruvian Health Minister Carlos Vallejo put hospitals and health centres on high alert.

Homes collapsed

An Associated Press photographer said that homes had collapsed in the centre of Lima and that many people had fled into the streets for safety. The capital shook for more than a minute.

"There was a pretty big, intense, long-wave earthquake, I felt it even though I was in a taxi," a woman named Erica in Lima told APTN television.

"The car was shaking, and you could see all the buildings here in San Isidro and the glass shaking.

"People were running, everyone was grabbing their cell phones. They wanted to call home and they couldn't. No one could get through to my line either."

Firefighters quoted in radio reports said that lamp posts collapsed and windows shattered in Lima but did not specify if there were any injuries.

Hundreds of workers were evacuated from Lima office buildings after the quake struck and remained outside, fearing aftershocks.

Callers to Radioprogramas, Peru's main news radio station, said parts of several cities in southern Peru had been hit with blackouts. Callers reported homes in poor neighbourhoods in Chincha and Cerro Azul had collapsed.

The quake also knocked out telephone service and mobile phone service in the capital.

Firefighters were called to put out a fire in a shopping centre. State doctors called off a national strike that began on Wednesday to handle the emergency.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Iran mocks US: 'Wise' leaders needed



US President George W. Bush's policies have harmed Washington's global image and the country needs "wise" leaders to regain its lost credibility, Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman said Saturday.

Mohammad Ali Hosseini said Bush's policies have isolated him both internationally and at home, citing the Republican Party's losses in Congress last November as proof of Bush's declining popularity.

"Instability in Iraq is the result of wrong policies and incorrect decisions of the US government. This illogical approach of the US government is even disliked by the American people," Iran's official news agency, IRNA, quoted Hosseini as saying.

"The United States needs wise leaders to regain its lost image," Hosseini was quoted as saying.

Hosseini's comments were in response to Bush, who on Thursday called Teheran a "destabilizing influence in the Middle East." The US leader also warned Iran to stop exporting sophisticated explosive devices into Iraq that the US alleges are used in attacks on American troops or "there will be consequences."

Hosseini did not address the US allegations but said Iran will continue to support the process of government building in Iraq and cooperate with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Talk shows

"The Oprah Winfrey Show" (9 a.m., Channel 7) Musicians Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood. (R)

"The View" (10 a.m., Channel 7) Guest co-host Joan Rivers; actress Anne Hathaway, actor Cameron Mathison; musician Chris Kirkpatrick. (R)

"Larry King Live" (8 p.m., CNN) Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).

"The Daily Show With Jon Stewart" (10 p.m., Comedy Central) Author Tal Ben- Shahar.

"The Colbert Report" (10:30 p.m., Comedy Central) Filmmaker Judd Apatow.

"Late Show With David Letterman" (10:35 p.m., Channel 2) Actor Bruce Willis; basketball player Tony Parker. (R)

"The Tonight Show With Jay Leno" (10:35 p.m., Channel 5) Actor David Duchovny; sportscaster Tiki Barber; comedian Nick Thune.

"Charlie Rose" (11 p.m., Channel 20) Sen. Joe Biden (R-Del.).

"Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson" (11:35 p.m., Channel 2) Actress Pamela Anderson; magician Augie March; comedian Avi Liberman; musician Nellie McKay.

"Late Night With Conan O'Brien" (11:35 p.m., Channel 5) Actor Cuba Gooding Jr.; world traveler Bruce Parry.

"Jimmy Kimmel Live" (12:05 a.m., Channel 7) Actor Paul Rudd; actor Michael Cera; music group Public Enemy.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Musharraf to impose emergency: Pak media


Media reports from Pakistan say the government has finalised a plan to impose emergency in the country.

Geo TV, a private news channel, reports President General Pervez Musharraf has decided to declare emergency for a month and could extended it for three months.

Musharraf, at a meeting of his top aides on Wednesday, reviewed the political situation in the country and the options he had to remain in power.

Tariq Azim, Minister of State for Information, told Geo TV in an interview that emergency could not be ruled out. "Both internal and external threats are such that you cannot rule out anything. At the moment there is no emergency. We have said that options are available with the government," Azim said.

''I cannot say that it will be tonight, tomorrow or later. We hope that it does not happen. But we are going through difficult circumstances so the possibility of an emergency cannot be ruled out,'' he told The Associated Press.

Geo TV reports Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, president of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League (Q), told women MPs at a reception that the government is likely to declare emergency.

Chaudhury Amir Hussain, Speaker of the National Assembly, was a guest at the reception and was reportedly consulted on how emergency could get the National Assembly’s approval.

Pakistan’s Attorney General Malik Qayyum told CNN-IBN the government would have consulted him if it planned to impose emergency and the matter had not been discussed when he met Musharraf in the morning.

Qayyum said in “normal circumstances” he would have been in the know-how of these developments.

Rumours across Pakistan

Wajahat Khan, a senior journalist with the Dawn newspaper, said Musharraf’s last-minute decision to not attend a traditional council (jirga) of Afghan and Pakistani leaders on Wednesday had sparked rumours that the government was about to declare emergency.

Black Vault: John Greenewald Has A UFO Obsession


Black Vault owner John Greenewald Jr. has been digging for the truth about extraterrestrials since he was a child. His online site the "Black Vault" may be the largest UFO information base in the world.

Motivated by his curiosity and empowered by the Freedom of Information Act, John Greenewald Jr. has assembled what may very well be the most comprehensive collection of UFO documents ever.

Over the past decade, John Greenewald Jr. has gathered half a million UFO-related government documents. And it's all online for anyone to see.

The Black Vault is currently down, however. Presumably, the Black Vault is down due to a massive influx of traffic generated from the notoriety, or maybe it was simply aliens, or a government conspiracy to hide the truth.

"I've learned specifically that the U.S. government and military cover up a lot," says Greenewald, according to Yahoo news. "It doesn't matter what subject you're dealing with, it doesn't matter what time frame you're dealing with."

The biggest cover-up of all, Greenewald says, is Area 51 in Nevada - the center of many UFO conspiracy theories. For years the government denied its very existence. It still doesn't appear on any maps. But Greenewald has a letter in his Black Vault from the Department of Energy acknowledging that Area 51 was annexed by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission in 1958, and that the area is currently part of Nellis Air Force Base.

As far as America's most famous UFO legend, the alleged crash of a flying saucer in the desert near Roswell, New Mexico, Greenewald says the government has changed its story many times.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Conflicting reports on Dawood Ibrahim


Conflicting reports on the detention of global terrorist Dawood Ibrahim in Pakistan kept rumour mills busy today but security agencies in both India and across the border expressed surprise over the claims.

Some Indian television channels claimed that Dawood, wanted in the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts case, had been wounded in a shootout in Karachi while others reported that the underworld don had been detained in Quetta along with his aides Tiger Memon and Chhota Shakeel.

No security official or hospital in Karachi had any inkling of any shootout involving Dawood, who was designated as a global terrorist by the US recently.

"Is he in Karachi," asked a top security official in Karachi, who dismissed the reports as "rumours".

No official was willing to say anything on record.

Another official in Karachi pointed out that with President Pervez Musharraf being in town, it was hard to believe that a shootout had taken place at a four-star hotel in the port city's busiest areas.

Pakistan's former Test cricket captain Javed Miandad, whose son is married to Dawood's daughter, refused to comment on the reports.

India has been claiming that Pakistan's ISI has provided shelter to don, a contention vehemently denied by Islamabad.

Unlike Indian television channels, no Pakistani channel had any story about Dawood being detained or wounded.

Indian security agencies said they were verifying the reports regarding Dawood and there was no credible information with them to suggest that he has been taken into custody.

The US has already asked Pakistan to hand over Dawood and his aides for their alleged links to al Qaeda.

62 Years After Hiroshima


WASHINGTON, Aug 6 (OneWorld) - In the history of warfare, nuclear weapons have been used twice, and though it has been 62 years since an atomic bomb has been employed in a conflict, the threat of a nuclear attack remains as present as ever, say arms control advocates.

Both nuclear attacks targeted Japan during the closing days of World War II. On August 6, 1945 Hiroshima was destroyed by a single atomic bomb. Three days later, on August 9th, a second atomic weapon was dropped over Nagasaki.

This week marks the anniversary of these bombings.

Currently there are nine nuclear-weapons-wielding countries: the United States, Russia, UK, France, China, Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea. According to reports from the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, these countries maintain approximately 27,000 nuclear weapons, 12,000 of which are currently deployed.

Although most of the world's nations are party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), an international agreement forged in 1968 to limit the spread of nuclear weapons, four key states that have since developed nuclear arsenals are not: Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea.

The NPT obligates the nuclear weapons states that are parties to the treaty to engage in good-faith negotiations for nuclear disarmament. The International Court of Justice has interpreted this to mean that negotiations must be concluded ''leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects.''

However, in a deal finalized last week, the United States government agreed to transfer nuclear technology to India. Although India has assured the world community that the imported technology would be used only for non-military purposes, critics fear the agreement could result in the escalation of a nuclear arms race in a politically volatile region of the world.

Critics have described the U.S. acceptance of India's nuclear weapons program as amounting to ''a major concession'' for a country that has refused to join the NPT.

''As the world's only remaining superpower, the United States can lead the way" in promoting nuclear disarmament, David Krieger of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation said last week. ''[But] it has failed to do so.''

''It is perhaps the least talked about and most worrying irony of our time. The United States has a massive defense budget, but spends relatively little addressing the most immediate danger to humanity,'' Krieger said, referring nuclear weapons.

''U.S. nuclear policy undermines the security of its people,'' Krieger added. ''The more the U.S. relies on nuclear weapons, the more other countries will do so.''

The non-profit group Citizens for Global Solutions agrees. "We've told the world that we will reduce our stockpiles of nuclear weapons and not develop new ones. Doing our part will help us convince others to do theirs," the group said in a message to its 35,000 members and supporters last week, adding that U.S. leaders should work with other governments to "revitalize and strengthen" the NPT, which it called "outdated."

But as U.S. voters prepare to choose a new president next year, there are indications that George W. Bush's successor may stay the course set by the current U.S. president on nuclear weapons. Indeed, four Republican presidential candidates have so far been unwilling to take the nuclear weapons option off the table against Iran.

And Democratic presidential hopeful Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton recently objected to Senator Barack Obama's statement that the use of nuclear weapons in Afghanistan or Pakistan would be a "profound mistake."

"Presidents should be careful at all times in discussing the use and nonuse of nuclear weapons," Senator Clinton remarked.

Leonor Tomero from the Washington, DC-based Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation called Clinton's approach ''reckless.''

"The United States should not recklessly threaten to use nuclear weapons, particularly against states that do not have these weapons....There is currently no justification for lowering the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons," Tomero said.

This black stone monolith marks the hypocenter of the atomic bomb that destroyed Nagasaki.

This black stone monolith marks the hypocenter of the atomic bomb that destroyed
The blast, heat, fire and radiation from the first atomic bomb to hit Hiroshima killed an estimated 90,000 people immediately and 145,000 by the end of 1945. In Nagasaki, some 40,000 were killed immediately, with another 30,000 dying by the end of the year. In each instance the majority of those killed were civilians.

Sixty-two years later the effects of these nuclear explosions are still felt.

In Hiroshima in 1955, Sadako Sasaki, a 12-year-old girl, was diagnosed with leukemia 10 years after being exposed to radiation from the nuclear attack. Sadako's intimate knowledge of the cost of war and nuclear attack motivated her to try and spread peace, say those who remember her efforts today.

Sadako began folding origami paper cranes after a friend reminded her of a legend: if one folds 1,000 cranes, one will live to be very old.

Sadako was only able to fold 644 cranes before succumbing to her illness, each one crafted with the words: "I will write peace on your wings and you will fly all over the world."

Inspired by the young girl's message of hope, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation and La Casa de Maria dedicated a peace garden in Santa Barbara, California to Sadako in 1995.

This year, on August 9, these organizations will celebrate their thirteenth annual Sadako Peace Day, and they have invited individuals to submit their own messages for peace to be sent to the White House.

In a statement commemorating the world's only nuclear attacks to date, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation's David Krieger said: "The anniversaries of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are reminders of the continued peril that humanity faces. This peril is far too serious to be left only in the hands of government leaders."

"Citizens must demand more of their governments," he added. "Their very lives and those of their children could depend upon ending the delusions that nuclear weapons protect us and that nuclear double standards will hold indefinitely."

Monday, August 6, 2007

`The Company': a chess game in a spook house


BEVERLY HILLS - Early in "The Company," TNT's six-hour miniseries about the Central Intelligence Agency during the Cold War, young CIA operative Jack McAuliffe marvels at an older spy's explanation of how to handle a defector who might be a double agent.

"It's a delicate game, isn't it?" asks McAuliffe, played by Chris O'Donnell.

"More than you know," replies super spook Harvey Torriti (Alfred Molina) in a tone that suggests the newly recruited agent may never understand the levels of the chess match between East and West from the end of World War II to the fall of the Soviet Union.

People on the brink

"It seemed like such a fascinating period in the amount of times we got to the brink of something awful and always pulled back, purely because everybody had the same weapons," says Molina, a child of the Cold War whose father fought on the communist side in the Spanish Civil War that preceded World War II.

Adds Molina: "I think there's an argument for people who get nostalgic about the Cold War. If everyone has such weapons, then does that mean no one's going to use it because they all know mutual destruction is assured?"

The audience for "The Company" - a dark, often engrossing and surprisingly suspenseful (since most will know how such key events as the Bay of Pigs turn out) film - is likely to split into two groups. There will be those who lived through the times and remember such
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flash points as the Hungarian revolt. Then there will be the young viewers, perhaps unaware of the history that is the underpinning of the film and the Robert Littell novel on which it's based. They may view this series as simply a ripping-good spy yarn not unlike the James Bond movies.

The intent of the filmmakers - screenwriter Ken Nolan ("Black Hawk Down") and director Mikael Salomon ("Band of Brothers") - is to enter the hall of mirrors that is espionage, an often lethal crazy house of disinformation, betrayal and paranoia. At the same time, as O'Donnell ("Grey's Anatomy") suggests, the film aims to shed light on the men (and it was almost all men at the time) who made "personal sacrifices for what they believed in" - only to find themselves trapped in moral ambiguity.

Patriotic and extraordinarily brave, the men on both sides of the game ended up as mere pawns for such ideological warriors as CIA heads Allen Dulles and William Colby on one hand and KGB bosses Yuri Andropov and Vladimir Putin on the other. (All of the real-life figures make appearances either as fully drawn characters or in composite.)

"The Company" (which begins at 8 tonight, TNT) comes along just after a theatrical film to which it will almost be compared: last December's "The Good Shepherd." Directed by Robert DeNiro and starring Matt Dillon, "The Good Shepherd" shares much of the time frame and some of the same real-life characters.

Interestingly, one of the miniseries' executive producers - John Calley - worked on "Shepherd" when he was chairman and CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment but eventually rejected that film because the story and script were "rather lugubrious." (Calley was right.)

"It turned out to be a blessing, because I think all of us involved in" the miniseries "are pleased the story could be done in the density of a six-hour format rather than two hours," Calley says.

"The Company" does, in fact, have a sweep and energy that is lacking in "Shepherd." It is richly produced with Puerto Rico standing in for Cuba in the Bay of Pigs sequences and Budapest, Hungary, being used for the scenes in Berlin and, of course, those involving the 1956 Hungarian uprising.

But its best moments are more intimate in scale and driven by some first-rate performances.

O'Donnell's low-key acting style, which has not served him well in some previous roles, is better suited to McAuliffe, who goes from committed young recruit to disillusioned veteran over the six hours. Molina is superb as Torriti, a gruff, blue-collar outsider in the agency's Ivy League boys' club. Rory Cochrane - best-known as Speedle in the early days of "CSI: Miami" - is effective as Yevgeny Tsipin, a Yale classmate of McAuliffe who becomes a KGB operative.

Best of all, though, there's an almost-recognizable Michael Keaton ("Batman") as James "Mother" Angleton, the most controversial and complex spy in American history.

"I always write a back story for my character, and this, for me, was a tad more difficult. While you might think it would be easier because there is an actual back story, I found it more difficult because I had to stay somewhat true to him," Keaton says.

"He was a person who was massively complex."

Angleton, who ran the CIA's black-ops and counterespionage operations for decades, was - depending on which historical interpretation you favor - a genius, a misguided patriot or a paranoid madman. That could give an actor too much, or too little, to work with, but Keaton manages to produce a creepy, utterly engrossing and very nuanced performance.

There are elements to "The Company" that are problematic, particularly in the area of historical veracity.

A few inconsistencies

Molina's Torriti, for example, is clearly the real-life William K. Harvey, the CIA's legendary Berlin station chief known as the Sorcerer. The name change seems to have no purpose. Kim Philby - the top operative for Britain's MI-6 who became the most infamous mole in Cold War history - is called Adrian Philby for no apparent reason. (Screenwriter Nolan says it was "one of the names" Philby used.) And some of the CIA's most egregious failings and flaws during the time are barely mentioned or not mentioned at all.

As a history lesson, "The Company" has some considerable shortcomings, but as television, it has few. It evokes an era worth revisiting, reconsiders a time that was an important chapter in our history and gives us a monumental performance by Keaton.

That makes "The Company" worth six hours of your time.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Gray whales winter amid Arctic ice


When scientists moored a couple of acoustic recorders in the Arctic Ocean northeast of Barrow in October 2003, they wanted to eavesdrop on the songs of bowhead, gray and other cetaceans as they feast on the polar ocean's summer bounty. When scientists moored a couple of acoustic recorders in the Arctic Ocean northeast of Barrow in October 2003, they wanted to eavesdrop on the songs of bowhead, gray and other cetaceans as they feast on the polar ocean's summer bounty.

And then, as darkness fell and the ocean froze, the whales would exit though the Bering Strait and the sea would go silent.

After all, the great whales can die if caught in thick ice - three gray whales trapped in ever shrinking leads near Barrow triggered an international rescue in the fall of 1988. At least one animal disappeared before a Russian ice-breaker plowed a path to open water.

But a few gray whales didn't get the memo.

Instead of joining 10,000 other Pacific grays on their 5,000-mile fall migration to wintering grounds in Mexico, the intelligent bottom-feeding invertebrate munchers spent the winter amid Alaska's Arctic pack.

In a stunning finding that raises questions about accelerating climate change and undermines assumptions about gray whale behavior, an autonomous acoustic device anchored 4,100 feet beneath the surface of the frozen Beaufort Sea recorded gray whale calls throughout the winter of 2003-04.

"Because this is the first-ever winter-long acoustic study, we cannot be certain that gray whales have not over-wintered in the Beaufort Sea in the past," the authors wrote in a report published in June in the journal Arctic. "However, a combination of increasing population size and habitat alteration associated with sea ice reduction and warming in the Alaskan Arctic may be responsible for the extra-seasonal gray whale occurrence near Barrow."

The discovery that gray whales overwintered in the Arctic was made possible by a revolution in marine field biology: tracking whales by sound with special underwater recorders.

Over the past decade, the devices helped identify and pinpoint a tiny population of North Pacific right whales in the eastern Bering Sea, offering hope for the most endangered large whales on the planet. Other devices have outed blue whales in the Gulf of Alaska. In an environment where mammals depend on sound, the technology promises to do for deep ocean exploration what satellite coverage offers on the surface.

* Whale Sounds
* Eavesdropping on North Pacific whales
* Ocean Acoustics at UW
* NOAA: gray whales
* Gray whale primer

This time, ocean acoustics specialist Kate Stafford and three collaborators placed three of the recorders in the ocean during fall of 2003 on different depths of the continental slope north of Alaska. In the spring, the scientists sent a signal to the devices to decouple but only two responded and floated to the surface.

In Gray whale calls recorded near Barrow, Alaska through the winter of 2003-04, Stafford and three co-authors (including long-time Pacific Ocean whale biologist and acoustic pioneer Sue Moore) reported that they collected more than 1,500 "pulses" from 202 calling bouts by the grays.

The device anchored at the 1,000 foot depth collected calls every week from Oct., 6 until it stopped working on Dec. 29. The deeper device continued to catch gray whales through May 12, though the number of calls fell off somewhat as time passed "suggesting that fewer whales were producing sounds at that time," the authors wrote.

No one knows for sure what gray whales eat northeast of Barrow, though the animals have been seen along the shelf break only about 25 miles out in summer. Nor do the researchers quite know what to make of the presence of the whales all winter.

"We had assumed that the wide extent and great thickness of sea ice in the western Beaufort Sea would exclude gray whales from this area in winter," they wrote.

Could they have been trapped, just like the whales in 1988? Satellite images showed enough plenty of leads - making the winter of 2003-04 one of the highest open-water winters on record. The scientists concluded the whales were not trapped.

Other explanations? Gray whales have been expanding in population, and seasonal migration has drifted later in the season in recent decades. Climate warming, changes in prey and foraging habits, and less sea ice might have contributed.

"Clearly, we need further long-term acoustic monitoring," they concluded. "We propose that autnomous acoustic monitoring become a standard practice."

Friday, August 3, 2007

Fila Brasileiro mastiffs kill man at Ving Rhames’ home


A man working for actor Ving Rhames was killed after what appeared to be a fatal dog attack.

Early Friday morning, August 3, 2007, an unidentified person called the Los Angeles Police Department to report a body found at the actor’s Brentwood, California, home. The victim may have been responsible for caring for the dogs. Authorities said the victim was found on the front lawn, and Lt. Ray Lombardo said at a news conference later that the man had many bites and scratches “which appear to be dog bites.” Rhames, 46, who appeared in the “Mission: Impossible” series of films, was not at home when the attack happened. He was quoted in an earlier Time magazine article stating that he had eight Fila Brasileiro mastiffs — the national dog of Brazil, also used by U.S. Marines in jungle warfare.

Priya Dutt meets Sonia, lobbies for brother


New Delhi: Congress MP and jailed actor Sanjay Dutt’s sister, Priya Dutt on Friday called upon Congress President Sonia Gandhi in the Capital to apprise her of the situation in her brother’s case. Minister of State for Home Prakash Jaiswal was reportedly part of the meeting too.

However, even as Priya met the Congress chief, the TADA court's ruling in the Sanjay Dutt case on Tuesday has exposed "divisions" in the ruling Congress with the party officially distancing itself from Parliamentary Affairs Minister P R Dasmunsi's views on the judgment.
Union ministers Kapil Sibal and P R Dasmunsi on Wednesday came out in support of Dutt saying that the Congress should stand by the family of late Congress leader Sunil Dutt.

The Dutt sentencing has the Congress in a fix with the party not wanting to take a position on the case, despite its close associations with the Dutt family.

”Not only will the film industry be greatly affected by his imprisonment, but Sanjay Dutt has lived an exemplary life in society, becoming a role model to the new generation and so he will always have my sympathies," Dasmunsi had said creating a furore.

Despite his support for Dutt creating a controversy, Dasmunsi has stood his ground declaring that the jailed actor was a "patriot" and asserted that he would "never disown" the contribution of the Dutt family.

Meanwhile, Sibal speaking separately and "not as a minister" said, "when the family is in trouble we should stand by the family." The noted lawyer said he was speaking without going into the merits of the case.

Dutt practices Gandhigiri in jail

For Sanjay Dutt, jail is now the best place to practice the famous Gandhigiri he propagated in his movie Lage Raho Munnabhai.

Dutt has apparently asked Pune’s Yerawada Jail authorities to grant him permission to join the Gandhi Vichar Pariksha course in jail.

This novel course teaches Gandhian ideology to the inmates and it is believed that Dutt wants to do the one-year course and possibly teach as well.

The voluntary programme, in which inmates attend lectures and are issued books on the Mahatma, is run by an NGO and was started four years back.

India, US unveil text of nuclear deal


New Delhi: The details of the Indo US Nuclear Deal were made public on Friday.

The agreement, which took two years to complete, spells out how a plan for the US to share nuclear technology with India will work, including thorny issues such as reprocessing rights and the creation of a fuel reserve for India.

According to the information from the Ministry of External Affairs, the Nuclear Agreement signed between India and United States will be valid for a period of 40-years which could subsequently be extended for 10-year periods.

Much to the delight of Indian diplomats, India's military nuclear facilities will not be bound by this deal. The operating agreement goes one step further, allowing India to reprocess spent fuel under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The text however makes no mention of nuclear testing on the 123 agreement. The agreement says, in case India conducts a nuclear test in response to a test by Pakistan or China, the United States will take into account the changed security environment.

United States will also help India develop a strategic fuel reserve, and would give special priority to fuel supplies in order to ensure uninterrupted operations of Indian reactors, MEA sources told CNN-IBN.

The US has also promised help in getting India a clearance from the Nuclear Suppliers Group, and negotiate permanent safeguards with IAEA.

The deal could open up 100 billion dollars-worth of opportunities for US businesses, according to the US Chamber of Commerce.

The pact outlines the safeguards India will have to put into place for the reactors that will benefit from the technology. It also addresses Pakistan's concerns, ruling out the use of any transferred nuclear material for nuclear explosive devices or for other military purposes.

The whole accord has to win the approval of the US Congress and the Indian Parliament. India first has to negotiate a safeguards agreement with the IAEA and gain the support of the 45-member Nuclear Suppliers Group.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Iraq war costs US and UK over 2,000 pounds a second


The war in Iraq is costing British and American taxpayers over 2,000 pounds a second.

The combined bill for the two countries was revealed yesterday as the conflict its 164th military victim, a British soldier, and four U.S. troops.

Washington's Congressional Budget Office estimated that as of June, up to 250 billion pounds had been spent on combat operations in Iraq.

The tally is snowballing at the rate of five billion pounds a month, which translates to nearly 2,000 pounds every second, The Daily Mail reports.

Britain's war spending is running at 80 million pounds a month, or 31 pounds a second.

Maintaining the British Army presence in Iraq is a major drain on national coffers, according to critics

With U.S. military commanders insisting they need more time to get results from President Bush's troop surge, Washington analysts claim the eventual cost of the conflict could be more than 500 billion pounds.

To put the spending in perspective, America recently pledged 18 million pounds to the United Nations' refugee agency - an amount that would fund military operations in Iraq for less than three hours.

The White House is now admitting for the first time its underestimation of the enemy in the increasingly unpopular and prolonged war.

Pentagon officials confirmed yesterday that the war is costing far more than expected.

The U.S. commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, hinted he would be recommending that extra troops sent to Iraq over the past few months stay until 2009.

U.S. Bridge Collapse Kills Seven; Death Toll May Rise


Federal, state and city investigators are probing the cause of a Minneapolis bridge collapse that sent dozens of vehicles into the Mississippi River and killed at least seven people. Officials expect the death toll to rise.

``Something went wrong, and we're going to get to the bottom of it,'' Minneapolis Fire Chief James Clack said during a televised news conference yesterday. Nine people were confirmed dead late yesterday, with 60 injured and 20 missing, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune newspaper reported without saying where it got the information.

The I-35W bridge, an eight-lane structure near the University of Minnesota and the Metrodome, buckled during the early evening rush hour. The cause was unknown. The bridge was undergoing repairs at the time, Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty said during a briefing.

At least seven people were killed, and the death toll is expected to rise, Clack said. Hundreds of rescue teams, including divers, searched the river, he said. The operation was called off shortly before midnight.

``We have concerns that this will be a very tragic night when this is over,'' Mayor R.T. Rybak said yesterday.

The bridge collapsed atop a freight train that was running on tracks along the river, according to Cable News Network. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said there were no indications terrorism played a role in the collapse.

Fifty Vehicles

Survivors were brought to the riverbank and transported to area hospitals, Minnesota State Patrol spokesman Steve Johnson said. Clack said there were an estimated 50 vehicles on the bridge when three of its four sections gave way. He didn't have an estimate for the number of vehicles that were submerged.

All except one of the construction workers were accounted for, Police Chief Tim Dolan said during a news conference.

The bridge, built in 1967, was inspected in 2005 and 2006 and no structural defects were found, Pawlenty said. MSNBC, citing the Minnesota Department of Transportation, said 200,000 vehicles crossed daily.

A March 2001 study by the state's transportation agency found that approach spans ``have exhibited several fatigue problems, primarily due to unanticipated out-of-plane distortion of the girders. Concern about fatigue cracking in the deck truss is heightened by a lack of redundancy in the main truss system.''

The agency recommended that the deck be replaced by 2020 or beyond, Pawlenty said. Several projects were under way on the structure, including concrete replacement, guardrail and lighting repairs and work on the joints, he said.

Low Rumble

South Minneapolis resident Xavier Sose said he was standing in the doorway on his balcony yesterday, when he heard and felt a low rumble. He looked toward the bridge and saw two piles of dust shoot out at either end.

``The next thing you know, the entire center section of the bridge just vanished,'' he said in a phone interview. ``Cars were sliding down and everything was covered in dust.''

A school bus carrying about 60 children was on the bridge. As many as 10 were brought to hospitals and the rest released to their families, Ted Canova of the American Red Cross said. He put out a call for blood donors and financial donations.

The Hennepin County Medical Center received one drowning victim, six others with serious injuries and 22 more with non- critical injuries, Joseph Clinton, chief of emergency medicine, said in a televised news conference.

Four patients had undergone surgery as of 9:45 p.m. local time yesterday for abdominal and head injuries, Clinton said.

``It looks like the scene at the bridge is largely a recovery operation at this time,'' he said.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Law of the land differs for different communities?


The sentencing of actor Sanjay Dutt to six years imprisonment in the 1993 Mumbai bombings on Tuesday brought to an end one of the world's longest terror trials during which 12 people were sent to the gallows and 20 got life imprisonment.

It was 14 years and four months ago on March 12, 1993, when a string of powerful blasts killed 257 people in Mumbai and injured hundreds.

Many believe that the blasts were a conspiracy by Mumbai's so-called Muslims. But what of the so-called Hindu riots before the blasts in which 900 people died?

As the 1993 blast accused are punished, riot-accused from all over India are often acquitted or not charged at all.

That was the issue discussed on CNN-IBN show Face The Nation: Does the law discriminate between riot and blast accused?

To debate the question, on the panel were social activist and Secretary of Citizens for Justice and Peace Teesta Setalvad, Maharashtra’s Additional Director General of Police Arup Patnaik (he was the deputy commissioner in Bandra when the riots took place in 1992), senior Supreme Court lawyer, Kamini Jaiswal and columnist and member of BJP Sheshadri Chari. The discussion was moderated by Sagarika Ghose.

Blasts vs riots

What is the difference between the riots and the blasts in Mumbai in ’92-’93? Aren’t riots also an act of terror?

“No, riots are not acts of terror. Terrorism is a very definitive. It is a conspiracy against a nation and people. Riots are subject to cause and action theories. Here the TADA court judge has ear-marked why he has punished the people concerned,” said Sheshadri Chari.

Disagreeing with the argument, Teesta Setalvad said that Chari should read the Srikrishna Commission report properly.

“Justice Srikrishna says that the serial blasts were a reaction to the totality of Ayodhya and Mumbai. The Shiv Sena, led by Bal Thakeray, along with Madhukar Sarpotdar, Gopinath Munde and Ram Nayak functioned with the impunity of the street and Sudhakar Rao Nayak’s Congress government turned the other way. The riots were acts of mob terror and the blasts were acts of bomb terror. There is no difference between the two but the law treats it differently,” Setalvad said.

School start age 'should be six'


The age at which pupils start school should be raised to six or seven, a teachers' association suggests.

The Professional Association of Teachers (PAT) says many who begin formal schooling aged just four are not ready for an academic curriculum.

Deborah Lawson from PAT said it was vital that children should have more freedom to play in nurseries without being told what to do by adults.

The government said primary schools followed an age-appropriate curriculum.

Speaking at the PAT annual conference, in Harrogate, Ms Lawson said: "There is evidence that by starting school earlier, our children are not better off than those children who are starting later.

"As practitioners and parents we have all seen children who really were not ready to start school."

Time and space

She said toddlers developed social and language skills by playing in a way that was natural to them.

"We are not giving children sufficient time and space to learn for themselves - child initiated play activities.


The formal school starting age of five has served children well for decades
Department for Children, Schools and Families

"When they are playing outdoors, we talk about children letting off steam," she said.

"Actually they learn about the world around them by playing in the street or the park. They are learning those life skills that they need."

But some affluent parents want to know how their children are developing and request detailed reports from nursery staff, she said.

"Some parents like the worksheets because they are solid evidence that their child is progressing. They really want to see it," she said.

"Sometimes parents say 'Little Johnny is bringing back flash cards and my Billy isn't'. Actually, Billy isn't quite ready for it.

"When our children are going to be pressured academically and tested academically to destruction, why should we be putting that pressure on them?"

Age-appropriate curriculum

But a spokesman for the Department for Children, Schools and Families said: "The formal school starting age of five has served children well for decades and standards in our primary schools have never been higher.

"All the evidence - key stage results, international comparisons and Ofsted reports - make this clear.

"We want all children to make progress in literacy and numeracy at an early age, as these skills are critical to their ability to get the most out of learning later on.

"The first years of schooling focus on play-based activities in addition to formal learning - the curriculum is age-appropriate and we actively support teachers to adapt their teaching to the needs of children."

Jailed Bollywood star 'in tears'


Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt has spent a troubled first night in a Mumbai jail, according to a fellow prison inmate.

The prisoner, who said that he sleeps near Dutt's cell, told a prison visitor interviewed by the BBC's Zubair Ahmed that the actor is often in tears.

He said that Dutt is too hot in his cell, has not been eating and finds his bed and prison clothes uncomfortable.

Dutt was jailed for six years on Tuesday for buying weapons from bombers who attacked Mumbai (Bombay) in 1993.

The fellow convict said that Dutt appeared not to enjoy food served to him by the prison authorities, which consisted of daal, chapattis, rice and vegetables.

The actor was reported only to have eaten when the inmate who shares a cell with him offered him two apples. The star told fellow inmates to pray for him.

Dutt's first night in prison has received saturation coverage in the Indian media which have gone into great detail about the conditions he faces in Cell Number One in Mumbai's Arthur Road Jail.

Clothes 'too rough'

Our correspondent says that the cell has three rooms - with an attached toilet and shower - as well as a hall.

Scene of Mumbai blast, 1993
Crowded Mumbai places were targeted in the attacks

Dutt's neighbour in the adjoining cell is his friend, Yousuf Nullwalla, who was also convicted along with him in the 1993 bombings case.

Another inmate told the BBC that Dutt had been summoned by the jail superintendent who asked him if he was comfortable.

The star was wearing a white striped jail uniform but was in some discomfort, complaining that the cloth was too rough.

The authorities agreed to allow him access to medicine and cigarettes.

That concession follows an unusual conversation between the trial judge PD Kode and the Bollywood star after he was sentenced on Tuesday.

Dutt told the judge that he was "more than family for all of us".

The judge replied by saying that Dutt had "shot for movies, doing remarkably well in the film line".

He urged Dutt not to be sentimental, and to "be calm and quiet".

Gangster roles

The star's lawyers plan to appeal against his sentence. They argued on Tuesday that he should remain free on bail because of good behaviour, but the judge ruled against leniency.

Dutt, 48, is the most high-profile of 100 people convicted in connection with the blasts which killed 257 people.

The actor was cleared of conspiracy, but found guilty of illegally possessing a rifle and a pistol.

Dutt found fame playing gangsters and anti-heroes. His trial generated huge interest among Bollywood fans across India.

The son of a Hindu father and Muslim mother, he said the weapons were necessary in order to defend his family during Hindu-Muslim rioting of 1993, which followed the destruction by Hindu zealots of the Babri mosque in Ayodhya.

The Mumbai blasts were allegedly carried out by Mumbai's Muslim-dominated underworld in retaliation for the riots in which most of those killed were Muslim.

Coimbatore blasts case verdict

Nine years after the 1998 Coimbatore serial blasts, a sessions court today (August 1) began delivering the verdict on the 166 accused. Syed Ahmed Basha, founder of the Al-Umma and the main accused has been found guilty along with Mohammed Ansari, Tajuddin and Fazal.

Key accused Abdul Nasser Madhani, accused of conspiring with Basha, has been acquitted of all charges. Madhani is the Chairman of Kerala-based People's Democratic Party. Madhani's lawyer, Akbar Ali reflects his clients relief as he confirmed the exoneration, and said Madhani and him were very satisfied and grateful to the judiciary, media and all their well wishers.

A series of 19 blasts took place on February 14 1998, that claimed 58 lives and left over 167 injured. The sessions court is handing out the verdict to the 166 accused, a majority of whom are members are Al-Umma.

The main accused included the founder of Al Umma Syed Ahmed Basha who has been found guilty, its general secreatry Mohammed Ansari and Abdul Naseer Mandhani who has been acquitted. All the accused have been lodged in jails across Tamil Nadu for the past 9 years.

Acquittal leaves BJP unhappy

BJP Ravi Shankar Prasad, spokesperson for BJP, said that the BJP demands in light of the acquittal of Abdul Naseer Mandhani, accused in the '98 Coimbatore blasts case, every effort be made to file an appeal against the special court judgement acquitting him.

Even as the court pronouces the verdict in the 9-year old case, the memory of that fateful day has come back to haunt those who witnessed the blasts.

Says eye-witness R.S. Puram in Coimbatore, "The first blast killed 3 people, and a tempo was found parked here. As soon as I heard a blast, I came here and saw bodies and people were screaming. I took my auto towards the theatre and saw more bodies."

Meanwhile Khurshid, the mother of an accused in the case from Karunanidhi Nagar, told TIMES NOW her son was innocent.

"It's been 10 years since they took away our sons, for an accident that happenend somewhere else. They just caught my children and took them away. I have faith that they'll come back. I pray to Allah," she said.