16 June 2010

Meghalaya Rejects Reports of Violence Against Nepalese

meghalaya-map Shillong, Jun 16 : The Meghalaya government Wednesday joined the Gorkha Welfare Centre and the Khasi Students Union in rejecting Nepalese media reports of alleged communal violence against the Nepali community in the state.

Kathmandu-based media reports earlier claimed that at least 17 Nepali people lost their lives and thousands were forced to flee following attacks by miscreants in Meghalaya.

Four people were killed and several injured in firing by Assam police personnel at Langpih village on May 14, after a clash between tribal Khasis with Nepali nationals at a weekly market.

Langpih village, about 60 km from Guwahati in Assam and 140 km from Shillong, has been a bone of contention between Assam and Meghalaya. The area has often hit the headlines since the Assam government laid the cornerstone for a health centre there in July 2008.

The Meghalaya government, however, termed the media reports, which claimed that at least 17 Nepali people were killed, as untrue and sensationalist.

'I have heard only one person (Nepali speaking) was killed, which has already been reported in the local media,' Chief Minister Mukul Sangma told IANS, dismissing reports of 17 deaths.

'When nobody came forward to complain, how do I know who has left Shillong?' Sangma said, while reacting to a question on the 'quit notices' allegedly issued to Nepali settlers in Khasi-Jaintia dominated areas in the eastern part of Meghalaya by several NGOs.

Terming these media reports as 'sensationalist', Meghalaya Director General of Police S.B. Kakati admitted that a 70-year-old man was burnt alive and said that there were no records to show 17 Nepalese were killed.

'I am not surprised that some people are sensationalizing and trying to take mileage from it,' the DGP said.

The powerful Khasi Students Union (KSU), which spearheaded a 12-hour shutdown last week in protest against the Assam police firing at Langpih, also criticized the reports.

Upset with the fabricated news reports, KSU president Samuel B. Jyrwa said the social organisations in Meghalaya were only against the killing of the unarmed Khasi villagers by Assam police personnel.

'Our demand from the government (Meghalaya) was to seek a solution to the vexed boundary dispute between Meghalaya and Assam,' Jyrwa said.

On the 'quit notices' served by various NGOs to Nepali settlers, the KSU Supremo said: 'There is illegality in it as they are foreigners. In fact, the North East Students' Organisation (an apex student's body of various students' unions) had demanded that the Indo-Nepal Treaty of Friendship should not be applicable in the entire Northeastern states.'

'The Indo-Nepal Treaty of Friendship, 1950 has opened the floodgates for lakhs of Nepali nationals who have entered the region and managed to obtain permanent citizenship through unfair means.

Tribal Khasi and Garo villagers alleged that the Assam government had been trying to usurp the land in Langpih area by pushing Nepalese nationals to settle in the disputed area.

'Following the (Langpih) incident, yes there is a fear psychosis among the Nepali settlers, but till then we stayed safely and the government ensured security,' D.B. Gurung, a senior leader of the Meghalaya Gorkha Welfare Association, said.

'There was only a case of a 70-year-old man being burnt alive and those reports of 17 (Nepalis) killed is complete rubbish,' Gurung told IANS.

15 June 2010

Mizoram Observes 75th Anniversary of YMA

yma platinum Aizawl, Jun 15 : The 75th anniversary of the formation of the Young Mizo Association (YMA), the apex body of Mizos, was observed in Mizoram on Tuesday.

The YMA was formed by English missionaries and some Mizo leaders on June 15, 1935 in Aizawl as the ‘Young Lushai Association’ (YLA) and was rechristened as YMA later.

YMA members voluntarily planted trees, cleaned their villages, held local sports events, helped the needy and ill by distributing gifts.

YMA members also donated blood in different hospitals in the past two weeks as part of the Platinum Jubilee celebrations.

All government offices and educational institutions remained closed.

The YMA has branches across the state and also in Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur and Bangladesh.

Slash Interview

Once the epitome of the hard-living heavy metal superstar, former Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash has released a solo album, Roadrunner, and is now a tee-total non-smoker, who also happens to be English.

By Craig McClean

Slash

Slash Photo: DAN BURN-FORTI

The Royal Variety Performance, Cardiff  Nov 2005. Queen Elizabeth II, Cliff Richard, Ozzy Osbourne and Slash.

The Royal Variety Performance, Cardiff Nov 2005. Queen Elizabeth II, Cliff Richard, Ozzy Osbourne and Slash. Photo: REX

Slash of 'Guns and Roses' and Michael Jackson performing onstage at the 1995 Video Music Awards in Los Angeles, CA on September 7, 1995.

Slash of 'Guns and Roses' and Michael Jackson performing onstage at the 1995 Video Music Awards in Los Angeles, CA on September 7, 1995. Photo: GETTY

Slash, the erstwhile Guns N’ Roses guitarist and the most rock ’n’ roll dude in Los Angeles, strides into the Sunset Marquis hotel and past the foyer’s Whiskey Bar – where he first met his wife, his friend and fellow English transplant Robbie Williams, and, no doubt, many others – and up to a first-floor room.

He’s ostensibly here to discuss his robustly tuneful debut solo album, which debuted at number three on the US charts (just behind the teenage heartthrob Justin Bieber, of all people) and which features vocals from Ozzy Osbourne, Iggy Pop, Lemmy, Alice Cooper – the kind of cockroach-like hard rock survivors that we’d expect to work with Slash – as well as Fergie of the Black Eyed Peas. But then Slash’s extravagant talents on the guitar have previously seen him work with everyone from Michael Jackson to Rihanna. In matters musical and recreational, he’s a rather catholic chap.

Slash is one of the most iconic and familiar figures in rock. Sunglasses? Check. Rock T-shirt and dirty jeans? Check. But today he is not rocking a top hat; his fuzzy black afro bursts wild and free and explosively around his Mount Rushmore face. And there’s something else. He doesn’t have a cigarette dangling from his lips.

'I’ve been off them for a year,’ he says, gravelly, gravely as he settles into a sofa and stares down a bottle of mineral water.

What, I ask, was his motivation? 'Well, you know, the missus was bugging me about it,’ Slash says with a chuckle. Having been born in Stoke-on-Trent and possessed of a British passport – he and his parents moved to the United States when he was six – the man christened Saul Hudson is perhaps the only LA rocker qualified to use the word 'missus’. Anyway: 'the first time I quit smoking was because we’d just had a baby and she claimed the baby smelled like an ashtray. So I thought, well, I’ll give it a shot. So I quit for a year and then I started again.

'Then this time my mom died of lung cancer, and I got sick with pneumonia.

'And after I got sick I had a cigarette in my hand and a lighter and I was about to smoke – and it just seemed really stubborn of me.’

Ola Hudson was a high-end music industry costume designer. She clothed Diana Ross, George Harrison, John Lennon and Yoko Ono. After she and Slash’s father – Anthony Hudson, a graphic designer who worked on album sleeves for Neil Young and Joni Mitchell – divorced when Slash was eight, she dated, among others, David Bowie. It’s through Bowie that Slash knew Iggy Pop when he was a boy. His mother was also a life‑long smoker.

'One of the regular statements that my mom made all my life was: “I’m gonna quit one of these days.” And she never did. But it was actually a shock ’cause she was in great health. And she went to the doctor about a bruise that she had from bumping into something and somehow they diagnosed her with cancer,’ he says sanguinely. 'It was the weirdest thing.’

As for her son, 'I just always smoked. A lot of vices that I’ve had over the years were always to make up for some sort of character deficiency, one of them being shyness. So I used to drink a lot, or do drugs. It’s not been too difficult to give up smoking, apart from the fact that I’ve found that I use Twitter all the time to keep my hands busy!’

And what of his fondness for Jack Daniel’s, liquor of choice for heavy metal bacchanals? It seems Slash hasn’t had a drink for four years.

'I quit doing drugs. But ’cause I’m a habitual kinda guy, if I quit doing drugs, then I drink. And then if I quit drinking, I do drugs – forever. So I quit doing drugs this one time, and I decided not to drink too. It’s been four years. And I really don’t miss it.’

Of all the things Slash has given up, what has been the most difficult? It’s certainly not Guns N’ Roses. He joined the nascent line-up, fronted by singer Axl Rose, in his late teens in 1985. Together they enjoyed 11 years of raging success. GN’R’s first album, 1987’s Appetite For Destruction, sold 28 million copies, propelled by the deathless rock anthem Sweet Child O’ Mine, which itself was propelled by Slash’s signature guitar riff. The band went on to gargantuan stadium-sized success, selling more than 100 million albums, and Slash became one of the greatest guitarists of his generation.

Last year he came second in Time magazine’s ranking of all-time electric guitar heroes (Jimi Hendrix came first).

But success went to Rose’s head, and to Slash’s veins. The singer developed a messiah complex, and the guitarist cultivated a full-blown heroin addiction. Rose ended up the sole original member of the band; in 2008 he finally managed to release Chinese Democracy, Guns N’ Roses’ sixth studio album. It took him more than a decade to make and cost a figure reportedly somewhere north of $13 million, which would make it the most expensive album in the history of time.

Post GN’R, Slash formed Velvet Revolver with bassist Duff McKagan and drummer Matt Sorum (also GN’R alums), in which the bad behaviour continued.

In his outrageously entertaining and candid 2007 biography, he depicts a life of rampant sex with groupies, coke for breakfast, guns for kicks, snakes for pets and the chaos that ensues when LA wild boys start earning millions upon millions of dollars.

You might call it picaresque, if the tales of shooting up coke/heroin speedballs and psychotic behaviour weren’t so alarming. At one point Slash’s conviction that there were little men following him everywhere - cavorting up his arm - even spooked his drug dealer. Slash writes of his dealer’s response: 'You’d better go, man. You’re way too out there. You should go home.’ 'Apparently,’ Slash noted wryly, 'I was bad for business.’

Slash is a coolly honest and relaxed chap. He is robust, and alert, and self-deprecating. Maybe it’s his English genes but – sunglasses indoors notwithstanding – there is no LA swagger about him. He’s cuddly, almost, and hugely entertaining company, with none of the post-rehab piousness that can attend former addicts. Looking back, was he never frightened by the depths of depravity to which he sank? Seeing little men dancing on his curtains – was that food for thought?

'No!’ he laughs. 'See, that’s what was wrong with me. I loved all that s---.

'Oh yeah! The near heart attacks, all the hallucinating, and the whole f------ thrill of chasing my dealers down – everything that was wrong about doing drugs I liked about it.’ Because you were a thrill-seeker, and a lonely man to boot?

'I think you just summed it up right there – lonely thrill-seeker! But you know, I have no regrets about my drug stuff. People always go: “Oh, now you’re a role model for going straight.” I say: “I’m not a role model, I just got sick of it.”’

Slash initially met his second wife Perla at a Guns N’ Roses concert afterparty in Las Vegas.

'We had our little fling for a second. I knew that I was seriously attracted to her. And I didn’t need that in my life, so we stayed apart.’ They remained friends, but then one night in 1997 they met again in the Sunset Marquis’s Whiskey Bar and have been together ever since. The love of a good woman didn’t exactly make Slash settle down, though.

'She and I were hard-core partiers for a long time. When we walked into a room you knew there was trouble. She was more hard-core than I was!”

Really?

'Yeah! And also, more – what’s the word for it? – more outspoken. A tougher all-round person. I’m sort of quiet. I don’t want to draw attention to myself if I can help it,’ he offers. 'She, on the other hand, started trouble. So between the two of us, Sid and Nancy had nothing on us. We weren’t necessarily that stupid though. Although we did have a couple of rows that were, you know, serious. Cops coming and s---.’ You were the injured party? 'There was one time when we both were. Anyway,’ he says brightly, 'we’ve had an interesting existence. Then at some point somehow we both just mellowed out a little bit. We’re still a pretty rockin’ couple though, I gotta say.’

Slash, Perla and their rockin’ sons London, seven, and Cash, five, live at the top of a pricey hill in Hollywood. Their neighbour is Robbie Williams, coincidentally another Stoke boy made good. Now sober Slash and sober Robbie have regular poker sessions together. 'He’s a good poker player,’ Slash says approvingly. One night all Williams’s 'Stoke buddies’ were in town, so Slash had his father come over too. 'It was a room full of Stoke guys talking about football.’ His father, he says, still has his Potteries accent. 'I do consider myself British. I have very strong feelings about my British heritage. My first years were there, I went to school there, and I have seemingly endless family on that side of the pond. So I’ve always felt most comfortable in England.’

Slash doesn’t do regret, nor rancour. He calmly refuses to be drawn on the (de)merits of Chinese Democracy – 'you know I’m not gonna give you the answer you want for that!’ He seems more tickled than anything by reports that Axl Rose has banned from Guns N’ Roses concerts anyone wearing Slash T‑shirts. 'I don’t know if that’s really true. I like to give the benefit of the doubt. But some people swear it’s true.’ He’s not even bothered by Axl Rose reportedly calling him 'a cancer’.

'You know,’ he chuckles, 'that’s sorta funny. The fact that he would go and say that – I started thinking about it: I’m around a lot so to him I probably am a cancer. And now the record’s doing really well, I’m even more cancerous! And apparently we’re gonna be touring Europe at the same time, which will put even more emphasis on the cancer thing!’

Slash says you’d have to be 'out of your head’ to want a career in music, yet he wouldn’t have had it any other way. Not least because, for the man once given six days to live if he didn’t quit drinking, music saved his life. 'On my own I’m very self destructive,’ he admits. 'The only thing that saved me was music - my desire to play.’

  • 'Slash’ (Roadrunner) is out now. He plays today at the Download Festival, and Glastonbury Festival on June 27

The Ten Best Seduction Techniques

Sticky Eyes

Sticky Eyes

When you are talking to your quarry, let your eyes stay glued to his or hers a little longer than necessary - even during silences. A gaze that lingers awakens primal, slightly disturbing feelings. It induces the same "fight or flight" chemicals that race through our veins when we feel infatuation. When you must look away, do so reluctantly. Drag your eyes away slowly. This is a particularly good technique for men to use, as women always want to feel that a man is absolutely fascinated by them.

The Visual Voyage

The Visual Voyage

As you and your date are chatting, let your eyes do some traveling - but only on safe ground at first. Take a visual voyage all over his or her face, concentrating on their eyes. If he or she seems to be enjoying your expedition, take small side trips to the neck, shoulders and torso. For girls, take sneak peeks at his body - and when he sees you pretend you are a little embarrassed. This should really get his juices flowing and is a great way to get a friend to think of you sexually. For the man this technique is a little more dangerous, so be wary. If your eyes travel too far south for too long you'll be in trouble.

Expensive Dining

Expensive Dining

This is good for a gentleman who intends to pick up the bill on the first date. Make sure you take your date to an expensive restaurant with an atmosphere like the one you wish to project - be it elegant, upbeat, cool or arty. Atmosphere is important because she will transfer her feelings about the room to you. It may be superficial, but women tend to judge a man on the first place he takes them.

Dress to Impress

Dress to Impress

Even when seeking only a casual liaison, do not go out dressed like an unmade bed. Dress as though you were auditioning to be his or her husband or wife. Men must make sure they are coordinated and dress affluently: women love good quality clothes on men. Women need to dress alluringly but not in a cheap way. He is going to mentally undress you anyway, so there is no need for that short skirt. However, you might want to try a slightly more revealing second layer of clothes so that you can, at the right moment, take off that jacket and reveal some wonderful cleavage.

Give First Date Butterflies

Give First Date Butterflies

When planning your first date, find out what pulls your date's strings, and then plan an arousing, emotional adventure. You don't have to go sky-diving, but a little shared danger is a proven aphrodisiac. A scary movie is an easy way to achieve this - or perhaps ice-skating, where the woman may be nervous and might have to hold on tight. Afterwards, go out for dinner or a drink to discuss your shared experience.

Co-react

Co-react

To capture your quarry's heart, you need to share his or her convictions and show that you feel them deeply. Watch his or her reactions to outside stimuli, then show the same emotions - shock, disgust, humour, compassion, etc. This is particularly important for men, who are more inclined to misjudge situations. Make sure your reactions suit the mood.

Smile

Smile

A simple but crucial technique. A smile is the most effective form of body language and a great way to let somebody know that you are interested in them. As you are looking at or talking to a member of the opposite sex whom you wish to seduce, let a soft smile of acceptance frame your lips. Don't give too quick a smile: just let a slow one float over your face. This will seem much more genuine - while making your romantic intentions obvious.

How do you feel about that?

How do you feel about that?

A good tip for men: pluck up some courage and, whatever your quarry is discussing, simply ask her, "How do you feel about that?" It might seem awkward at first, but woman love to talk about how they feel and will nearly always respond enthusiastically. Women, on the other hand, should wait until a relationship is on stable ground before asking a man much about his feelings - otherwise there is a danger of rocking the boat before it is launched.

Let Your Quarry Pass an 'Audition'

Let Your Quarry Pass an 'Audition'

Men should not ask a woman out too soon, lest she think you are interested only in her looks. The ideal time to ask a woman for a date is when she has said something relevant to her personality. For example, if she says something spiritual, say that you'd love to hear more about that, perhaps over dinner. A woman values interest all the more if she feels that you appreciate her inner qualities. Women, meanwhile, can move faster, as men are less afraid of being treated as sex objects.

Have the First Laugh

Have the First Laugh

Another obvious but important technique. Women: make sure you laugh at your quarry's jokes and, when in a group, be the first to laugh. It brings you closer together. Men should try and introduce cute private jokes to create a bond between the two of you. This will help to make you seem like long-time lovers rather than first-date strangers.

'How to Make Anyone Fall in Love With You: 85 Proven Techniques for Success' - £8.99, by Leil Lowndes, is published by Element

How One Indian Entrepreneur Is Bringing Clean Water and Health Care to Local Villages on the Cheap

By Ariel Schwartz

How do you win a major sustainability award from MIT? Simultaneously tackle health care and clean water in the developing world like Dr. BP Agrawal, the founder of Sustainable Innovations--a seven year-old nonprofit that builds self-sustaining projects in rural villages. Agrawal recently won the $100,000 Lemelson-MIT Award for Sustainability, which will be given out this week at MIT's Eureka Fest. The prize honors "inventors whose products or processes impact issues of global relevance, as well as issues that impact local communities in terms of meeting basic health needs, and building sustainable livelihoods for the world's poorest populations."

Agrawal's first major project with Sustainable Innovations, the Aakash Ganga ("River from Skies") initiative, is being tested in six rural Indian villages. The initiative installs rainwater collection systems on villagers' rooftops along with a pipe system that pumps water to larger reservoirs. Sustainable Solutions provides some of the cash, and the villagers provide the rest. In exchange, residents can keep some of the water for themselves and get paid for sending leftovers to the reservoirs.

The initiative is going well so far, with over 600 collection systems installed. Agrawal attributes part of the program's success to his cultural involvement in local villages. "Villages have a lot of traditions. We treat them as social capital," he says. "We don't treat traditions as something that holds society back." Agrawal has, for example, leveraged the tradition of women worshiping at local wells when a child is born to ensure that reservoirs stay clean. The wells are all dry, so Agrawal swayed village women to worship at local reservoirs by offering them flowers and fruit baskets, which cost $50 a pop. This prompted the mothers to convince family members to avoid defecating in the reservoirs--a relatively cheap solution to a problem that would cost approximately $1,000 per village for a more technologically advanced system.

Indian villageAgrawal eventually hopes to implement his system in 1,000 villages and provide clean drinking water to 2.5 million people. But that's a long-term goal, since "We hope to complete 100 villages by 2030. We're are working with the government of India to set up a social enterprise where the government, private sector, and community all contribute," Agrawal says. So far, Agrawal has raised approximately $500,000 for the initiative.

Sustainable Innovations' second major project, Arogya Ghar, delivers health care to villages via a laptop-based system that serves up disease protocols. Arogya Ghar also offers medical identification cards to residents, so every time someone gets a vaccination or a checkup, the procedure is logged using the card. "It's a poor man's medical record," explains Agrawal.

Local girls are trained to use the cheap Arogya Ghar laptops, which are hooked up to diagnostic devices. They travel door-to-door checking up on residents, and are paid 25 cents for each diagnostic task performed. Agrawal says that the program provides self-esteem to the girls, whose options are usually limited. "They think they can only be housewives, and when we invite them to this class for training, we can see a glow in their eyes that finally someone can trust them. It creates a sense of dignity."

So far, Sustainable Innovations has implemented pilots of the health care initiative in four Indian villages. Once the organization raises $250,000 for Arogya Ghar, the program will expand to 50 villages.

Agrawal doesn't plan to implement any new programs in the foreseeable future. "These two projects will keep me busy for the next four to five years," he says. "I want to scale them up so we can create demonstrable models. That will keep the government interested." In the meantime, Agrawal tells us that he is actively looking for both volunteers and new technological solutions for his existing programs.

Check out Sustainable Innovations' Web site for details.

[ via fastcompany ]

We've Found Something Even Louder Than The Vuvuzelas at the World Cup... The Dutch Female Football Fans

There has been complaint after complaint about the noise of the vuvuzelas at this year's World Cup in South Africa.

But there was certainly one thing louder than the noisy horns at the Holland vs. Denmark match today - the attire of the Dutch female football fans.

Dressed in orange, their team's colour, the groups of excited women clutched flags and posed for photographers before the game.

Dutch fansSea of orange: Dutch football fans pose for photographs clutching flags before the Holland vs. Denmark game

Thrilled: The excitement was palpable as Holland came into the lead after Denmark scored an own goalThrilled: The excitement was palpable as Holland came into the lead after Denmark scored an own goal

It was literally a sea of orange at Johannesburg's Soccer City stadium as thousands of fans streamed in to watch their country play in their first game of the tournament.

And they could barely contain themselves as Holland won the match, beating Denmark by two goals.

However, the Danish fans also tried to make themselves heard in the stadium, dressed in red and white they arrived carrying red rattles - hardly a match for the notorious vuvuzela.

Air we go: Some of the Dutch fans dressed up as stewardesses and pilots for the gameAir we go: Some of the Dutch fans dressed up as stewardesses and pilots for the game

Denmark fans Competition: Danish fans tried to compete with the Dutch by wearing their own team's colours

DUTCH FAN WITH ANGEL WINGsFailure: But they couldn't hold a candle to the Dutch fans, who literally flooded the World Cup stadium with their orange presence

Dutch fansTeam spirit: Everyone was getting into the spirit of the World Cup, with many fans donning face paint in support

FEMALE DUTCH FANS Cheerleaders: The Dutch girls get in the party spirit as their team takes control of the game

But many fans may have been left disappointed by the game, which was labelled yet another underwhelming match as the World Cup moved into its fourth day.

Both the Dutch and the Danish have suggested that their teams have suffered because they are playing at an altitude of 5,750 feet.

Dutch fanGoal!! One fan celebrates after Holland seal their victory with a second goal, and end the match 2-0

Holland players celebrate the opening goal after Denmark's Simon Poulsen scored an own goalVictory: Holland players celebrate after Denmark's Simon Poulsen scored an own goal

Meanwhile the Italian fans were out in force last night for their first match of the tournament against Paraguay.

And they have already won an army of admirers after being pictured on the big screens blowing kisses to the cameras.

The match may have been another disappointing draw, but there was plenty of glamour to keep the armchair fan happy.

Does YOUR country have attractive football fans to rival the Dutch? Send your photos to readerspictures@dailymail.co.uk and post your comments below.

Sharing the love: Italian fans in the stands after their team equalised last night in Cape TownSharing the love: Italian fans in the stands after their team equalised last night in Cape Town

[ via Dailymail ]

Eva Mendes in W Magazine

Eva Mendes is out to prove she is more than just a bombshell.

But it's pretty darn hard to think of her as anything else in these photos.

Posing in a new spread for W magazine, on newsstands June 15, the star of the upcoming Will Ferrell comedy "The Other Guys" makes the transition from sexy to funny.

She tells the mag, “It’s very hard for me to be seen as funny. And the truth is, that’s where I’m most comfortable.”

Click through to see more of Eva.

Photos by Mert Alas & Marcus Piggot


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On her own dual passions:
“I’m a modern woman in the sense of I take care of myself, I’m fiercely independent, and I’m really ambitious.  Yet I have these old-school thoughts in my mind. I do like to belong to a man. I love having a man in my life, and being his woman at the end of the day. I know it’s a dichotomy.”
On her ethnicity:
“I don’t consider myself a Latin American actress. I was born and raised here, and I have Cuban parents, but for me, I am the new American girl. It’s not only Drew Barrymore and the blond Mid-western girl. This, [pointing to her face] is also what we look like now.”

Photos: Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott


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On seeing her Calvin Klein ad for the first time in New York City:
“There I was all greased up, my head thrown back, and I thought, ‘Who are you? Are you kidding me?’”
On performing in the nude:
“I’ve never had a problem with nudity, but I don’t put it out there without a reason. I’m not an exhibitionist. But, honestly, for my art I’ll do anything almost. I’ll go there.”


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Eva Mendes' New Calvin Klein Billboards

Competitive much?

The day after Megan Fox's new Emporio Armani billboard campaign photos were released, Eva Mendes' Calvin Klein jeans billboards have been made public.

Click through these, and then click through Megan's, and then answer our Fox411.com Survey question:

Who has the hottest new billboard campaign, Eva or Megan?


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Nov. 4: Actress Eva Mendes attends the AFI Fest 2009 gala screening of "The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans" in Hollywood.

(Source: Reuters)


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GK Pillai to Meet Chief Secretaries of Nagaland and Manipur

G_K_PILLAI New Delhi, Jun 15 : Voicing "serious concern" over the economic blockade of Manipur by Naga groups, the home ministry has convened an emergency meeting of the chief secretaries of both the states tomorrow to discuss steps to end it.

Home secretary GK Pillai will meet the chief secretaries of Manipur and Nagaland to discuss the current situation and steps to be taken to keep open the NH-39 which is the main and direct road link to Manipur and the economic lifeline of the northeastern state.

"Union home minister P Chidambaram has already spoken to the chief ministers of Nagaland and Manipur to take necessary steps to have the blockade withdrawn," an official spokesperson said here.

The agitating Naga students last night decided to temporarily suspend the blockade. The decision by Naga Students' Federation (NSF) was taken at a meeting in Kohima after its delegation met prime minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi discussing their demands.

At the request of the Manipur government, the ministry has decided to shortly deploy additional para-military forces on NH-39 to remove the blockade and keep the highway open for unhindered movement of traffic and goods, the official said.

The blockade which is nearing two months has crippled normal life in Manipur following shortage of essential supplies resulting from the seize.

Following the blockade of the highway, home ministry is trying to ease the situation by transporting supplies through air-route.

"Two consignments of life saving drugs reached Imphal on May 18, 2010 and additional consignment of life saving drugs weighing 4 MT was airlifted by IAF aircraft on the same day. Between May 17 and May 23, 2010, 492.52 quintals of PDS rice was airlifted from FCI, Guwahati by AN 32 aircraft of Indian Air Force," the official said.

The ministry is also transporting essential supplies using alternative and longer route of NH-53 under the escort of state police since May 21, 2010.

"More than 1000 trucks and tankers with essential commodities such as petroleum products, rice, have reached Manipur through this route. An IL-76 aircraft carried 32 kilo litres of kerosene oil on May 21, 2010 and 48 kilo-liltres of petrol on May 22, 2010," the official said.

The government is also trying to ease the situation in the state by transporting essential commodities through NH 150 with the assistance of Mizoram government, he said.