06 October 2010

NEHU Wants a Tribal Vice Chancellor

nehu Nehu vice-chancellor’s office.

Shillong, Oct 6 : Trouble continues to haunt the North Eastern Hill University as the students and the teachers today expressed deep resentment over the appointment of A.N. Rai as Nehu’s next vice-chancellor.

The Meghalaya Tribal Students’ Coordination Committee and the Joint Action Committee of Nehu resolved to oppose Rai who was appointed yesterday by the human resource development ministry to replace Pramod Tandon.

The coordination committee, comprising the Khasi Students’ Union Nehu, A’chik Post Graduate Students’ Union and the Meghalaya Post Graduate Students’ Union, at a meeting held on Nehu campus, resolved not to allow Rai, hitherto the vice-chancellor of Mizoram University, from taking over as the new vice-chancellor.

“We have set a deadline till October 8 for the Centre to denotify the appointment of Rai as the vice-chancellor of Nehu,” the chairman of the coordination committee, Kynpham Kharlyngdoh, said after the meeting.

Kharlyngdoh also questioned the rationale behind the appointment of Rai when his tenure as the vice-chancellor of Mizoram University would end only after eight months. “We have also come to know that even students of the Mizoram University were dissatisfied with Rai’s way of functioning,” Kharlyngdoh alleged.

Stressing the demand to appoint a person form indigenous background as the next vice-chancellor, Kharlyngdoh said: “We have many local tribals who have what it takes to occupy the top post in Nehu. Therefore, the Union ministry of human resource development should review its decision immediately.”

The Joint Action Committee which comprises the Nehu Teachers’ Association and Nehu Non-Teaching Staff Association, also supported the resolution adopted by the students, at a separate meeting held today.

“We are shocked by the appointment of a tainted man in the prestigious Nehu and the university is not a dumping ground for adjusting discredited Rai as the new vice-chancellor,” its chairman S.B. Prasad said in a statement.

Jemino Mawthoh, another Joint Action Committee leader, said after a threadbare discussion, the meeting resolved to support the students. “We are perplexed by the decision taken by the search committee to recommend the name of a sitting vice-chancellor. This clearly shows that Rai was no longer wanted in Mizoram University,” Mawthoh said.

Undocumented Language Found Hidden in Arunachal

By Randolph E. Schmid

alt

This undated handout photo provided by National Geographic shows Kachim, a speaker of the hidden language Koro, talking to National Geographic Fellow Gregory Anderson. Anderson and a team made the first known recordings of Koro, an endangered language that is new to science. The expedition is featured in a new National Geographic book, "The Last Speakers," by K. David Harrison. A previously unreported language spoken by fewer than 1,000 people has been discovered in the remote northeast corner of India. The region is known as hotspot of language diversity and researchers were documenting some of the unwritten tongues when they came across the new one, called Koro. (AP Photo/Chris Rainier, National Geographic)


Washington, Oct 6
: A "hidden" language spoken by only about 1,000 people has been discovered in the remote northeast corner of India by researchers who at first thought they were documenting a dialect of the Aka culture, a tribal community that subsists on farming and hunting.

They found an entirely different vocabulary and linguistic structure.

Even the speakers of the tongue, called Koro, did not realize they had a distinct language, linguist K. David Harrison said Tuesday.

Culturally, the Koro speakers are part of the Aka community in India's Arunachal Pradesh state, and Harrison, associate professor of linguistics at Swarthmore College, said both groups merely considered Koro a dialect of the Aka language.

But researchers studying the groups found they used different words for body parts, numbers and other concepts, establishing Koro as a separate language, Harrison said.

"Koro is quite distinct from the Aka language," said Gregory Anderson, director of the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages. "When we went there we were told it was a dialect of Aka, but it is a distant sister language."

People of the Aka culture live in small villages near the borders of China, Tibet and Burma (also known as Myanmar). They practice subsistence hunting, farming and gathering firewood in the forest and tend to wear ornate clothing of hand-woven cloth, favoring red garments. Their languages are not well known, though they were first noted in the 19th century.

Harrison and Anderson spoke at a news conference organized by the National Geographic Society, which supported their work.

The northeast corner of India is known as a hotspot of language diversity and researchers were documenting some of the unwritten tongues when they came across Koro in research started in 2008.

The timing of their discovery was important.

"We were finding something that was making its exit, was on its way out. And if we had waited 10 years to make the trip, we might not have come across close to the number of speakers we found," said Anderson.

Previously undocumented languages are "noticed from time to time" Harrison said, so such a discovery is not rare. But at the same time linguists estimate that a language "dies" about every two weeks with the loss of its last speakers.

Counting Koro there are 6,910 documented languages in the world, Harrison said. But he added that is really just a best estimate that can change regularly.

Many languages around the world are considered endangered, including Koro, he explained, because younger people tend to shift to the more dominant language in a region.

Unusually, Koro has been maintained within the Aka community, the researchers said, even though there is intermarriage and the groups share villages, traditions, festivals and food. In addition to the estimated 800 to 1,200 Koro speakers, the West Kameng and East Kameng districts of Arunachal Pradesh contain 4,000 to 6,000 Aka speakers.

The Koro speakers "consider themselves to be Aka tribally, though linguistically they are Koro. It's an unusual condition, such arrangement doesn't usually allow for maintenance of the minor language," Anderson said.

The threat, however, is from the spread of Hindi, a dominant language in India, and many youngsters go to boarding schools where they learn Hindi or English.

The researchers said they hope to figure out how the Koro language managed to survive within the Aka community.

They said Koro is a member of the Tibeto-Burman language family, a group of some 400 languages that includes Tibetan and Burmese. While Koro differs from Aka, it does share some things with another language, Tani, which is spoken farther to the east.

The research was started in 2008 to document two little known languages, Aka and Miji, and the third language, Koro, was discovered in that process.

"We didn't have to get far on our word list to realize it was extremely different in every possible way," Harrison said.

They said Koro's inventory of sounds was completely different, and so was the way sounds combine to form words. Words also are built differently in Koro, as are sentences.

The Aka word for "mountain" is "phu," while the Koro word is "nggo." Aka speakers call a pig a "vo" while to Koro speakers, a pig is a "lele."

"Koro could hardly sound more different from Aka," reported Harrison, author of a new book "The Last Speakers," about vanishing languages. Joining the two was linguist Ganesh Murmu of Ranchi University in India.

The researchers detail Koro in a scientific paper to be published in the journal Indian Linguistics.

___

Online:

Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages: http://www.livingtongues.org/

National Geographic Enduring Voices: http://www.nationalgeographic.com/mission/enduringvoices/

http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/news/culture-places-news/enduring-voices-koro-vin.html

Meghalaya Teachers go on Strike 50,000 Children Affected

meghalya school children Shillong, Oct 6 : The indefinite strike called by over 3,000 teachers Monday to protest the Meghalaya government's failure to clear their pending arrears has affected more than 50,000 students across the state.

Over 3,000 school teachers under the banner of Khasi Jaintia Deficit School Teachers' Association (KJDSTA) and Garo Hills Deficit School Teachers' and Employees Association (GHDSTEA) have called for the indefinite strike.

Almost all the schools have declared holidays till the strike is called off.

The teachers are demanding their 40 percent arrears as recommended by the Meghalaya Fourth Pay Commission.

The state government had released the 40 percent arrears to government employees in October last year.

'The government has forced us to resort to this indefinite strike for its double standards. We will continue with the strike to put pressure on the government to clear 40 percent arrears at the earliest,' E.D. Nongsiang, the KJDSTA Chief, told IANS Tuesday.

Education Minister M. Ampareen Lyngdoh has appealed the teachers not to go on strike as 'students will be the biggest losers'.

Lyngdoh said the government requires Rs.52 crore to clear the 40 percent arrears.

Chief Secretary W.M.S. Pariat said the pending arrears will be released as soon the financial situation in the state improves.

Asked if the state is preparing to evoke the Essential Services Maintenance Act against the teachers, Pariat said: 'ESMA is limited to certain sectors, and it does not apply to the education sector.'

The opposition Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) has expressed concern over the hardship faced by students.

India to Launch Satellite to Monitor Its Forests in Real Time

By Mridul Chadha

satellite-india The Indian space agency plans to launch a satellites dedicated to monitor deforestation activities and afforestation efforts in 2013.

The minister of Environment and Forests, Mr. Jairam Ramesh, had earlier announced the plans of launching a satellite which would measure India's greenhouse gas and aerosol emissions. This satellite is scheduled for launch in 2012. Both the satellites would help India achieve important international and domestic goals.

India has its own climate change study forum known as the Indian Network for Climate Change Assessment (INCCA) which comprises of scientists from various fields and institutes from around the country. The network has been tasked with the job of studying and publishing peer-reviewed findings on the impact of climate change on the Indian ecosystem.

This group of scientists was established in order to get specific information about the impact of climate change on the health of the Himalayan glaciers, on the agricultural output and on the coastal areas of the country. Also, Indian government can also use the information gathered at the international climate change treaties to strengthen its case for opposing mandatory GHG emission targets.

'We are also working with ISRO's space application centre in Ahemdabad in modeling and monitoring the health of the Himalayan glaciers as the space agency is an integral part of our climate science and climate change negotiations team,' Ramesh said.

While making a case for an indigenous forum to study climate change, the environment minister had pointed out the discrepancies in the studies done in the developed countries. He pointed out to a study done by foreign scientists which overestimated the methane emissions from Indian paddy fields. The forum gained mileage after the 'Glaciergate' fiasco which raised serious questions about the credibility of IPCC.

The new satellite would also play a major role in the realization of an ambitious plan called the National Mission for Green India. According to a related policy document, the aim of this mission is to increase the forest cover by 10 million hectares by 2020. Such a large-scale afforestation plan, which would be mostly based on the REDD-credit scheme, would help India offset about 6.5 percent of its GHG emissions.

The information gathered through this satellite would help the government in accounting the national resources and the rate at which they are being consumed. In addition, the information can help in the demarcation of forest land inhibited by tribals which has become a major issue as the country has been witnessing several controversial land acquisition issues. And the real-time monitoring the illegal logging practices which have been a major concern for several decades.

With so many ambitious green goals lined up India certainly needs state-of-the-art technological infrastructure to not only meet those goals but also fulfill its strategic national interests. Such scientific tools would help India become an influential player at the crucial climate change treaty summits.

via Ecopolitology

05 October 2010

Miss World 2010 - Meet The Contestants

miss world Contestants from 120 countries have arrived at Sanya Island, China to take part in the 60th edition of the prestigious event to be held on 30 October.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants wave while posing for a group photo under a blessing tree during their visit to the Badachu Park Temple in Beijing.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss India World Manasvi Mamgai will be representing the country at this year's pageant.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestant Sara Khouly of Egypt waves while visiting the Badachu Park Temple in Beijing.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestant Czarina Gatbonton of the Philippines smiles while taking a picture with a Chinese visitor during her visit to the Badachu Park Temple.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants Kamilla Salgado of Brazil (left), Andrea Kkolou of Cyprus (centre) and Tang Xiao of China.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestant Kimberly Kuiperi from Aruba shows her welcoming gift while at the Badachu Park Temple.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants Alexandria Mills of the US (right) and Courtenay Hamilton of Wales pose for the cameras.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestant Mariana Arambarry of Argentina smiles as she receives her gift.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants from left, Andrea Kkolou of Cyprus, Kamilla Salgado of Brazil, Tang Xiao of China, Sara Khouly of Egypt and Denise Garrido of Canada pose for a picture.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestant Kamilla Salgado of Brazil (left) and Tang Xiao of China take a photo of themselves in the vicinity of the Badachu Park Temple in Beijing.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants watch a lion dance performance under a blessing tree while visiting the Badachu Park Temple.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants from left, Yara Santiago of Puerto Rico, Czarina Gatbonton of the Philippines and Odile Gertze of Namibia pose under the blessing tree.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss World contestants Tang Xiao of China and Kaiane Aldorino of Gibraltar at a press conference.

Miss World 2010 - Meet the contestants

Miss China Tang Xiao and Miss Gibraltar Kaiane Aldorino are all smiles as they pose for a picture.

Source: India Syndicate

Image credits: AP, AFP, Varinder Chawla, India Syndicate

Imran Khan-Meets-Deepika Padukone!

'Break Ke Baad'

Break Ke Baad

Abhay Gulati and Aaliya Khan have known each other since they were four years old. Their friendship turned into love at the tender age of 15, when Abhay realises Aaliya is the girl for him.

Aaliya's life is defined by her burning desire to become an actress and she is unmindful of what or who comes in her way. Abhay who is still unsure about what he wants to do finds himself competing with Aaliya's incessant plans and projects to fulfil her dreams. While their relationship blooms because of their personality differences, the baggage because of these differences also grows silently.

Things come to a head when Aaliya decides to go to Australia to study and Abhay has to deal with the prospect of a long term relationship, secretly fearing that he will lose Aaliya forever. He takes a leap of faith and they decide to take this time off from each other to figure out what they want to do.

The choices Abhay and Aaliya make from here on tests their relationship.

Aaliya risks everything and everyone she loves only to realize that there is no joy in achieving one's dreams if one has no one to share it with. Abhay risks losing every shred of his ego, dignity and self-respect only to realize that there is no bigger high than seeing your dream come to life, brick by brick. They make mistakes, deal with disappointments, even lose each other - and become stronger individually.

'Break Ke Baad' is not just a coming of age film, but a film about couples growing up - together. In a fickle world where relationships break up on the smallest of differences, Abhay and Aaliya manage to save theirs despite geographical ones.

Love needs a little space...

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Break Ke Baad

Danielle Lloyd Reveals Her Post-Pregnancy Body in Monokini

Just 11 weeks after giving birth to her first child, Danielle Lloyd has already regained her model figure.

The Liverpudlian model has shrunk back to 9st 7lb and she’s determined to lose even more until she reaches just 9st.

Despite gaining over two stone while pregnant with son Archie, it appears the baby weight has quickly fallen off.

Post baby body: Danielle Lloyd shows off her incredible figure just two months after giving birth

Post baby body: Danielle Lloyd shows off her incredible figure just two months after giving birth

 Danielle Lloyd Liz Hurley

 

Recreation: Danielle Lloyd (left) recreates Liz Hurley's 2002 photo shoot (right)

She tells the new issue of Now magazine: ‘I want to get down to 9st so I’ve got more toning up to do, but I’m happy with my body and I feel sexy.

‘I think I’ve got a bit of a tummy and Jamie says I’ve got a fat a**e, but I know he likes it!’

But neither a tummy nor a ‘fat a**e’ was anywhere to be seen in her latest photo shoot.

Now Magazine

Read the full interview in Now Magazine

To celebrate her post baby body she recreated Liz Hurley’s iconic 2002 Pop Magazine cover shoot that was taken after the model gave birth to her son Damian.

The shoot saw Danielle oiled up in a skin-tight monokini and killer heels, which looked like a cross between ballet slippers and skyscraper stilettos.

In the gymnast-inspired shoot, the 26-year-old hoists herself up on a pair of rings.

The fiancĂ©e of footballer Jamie O’Hara gave birth to her first child Archie in July and is now back to a svelte size 10 after ballooning to a size 14 after the pregnancy.

But Danielle is just the latest celebrity to lose weight overnight following child birth, which has been branded an unhealthy obsession.

Liz Hurley famously existed on a handful of dried fruit each night to regain her figure after having her son Damian.

While Victoria Beckham retorted that she ate nothing but prawns to get back her pre-Cruz body.

• Read the full interview with Danielle Lloyd in the new issue of Now magazine, on sale today.

Blooming: Danielle, pictured while seven months pregnant, put on two stone while she was expecting Archie

Blooming: Danielle, pictured while seven months pregnant, put on two stone while she was expecting Archie

Milk Negates Healing Power of Antibiotics, Reveals Study

Milk negates healing power of antibiotics, reveals PU studyA seven-year research conducted by University Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences finds that antibiotics, if taken with dairy products, tend to lose effectiveness.

Chandigarh, Oct 5 : A research conducted by the University Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Panjab University, has revealed that antibiotics, if taken with dairy products, tend to lose effectiveness to less than 50 per cent, and in some cases, are rendered ineffective completely. The study holds much significance in the Indian context, for it is quite common among people here to take antibiotics with milk.

The study, conducted by a team comprising a couple of PhD and M Pharma scholars under the guidance of Dr Bhupinder Singh Bhoop, professor and Dean-Alumni, Panjab University, has already been presented at the International Conference held at NIPER (National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research), Mohali, last year.

It has also been published in one of the popular journals on pharmaceutical sciences -- Clinical Pharmacokinetics. The research has been recently published by the Panjab University, too.

Milk negates healing power of antibiotics, reveals PU study

It took the team almost seven years to complete the study on the intake of two commonly used antibiotics -- ciprofloxacin and gatifloxacin. The results showed a drastic decline in their effect -- between 31 and 66 per cent (with a mean of 52 per cent); in some cases, milk totally nullified the effect of these antibiotics.

"The antibiotics are partially or even absolutely ineffective if they are consumed with dairy products, especially milk. The study was conducted on 12 male volunteers," said Dr Bhoop.

The research further revealed that the concurrent intake of even antacids with these drugs should be avoided, as these, too, might thwart the attainment of optimal therapeutic effect of these drugs.

Milk negates healing power of antibiotics, reveals PU study

In a nutshell, serious and significant clinical consequences of antibiotic interaction were discerned. The scientific reason for this phenomenon deduced from the study is that reduction in the plasma levels of these antibiotics may turn out to be sub-therapeutic for many pathogens (disease causing organisms) against which these drugs are intended to be used to combat various infective disorders. This may lead to treatment failure when these drugs are co-administered with antacids, dairy products and/or multivitamin-mineral combinations containing iron, calcium, and the like.

"This is true for many drugs that they should not be taken with certain food items and I am not surprised if ciprofloxacin has shown such results. The reason could be that certain drugs compete for absorption with food items after their intake; they get attached to certain food items and are flushed out without getting absorbed. Also, certain medicines are absorbed at higher pH levels. Thus, the food items can interfere with medicines including antibiotics," said Dr Subhash Verma, who has held the post of MD at the Department of Medicine, PGIMER, for over 30 years.

Milk negates healing power of antibiotics, reveals PU study

One of the recommendations of the study is that these drugs should be taken at least two hours before or six hours after the intake of these items, including milk products, antacids or multivitamin-mineral combinations.

"Surprisingly, some doctors do not advise the patients on the possible consequences of taking these antimicrobials with other drugs and dairy products. Looking into the significance of the outcome of these drug interaction studies, it is highly desirable to propagate rational awareness among physicians, pharmacists, chemists, pharmaceutical manufacturers, educators, medical salesmen and even the general public on the potential risks of concurrent therapy using these drugs. Labeling instructions and insert information should also be modified accordingly. This will help a great deal in circumventing any treatment failures occurring as a consequence," said Dr Bhoop.

Milk negates healing power of antibiotics, reveals PU study

Dr Surjit Singh, another senior doctor in the department of medicine, PGIMER, echoed Dr Verma's views. "It is possible that the absorption of antibiotics is inhibited by the intake of food items, including milk. It is also true that such is the prevalence of the habit among the society that 99.9 per cent of people usually take medicines with milk or meals. I have been advocating all my life that certain medicines can be safely taken without milk and even on an empty stomach, but to no avail. As most of the doctors do not advise patients on the intake of medicines, the practice continues to be widespread," he said.

Source: The Indian Express