29 June 2010

10 Assam Districts Under The Grip of Flood

Guwahati, Jun 29 : Flood ravage continues in as many ten districts of Assam as swelling waters of the rivers are submerging new areas.

Large areas of Barpeta, Baksa, Kokrajhar, Bongaigaon and Dhubri districts have been inundated following reported release of Kurichu dam water in neighbouring Bhutan.

Vast areas of the Manas and Kaziranga National Parks and the Pabitora wildlife sanctuary have been submerged.

The high speed flow of water breached two vital embankments of Beki and Mora Pagladiya rivers.

Surface communication remained disrupted in the flood-hit districts.

The State Government has instructed the district authorities to gear up relief and rescue measures among the flood-ravaged areas.

Football Doesn't Need Replays - it Needs More Fairplay

By Bill Chappell

Referee

Rebecca Blackwell/AP

Hungarian referee Viktor Kassai during the U.S. Vs. Ghana match.  U.S. lost, 1-2

With the World Cup's Round of 16 under way, a rash of bungled calls — and the near-disastrous effect they had on the U.S. team — has Americans fuming. Disallowed goals and "mystery fouls" are now the norm. And referees have come to resemble Sphinxes — quiet, powerful and full of riddles.

Another example came in Sunday's Germany-England match, when officials missed noticing that Frank Lampard's shot had entered Germany's goal for a potential equalizer in the first half.

That's led many people to call for instant replay. But that's a silly idea, one that would drain the sport of the beautiful momentum that can make a 0-0 game fascinating. Still, I don't agree with FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who justifies the status quo by saying, "Society is not perfect, football is not perfect."

Aside from giving me something cool to say when I'm having a "discussion" with my girlfriend (just insert "Bill" for "football"), that statement is useless; it borders on the perverse. And it ignores a basic truth: It's time for the soccer-powers-that-be (or, the football-powers-that-etre) to change how they officiate games.

The problems go beyond Koman Coulibaly of Mali, who threw out American Maurice Edu's goal against Slovenia. Even before the final stage of the Cup, a referee missed handballs and other transgressions by France, in a match that gave them a spot and kept Ireland out. And in Brazil's first-round win over Ivory Coast, referee Stephane Lannoy was seen laughing with Luis Fabiano after missing his handball on a scoring play.

Are all these guys on the take — or maybe just evil? No — it's just that their flaws are magnified by a system that’s both broken and slanted. Here are some of the problems I see in World Cup soccer:

Four officials cover a space that’s larger than a football field. By contrast, the NFL uses seven officials to rule a field that's smaller by 20,000 square feet (77,625 sq. ft. for soccer vs. 57,600 for football).

And only one official — the referee — roams the field. Combine that with the perpetual motion mentioned above — or, to put it another way, 90 minutes of near-continuous chaos — and you realize that only a superhero could keep these games fair and under control.

Having one man follow the ball all over the pitch is like baseball's homeplate umpire chasing baserunners around the diamond, calling balls and strikes along the way. Because don't forget, the main responsibility of half of soccer's officiating crew is just to jog along the sideline and raise a checkered flag once in a while.

And that leads to the next point: Since soccer officials rarely collaborate on calls, the "wisdom of crowds" approach is out the window. Until recently, the "fourth official," who manages time and substitution issues, wasn't even expected to speak to the match referee.

My last point is related more to confidence and inclusion. Consider this: the U.S. doesn’t have a single referee in the Cup, but tiny Seychelles does – and they’re not even in the tournament. And Uruguay, for whatever reason, has six; Mexico has five.

I'm sure most of those guys are qualified — but the idea that America doesn't have a single official capable of refereeing — or, for the love of Pele, able to raise a checkered flag once in a while — is ludicrous. Being left out of the referee mix just feeds the paranoia of fans who think games are rigged.

Take all those points together, and you get a picture of a system that’s paternalistic, exclusionary and destined to fail — in short, it's not unlike several economies in Europe.

Maybe that's why U.S. coach Bob Bradley and his team took the setbacks in stride. They actually seemed surprised by the uproar over the bad calls, and the lack of explanation for them.

"FIFA operates differently. Soccer is a different game," Bradley said. "From our end, we get used to that. We all have friends and family who ask us the same questions that most of you ask us, and you end up saying, 'That's just how it is sometimes', and you move on and get ready for the next game."

When an organization embraces opportunities for unfairness and ineptitude with the zest FIFA has shown, you really can't be shocked by the result.

The World Cup would be better off if FIFA bagged the talk about humanity and imperfection and took a few pages from the folks running Wimbledon — a tournament that openly pursues perfection. When a tennis match starts on Centre Court, there are 11 officials watching the field of play — the chair umpire and 10 line judges.

If you're hoping to see that many referees in soccer, don't hold your breath. But before we see video replay and other technology being used in the World Cup, it'd be nice to see how well the officials could do if they're put in a position to succeed.

Legalisation of 'Medicinal' Cannabis Sees Amazing Surge in Users

When Capitalism Meets Cannabis

At the Farmacy in Boulder, Colo., medical marijuana is sold in a boutiquelike atmosphere. State law lets sellers profit as much as they can, as long as they stay within a labyrinth of rules.

By David Segal

Anyone who thinks it would be easy to get rich selling marijuana in a state where it’s legal should spend an hour with Ravi Respeto, manager of the Farmacy, an upscale dispensary here that offers Strawberry Haze, Hawaiian Skunk and other strains of Cannabis sativa at up to $16 a gram.

She will harsh your mellow.

“No M.B.A. program could have prepared me for this experience,” she says, wearing a cream-colored smock made of hemp. “People have this misconception that you just jump into it and start making money hand over fist, and that is not the case.”

Since this place opened in January, it’s been one nerve-fraying problem after another. Pot growers, used to cash-only transactions, are shocked to be paid with checks and asked for receipts. And there are a lot of unhappy surprises, like one not long ago when the Farmacy learned that its line of pot-infused beverages could not be sold nearby in Denver. Officials there had decided that any marijuana-tinged consumables had to be produced in a kitchen in the city.

“You’d never see a law that says, ‘If you want to sell Nike shoes in San Francisco, the shoes have to be made in San Francisco,’ ” says Ms. Respeto, sitting in a tiny office on the second floor of the Farmacy. “But in this industry you get stuff like that all the time.”

One of the odder experiments in the recent history of American capitalism is unfolding here in the Rockies: the country’s first attempt at fully regulating, licensing and taxing a for-profit marijuana trade. In California, medical marijuana dispensary owners work in nonprofit collectives, but the cannabis pioneers of Colorado are free to pocket as much as they can — as long as they stay within the rules.

The catch is that there are a ton of rules, and more are coming in the next few months. The authorities here were initially caught off guard when dispensary mania began last year, after President Obama announced that federal law enforcement officials wouldn’t trouble users and suppliers as long as they complied with state law. In Colorado, where a constitutional amendment legalizing medical marijuana was passed in 2000, hundreds of dispensaries popped up and a startling number of residents turned out to be in “severe pain,” the most popular of eight conditions that can be treated legally with the once-demonized weed.

More than 80,000 people here now have medical marijuana certificates, which are essentially prescriptions, and for months new enrollees have signed up at a rate of roughly 1,000 a day.

As supply met demand, politicians decided that a body of regulations was overdue. The state’s Department of Revenue has spent months conceiving rules for this new industry, ending the reefer-madness phase here in favor of buzz-killing specifics about cultivation, distribution, storage and every other part of the business.

Whether and how this works will be carefully watched far beyond Colorado. The rules here could be a blueprint for the 13 states, as well as the District of Columbia, that have medical marijuana laws. That is particularly the case in Rhode Island, New Jersey, the District of Columbia and Maine, which are poised to roll out programs of their own.

Americans spend roughly $25 billion a year on marijuana, according to the Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron, which gives some idea of the popularity of this drug. Eventually, we might be talking about a sizable sum of tax revenue from its sales as medicine, not to mention private investment and employment. A spokesman for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws says hedge fund investors and an assortment of financial service firms are starting to call around to sniff out opportunities.

“We’re past the days when people call here to ask if marijuana will give men breasts,” says Allen St. Pierre, the executive director of NORML. “Now, the calls are from angel investors, or REITs — people who are looking for ways to invest or offer their services.”

What happens when pot goes legit? How does the government establish rules that allow the industry to flourish, but not run rampant? And given that this is all about medicine, what about doctors, some of whom have turned medical marijuana consultations into a highly lucrative specialty?

These and dozens of other questions are now being answered in cities like Boulder, an affluent, whole-grain kind of college town where the number of dispensaries — anywhere from 50 to 100, depending on whom you ask — is larger than the number of Starbucks and liquor stores combined. During a recent visit, it was clear that for every marijuana seller and physician who thinks that the rules are too strict, murky or fluid, there are others who can hardly wipe the smile off their faces.

“When I visited in September, I looked around and saw that there were only four dispensaries in Boulder, and they were all right on campus,” says Bradley Melshenker, co-owner of the Greenest Green and formerly a medical marijuana seller in Los Angeles. “We went into one and saw like 30 kids in the waiting room, and I thought: ‘This is crazy. We’ve got to come.’ ”

YOUR first foray into a medical marijuana center is slightly disorienting, like breathing underwater during your maiden scuba dive, or watching the Red Sox win the 2004 World Series. Everything in your past tells you that the experience is impossible, but at the same time, you know it is happening.

Forget the furtive transactions that have defined American pot dealing since the dawn of the dime bag. The best of Boulder’s dispensaries display their product in the sort of glass cases found in jewelry stores or high-end bakeries.

The people behind those cases, known as “budtenders,” like to think of themselves as sommeliers, although the names of the strains for sale will never be confused with chardonnay: Bubble Gum, Sour Kush, God’s Gift, Grand Daddy Purp and Blue Skunk.

“This will throw you for a loop,” says Michael Bellingham, owner of the Boulder Medical Marijuana Dispensary, who is holding a jar of Jack the Ripper, one of more than a dozen strains he sells. “It’s very serious, very strong; it goes right to your brain.”

With a couple of exceptions — Mr. Bellingham among them — interviewing pot sellers is unlike interviewing anyone else in business. Simple yes-or-no questions yield 10-minute soliloquies. Words are coined on the spot, like “refudiate,” and regular words are used in ways that make sense only in context. One guy kept saying “rue” as though it meant “reluctant,” as in “I think the state was rue to act.”

Many have a long history with marijuana, and they remain — let’s just run with it — rue to share their names. One dispensary employee swears that his hippie parents christened him Onefree, but he prefers to be called Dave and everyone calls him Van.

A few dispensary owners declined to be interviewed; many are still wrapping their heads around the idea that what they do is legal. And none of the owners offered a look at their “grow,” as indoor, hydroponic crops are known. On that subject, everyone became bashful. There are strict rules about the size of grows and, of course, at the federal level, marijuana remains a “Schedule I Controlled Substance,” alongside heroin and L.S.D.

Most owners, though, were happy to show off their wares at retail, and it’s stuff that has little in common with the Cheech-and-Chong era of this drug. State-of-the-art pot is dense and loamy and comes in exotic shades of green and lavender — like shag carpeting made in a jungle. Most customers buy a gram or two at a time, and a lot of dispensaries offer loyalty cards — buy a lot, get some free. If smoking doesn’t appeal, there are lots of pot edibles, like cookies, fudge, butter, candy bars, muffins, coffee and ice cream.

“We had a milkshake night here a few weeks ago,” says Lauren Meisels of the Greenest Green. “The place was packed.”

The marijuana merchants in Colorado, like trailblazers in any business, had to make a lot of basic decisions when they started. Among them: What should a for-profit medical marijuana dispensary look like, anyway? State law says that the cannabis has to be in “limited access areas,” but as far as interior decorating mandates go, that’s it.

So there’s variety. The Greenest Green looks like a bar in Amsterdam, with a chalkboard announcing the day’s offerings in colors reminiscent of Starburst Fruit Chews, as well as a stereo playing reggae. Until a new law went into effect, patients could “medicate” on the premises, with options that included a $5 hit of hash oil from an elaborate bonglike device called a skillet.

The Green Room has a Pottery Barn in Bohemia feel, with an espresso bar and a separate room for a massage therapist. Another, Dr. Reefer — it’s the name of the dispensary and the trade name of the owner — is proudly ramshackle, in part because it hasn’t been thoroughly renovated since a restaurant moved off the premises.

“This used to be a hot dog place called What’s Up Dog and my place was in the basement,” says Pierre Werner, Dr. Reefer himself. “When What’s Up Dog closed, I moved in the very next day, and I’ve been open every day since.”

Mr. Werner, for the record, is not actually a doctor. Rather, as he puts it with a note of pride and defiance, he’s a “three-time convicted felon for possession of marijuana with intent to sell.” That history, as well as his habit of standing near the side of the road and waving a huge Dr. Reefer sign at passing cars while shouting “come get your meds,” makes other dispensary owners, not to mention some local politicians, wince.

After all, they’re trying to create respectability — maybe even some class — and Dr. Reefer’s not helping.

If there is a historical precedent for what’s now happening in Colorado, it could be the 1920s and the era of Prohibition. During America’s dry age, the federal alcohol ban carved out an exemption for medicinal use, and doctors nationwide suddenly discovered they could bolster their incomes by writing liquor prescriptions.

Pharmacies, which filled those prescriptions, and were one of the few places whiskey could be bought legally, raked it in. Through the 1920s, the number of Walgreens stores soared from 20 to nearly 400.

Prohibition also enriched adventurous sorts at every level of booze production and consumption, from grape farmers and distillers to the owners of speakeasies. Many of them went on to earn legitimate fortunes once Prohibition was repealed.

More than a few in the marijuana business say they believe they are early entrants in a market that could be huge, as laws and public attitudes shift in their favor. But a lot depends on what restrictions are placed on sales, as Colorado’s example suggests.

SELLERS here will tell you that to succeed in this business, you need to keep two essentials in mind.

First is the importance of nabbing a lot of “caregiver rights,” which every person with a medical marijuana certificate can assign to a seller of choice. The caregiver rights of each patient, as customers are universally known, allow a dispensary to sell the marijuana of six plants, though the pot can be sold to anyone with a certificate. So the more caregiver rights a dispensary collects, the more pot it can sell.

The second essential: grow your own. A pound of marijuana can be sold at retail for somewhere between $5,500 and $7,500. To buy that quantity wholesale will cost about $4,000. Grow it yourself and the same pound will cost just $750 to $1,000.

“It’s like any retail environment,” says Sean Fey, a co-owner of the Green Room. “Given overhead expenses, you’re not going to make a lot of money if your margins are 40 or 50 percent, which is what you’ll earn if you don’t grow your own marijuana. But you’ll get 70 to 80 percent margins if you do.”

Pot sales so far are expected to generate about $2.7 million in license fees, in addition to the more than $681,000 in sales tax collected from July 2009 to February 2010. These figures seem a decent-enough start, but are far less than the $15 million in annual taxes predicted by some of the state’s more optimistic lawmakers.

A batch of regulations known as Amendment 1284, signed by the governor on June 7, is expected to put many dispensaries out of business, eliminating the amateurs and semipros who jumped in because there was nothing to stop them, but greatly strengthening those who have the wherewithal to remain standing.

At least that is the hope of Matt Cook, the senior director of enforcement at the state’s Department of Revenue and the man behind Colorado’s pot regulation system.

“I’ve been coming up with regulations for different industries for 30 years,” he says. “Alcohol, tobacco, car dealerships. I just took the best practices from those businesses, and I was allowed input of my own.”

The new rules, many of which will take effect over coming months, treat dispensaries a bit like pharmacies and a bit like casinos. Felons will soon be prohibited from owning dispensaries. (Mr. Werner is selling the Dr. Reefer store.) Twenty-four-hour Webcams will be trained on every growing facility and dispensary in the state. There are restrictions on hours, new rules for licensing, labeling and on and on.

Dispensary owners, generally speaking, aren’t complaining. The more regulated the business becomes, the easier it will be to operate, says Ms. Respeto of the Farmacy. The company, which was co-founded by her father, has big ambitions: to become a medical marijuana dispensary franchise and do for Super Silver Haze what Rite Aid did for pills. The store in Boulder is actually the company’s fifth; there are three in California and one in Denver.

“I used to manage Whole Foods stores on the East Coast,” she says. “And that was a lot easier. Because in the food industry, you know what the standards are.”

Ms. Respeto exudes a kind of soccer-mom normality, which dovetails neatly with a core element of the Farmacy’s marketing plan. The company would like to purge the business of its counterculture, glazed-and-confused image and turn it into something mainstream.

“What you hear about is a bunch of 18-year-olds who just want to get high,” she says. “You’ll see little of that in our establishment. What you’ll see instead is the 50-year-old woman who suffers from arthritis and this is her choice of pain medication.”

The medical dimensions of this industry seem in perpetual tension with its stoner roots. All dispensary workers sound utterly sincere about the health benefits of marijuana, and each has a story about an elderly man whose chronic back pain vanished when he was introduced to the healing powers of Sour Diesel.

These are true stories, and there’s no doubting that pot helps a lot of people who are in genuine pain.

But when was the last time your pharmacy had a milkshake night? Selling “dosage controlled” scoops of chocolate peanut butter ice cream?

Judging from three days of visits to a dozen places, the sweet spot of the dispensary demographic seems to be 20- to 30-year-olds, all of whom, when asked, say they have an ailment — insomnia, menstrual cramps or an assortment of painful-sounding bone problems.

“I fractured a vertebra in my back,” says Keith Aten, who has just swung by the Green Room to buy a medicated cookie and a caramel. “It hurts if I’m having a heavy walking day.”

Mr. Aten is a tall 21-year-old wearing a T-shirt with a zombiefied version of the Scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz, lurching down the Yellow Brick Road yelling “Brains!” Like every patient, Mr. Aten is assiduously courted with freebies by dispensaries who covet his caregiver rights.

“My guy used to give me a free half-ounce every month, but he just dropped it to a free quarter-ounce,” he said. “So I’m looking around to see who has a better deal. I’ve visited about 30 places so far.”

To acquire this V.I.P. status, Mr. Aten first needed to pass a medical exam certifying that marijuana is appropriate medicine for him. And that exam, surprisingly enough, might be the easiest money in this aromatic field.

TO see why, visit the office of Dr. James Boland, about nine miles outside of Boulder, in a strip mall in Broomfield. The place is a marvel of work-flow efficiency. In a matter of minutes, patients are greeted by a secretary, have their papers notarized by a notary public and are escorted to a waiting room — which on this day has a TV playing an instructional video on making your own hash.

“Today, I saw about 40 patients, but sometimes we’ll have 100 patients come through here,” Dr. Boland says, sitting in his small examination room.

He is dressed in dark green scrubs, like a man on a work break from a MASH unit. Until last year, he earned a modest income handling worker’s comp claims for a local furniture manufacturer.

Then he decided to enter medical marijuana full time, and he opened this place, which technically isn’t a doctor’s office, but a “managing/marketing firm” called Relaxed Clarity. His employees are allowed to do what he can’t — show up in dispensaries to pitch his services.

And when patients arrive, they find a highly streamlined operation. Each examination lasts three to five minutes.

“All you’re doing is answering the narrow question: does this person have a condition that qualifies them?” says Dr. Boland. “And do they have anything else that would place them at risk for an adverse outcome if they use medical marijuana?”

Yes to the first question, no to the second — those are the answers about 90 percent of the time, he says. And he stands by every one of those decisions.

BY the standards of a workaday medical practice, this is simple and headache-free work, according to Dr. Boland, unless you count the hidden-camera TV journalists who have dropped by hoping to find misconduct, or the lingering fears that if you’re too liberal with your signature, the state’s medical board might discipline you. A very small number of doctors approves a majority of certificates, and Dr. Boland is one of the most prolific of them all.

In one year alone, working just three days a week at Relaxed Clarity, he’s seen 7,000 patients, each paying an average of $150 for a visit. He takes out a calculator and does some quick arithmetic. That’s more than $1 million, grossed in 12 months.

“There’s no waiting for an insurance company to pay you a fraction of what you billed,” Dr. Boland says. “It’s just boom, you know, cash on the spot. So you can make a significant amount of money doing this.”

Like the Farmacy, Dr. Boland hopes to take his medical marijuana business national, opening Relaxed Clarity offices in other states. The difference is that he is profitable, while the Boulder outpost of the Farmacy, at least for now, is not.

The lack of profits has been a source of stress for Ms. Respeto. Maybe as the industry matures, it will become more predictable and easier to navigate, less given to panicky phone calls about unforeseen U-turns. Until then, the good news is that she is surrounded, day in and day out, by one of the best-known relaxants on earth. The bad news is that she is one of the very few people in this business who does not smoke pot.

“I go home at night,” she sighs, “and have a glass of wine.”

Mark Webber Miraculously Escape

Formula One driver Mark Webber miraculously escaped a collision in which his Red Bull Racing car took off, flipped upside down and smashed into a tyre wall at 190mph at the Valencia Grand Prix today.

The incident, on lap 10 in Spain, came when the Australian attempted to overtake rival Heikki Kovalainen on one the tracks fastest sections.

Preparing to make his move: Mark Webber (behind) approached Heikki Kovalainen on lap 10 of the Valencia Grand Prix.....

Preparing to make his move: Mark Webber (behind) approached Heikki Kovalainen on lap 10 of the Valencia Grand Prix.....

.... but the Australian smashed into the back of the Lotus driver causing him to take flight and flip his car....

.... but the Australian smashed into the back of the Lotus driver causing him to take flight and flip his car....

... and then comes crashing down on the car's roof at 190mph

... and then comes crashing down on the car's roof at 190mph

However the Lotus driver attempted to defend his position leading Webber to plow into the back of him. It was then the car took off, turning 360 degrees in the air before landing on it's roof and skidding out of control off the track.

Room with a view: TV pictures captured the moment Webber took flight something like a rocket facing skywards

Room with a view: TV pictures captured the moment Webber took flight something like a rocket facing skywards

Lucky escape: Miraculously Webber was able to walk away from his car after it came to a stop in a tyre wall

Lucky escape: Miraculously Webber was able to walk away from his car after it came to a stop in a tyre wall

Gives you wings: Webber had started the race from second on the grid

Gives you wings: Webber had started the race from second on the grid

Incredibly Webber walked away from the incident which, had it not been for the exceptional levels of design safety on the car and indeed track surroundings, may well have been much more serious.

BBC commentator and former F1 driver David Coulthard said: 'F1 has seen one of its luckiest days.

'That could have been really, really serious. '

Coulthard later caught up with Webber and revealed: 'Mark is sitting very calmly reflecting on his low flying Red Bull. He is in good shape and physically no problem at all.

'He is looking like the chilled Aussie he is, not a man that has just had that experience.'

Earlier in the day GP2 driver Josef Kral had an equally nasty accident at turn 17. Kral was attempting to pass Rodolfo Gonazalez when he mounted the rear of his opponent, barrel-rolled into the air and buried the car deep into the tyre barrier.He was taken to hospital conscious but reporting pain in his back and right arm.

Angelina Jolie as She Opens up About Her Family

Angelina Jolie has revealed her four-year-old daughter Shiloh wants to be a boy.

The Salt actress - who has six children with partner Brad Pitt - has revealed that that she encourages her eldest biological child to embrace her tomboy style.

'She wants to be a boy,' she tells the August edition of Vanity Fair magazine. 'So we had to cut her hair. She likes to wear boys' everything. She thinks she's one of the brothers.'

Apparently coining a new fashion term, she says: 'Shiloh, we feel, has Montenegro style.'

'She dresses like a little dude. It's how people dress there. She likes tracksuits, she likes [regular] suits.'

Interview: Angelina Jolie speaks about her children, and her marriage in Vanity Fair's August issue

Candid interview: Angelina Jolie opend up about her about her children in an interview with the August issue of Vanity Fair

But Angelina isn't concerned and says she sees much of her creative self in her daughter.

'Shiloh’s hysterically funny, one of the goofiest, most playful people you’ll ever meet,' she says. 'Goofy and verbal, the early signs of a performer. I used to get dressed up in costumes and jump around.'

In her most candid interview yet, the 35-year-old described most of her children's developing personalities.

Angelina JolieAngelina Jolie

Tomboy at heart: Angelina, pictured in LA with Shiloh yesterday, says her daughter wants to be a boy

Maddox, 8, is 'a real intellectual, which I can take no credit for genetically. He’s great at school, great at history. He feels like he could be a writer or travel the world and learn about places and things.'

Five-year-old Zahara has 'got an extraordinary voice and is just so elegant and well spoken,' she adds.

And twins Knox and Vivienne, who turn 2 next month, are 'classic boy and girl. She’s really female. And he’s really a little dude.'

ShilohShiloh

'Montenegro style': Shiloh likes to dress 'like a little dude'

Angelina, who is also mother to Pax, 6, says she has a 'happy home' and has not ruled out adding to her brood.

But she and partner Brad, 46, are aware of the demands of six growing children and she denied she was carrying a seventh.

She told the magazine: 'I'm not pregnant. We're not opposed to it. But we want to make sure we can give everybody special time.

'They're kids now, and can play together, but they're going to need a lot more talking in the middle of the night, like I did with my mom for hours.

Brad Pitt

Famous brood: The couple haven't ruled out having more children

'We want to make sure we don't build a family so big that we don't have absolutely enough time to raise them each really well.'

Angelina, who recently finished filming in Venice for her role as an Interpol agent opposite Johnny Depp in The Tourist, might soon give up acting to spend more time with her family.

'It is not the most important thing in my life,' she says of her career.

'It’s a fun job. It’s a luxury. But I don’t think I’ll do it much longer.'

For more see www.vanityfair.com. The August edition of Vanity Fair is out on Friday

Kristen Stewart Goes From Goth to GINGER With a Stunning New Twilight Highlights

Twilight star Kristen Stewart usually favours a vampish look on the red carpet, but now she's really lightened up.

The actress debuted a freshly dyed ginger mane as she turned up on the New York set of the Late Show with David Letterman.

Kristen Stewart

Lightening up: Kristen Stewart arrived for an interview with David Letterman in New York today with a brand new hairstyle

Kristen StewartKristen Stewart

Looking sleek: The Twilight star wore a stylish LBD for the appearance

Kristen

Dark side: Brunette Kristen with Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner at the LA premiere of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse last week

It also appeared she'd had her long locks trimmed into a shaggy bob.

She teamed her new 'do with a sleek little black dress with metallic detailing and towering shoes.

Kristen, who has been working over time to promote The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, previously said she was planning to colour her hair a 'dirty, strawberry blonde' for her next film role.

She is set to play MaryLou, the wife of drifter Dean Moriarity in the big screen adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s 1957 novel, On The Road.

The 20-year-old says she is 'over the moon' about the part, adding: 'It was my first favourite book and the character is iconic.'

Filming is set to begin in the coming month.

Kristen StewartAshley Greene
Quick-change: Kristen later changed into a different little black dress for a screening, which was also attended by Ashley Greene

Awesome: Samsung NX10 Digital Camera

samsung Samsung has launched NX10 – its mirror-less interchangeable lens camera.

According to the company, Samsung NX10 has the heart of a DSLR embedded inside the compact frame of a digital camera, successfully integrating the APS-C size CMOS sensor with a mirrorless interchangeable lens, in a small, light body.

NX10 comes with auto focus (AF), 14.6 MP APS-C size CMOS sensor and 3.0" AMOLED screen. The camera has DRIMe II Pro engine and advanced AF algorithm. The AMOLED screen provides 30,000 times faster response rate than conventional LCDs, and has lower power consumption and a higher contrast ratio – 100,000:1 vs. 500:1, according to the company.

NX10 comprises a range of intelligent features including in-depth manual controls and a Smart Auto function which automatically detects the surrounding environment, selects the right shoot mode and a Smart Range feature that enables the user to express both bright areas and dark areas in the same frame. There's also a Supersonic Dust Reduction system to keep dust particles clear of the image sensor.

NX10 also offers several options for playing, reviewing and managing captured images. Users can scroll through the images, view thumbnails, zoom in or out, view slideshows. The Image Edit option offers a several ways to alter the look of an already-captured photo, including redeye fix, backlight, changing the photo style, resizing, rotating etc.

Slim and light at just over 350gm, NX10 is available in Black colour in two variants. One with an 18-55mm lens kit (Rs 42,990-/) & second with 30mm Pan Cake lens (Rs 44,990-/).

Top IT Employers at Engineering Institutes

Top IT employers at engg institutes

IT companies are back to engineering campuses. After a lull caused by the adverse economic conditions, the year 2009-2010 saw IT companies return to campuses. Though the numbers have still not touched the pre-recession levels, they surely look promising.

Business Today magazine recently came out with a list of top recruiters at India's premier engineering institutes, companies which have driven hiring at these institutes since the beginning of 2010 (till May) as well as also in last fiscal.

Here are IT companies who formed the part of the list. IT companies who have been among the biggest employers at engineering institutes.

Microsoft

Microsoft

The software giant Microsoft too is back to campus. Microsoft India Development Center reportedly went to the top 25 engineering institutes in India (IITs, NITs and a few state-level good engineering colleges) and hired close to 100 graduates who are expected to come on board in the next few months.

Last year, it hired 75 engineers.

Wipro

Wipro

Wipro reportedly hired 2,500 from engineering colleges and added 1,300 under its Wipro Academy of Software Excellence (WASE) programme.
A company official recently said that Wipro's campus hires for the present financial year are likely to be between 11,000 and 12,000.
The third-largest IT company is also said to be hiring off-campus graduates from science streams, from the 2009 and 2010 batches, for meeting its existing demand.

Cognizant

Cognizant

IT services provider Cognizant reportedly visited 75 engineering schools to pick up talent for its technology solutions business.
Though the company did not share the exact number of hires, in 2009-10 it added 21,800 to its total global headcount, of which 60 per cent are fresh engineering and science graduates.
The US-based software company scaled up its revenue forecast for fiscal ending December 31, 2010 to $4.1 billion from the earlier projection of $3.935 billion.
In the first quarter ended March 31, 2010, the company reported that it's net employee addition exceeded 7,100, taking the company's global headcount to over 85,500.

Tata Consultancy Services

Tata Consultancy Services

Country's largest IT company TCS visited 371 campuses for hiring and made 20,050 campus offers in the recently-concluded fiscal, with 72% of these made in the January-March quarter alone.
India's largest software services provider Tata Consultancy Services reportedly hired approximately 438 students till May 2010 from top the 10 engineering colleges.
The company, which added 16,668 employees in 2009-10, total manpower strength stands at approximately 1,60,429.
The Indian numero uno is upbeat on global recovery and plans to hire 30,000 employees in the current fiscal.
The company's HR head said that the hiring ratio will be around 60 percent-plus for fresher's and 30 percent plus for experienced professionals.

Infosys Technologies

Infosys Technologies

The campus intake of Infosys Technologies in 2009-10 was 19,000.
Nasdaq-listed Infosys total employee strength stood at 1.13 lakh on March 31, 2010 which includes 1.06 lakh software professionals, 8,880 trainees and 6,932 sales & support staff.
In the last quarter, Infosys hired as many as 9,313 employees, but the net addition after taking into account attrition was 3,914.
Recently, its CEO Kris Gopalakrishnan said that Infosys will hire 30,000 professionals this year as growth has returned to the sector.

Aricent

Aricent

Telecom technology and services company Aricent, ranked #6 on BT survey made 1,000 offers to the class of 2010.
In April, the company announced that it will add close to 3,000 professionals to its global workforce. Out of these, almost 1,000 will be recruited in India over the next 3-4 months.
According to the company, some 300 of these new recruits will be joining its Chennai development center. He added that the recruitment drive will look for both fresher's as well as experienced resources.
As on April 2010, the global headcount at Aricent was 8,500. The company has three development centers in India, located at Bangalore, Chennai and Gurgaon.

Oracle

Oracle

Enterprise software maker Oracle too made campus visits for hiring across India. The company added around 72 fresher's since the beginning of 2010.
The company which recently acquired Sun Microsystems for $7.4 billion, had announced at the start of 2010 that it plan to hire 2,000 sales and engineering employees.

iGate

iGate

IT services company iGate hired 35 fresher's from top tech campuses across India. The company in April announced that it will hire 500 professionals in the next two quarters to support its expanding operations.
iGate CEO Phaneesh Murthy said that most of the 500 people will be in India and some in Mexico and the US. They will be employed in both services in BPO areas.
The Nasdaq-listed company also plans to close acquisitions in the range of $30-70 million this year.
The company at the end of January-March quarter had 7,357 employees, a net addition of 447 employees during the quarter.

Hewlett-Packard

Hewlett-Packard

Computer manufacturer Hewlett-Packard, which recently announced 24,600 job cuts or 7.5% of its workforce, picked up a handful of 35 people from India's top engineering institutes.
HP said it would carry out the cutbacks over the next three years, while replacing about half the jobs in new areas of its services business.

IBM

IBM

US-based IBM hired close to 179 students from the country's top top engineering colleges.
Spurred by jump in technology spending by corporate, IBM reported a 13% growth in net income at $2.6 bn in Jan-Mar quarter of 2010. Total revenues stood at $22.9 bn, an increase of 5% over the same period last fiscal.
This year in March the company cut almost 500 jobs across US, according to Alliance@IBM, a group that represents some employees. The cuts were less than 1% of IBM’s workforce of 399,409 as of Dec 31, 2009.