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Convinced he’s overpaid, techie returns Rs 40k salary to bosses

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

BANGALORE: A 32-year-old man from Bangalore quit his job as he felt that his employers were paying him too much money. This guilt of being 'overpaid' led him to depression - a condition psychiatrists term schizoaffective psychosis or chaotic thought process.

His condition has thrown light on an issue that a handful of the workforce is grappling with.

The man, who had eight years of experience, drew Rs 40,000 per month at the IT firm he worked at, even though experts say an individual with his experience should ideally draw Rs 60,000.

However, when he would get his salary, the man would out of sheer guilt return the amount to his bosses.

Dr Vinod Kulkarni, a senior consultant in neuropsychiatry, who treated the man, said stress triggers this condition in certain individuals.

"It is because of a dispute between unlimited ambitions and limited capabilities. It could be also because of certain biochemical changes that occur in the brain. Their discipline puts them in such a state of mind that even if they make a small mistake, they think they have committed an unpardonable sin and have to punish themselves for the consequences. They tend to develop an inferiority complex," said Dr Kulkarni.

While the man is receiving treatment, Dr Kulkarni says his is not an isolated case.

"A few weeks ago we had a bank manager who thought there were several others who were superior to him and felt they should be promoted instead of him," said Dr Kulkarni while speaking to Mirror.

The man is currently being counselled and also receiving cognitive behaviour therapy where he is made to see his merits and talent."We have already put him on anti-depressants," said Dr Kulkarni.


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Kohli steals Bailey's thunder as India restore parity in ODI series against Australia

NAGPUR: When ICC introduced two new balls and a new Powerplay rule, its aim was to have a proper balance between bat and ball. At the moment though it's just not happening.

Scorecard | Highest Successful Run Chases | Match In Pics

No total appears safe these days as India made a mockery of Australia's huge total (350-6) for the second time in the series, chasing down the target of 351 with six wickets intact and three balls to spare.

If it's a chase then Virat Kohli has to be the protagonist. Kohli (115, 66b, 18x4, 1x6) came out with purpose and changed the course of the game with some brilliant strokeplay to notch up his 17th one-day hundred.

Kohli did what he has done in most of the successful chases; keep his cool under pressure, pace his innings nicely and stay till the end to keep India's hopes alive of winning their first bilateral home series against Australia.

This after Shikhar Dhawan (100, 102b, 12x4) and Rohit Sharma (79, 89b, 7x4, 3x6) laid the foundation with a 178-run stand. They have had five 100-plus stands this year. No other opening pair has these many since 2011.

However, it was Kohli's innings that made all the difference in the end. Despite losing Suresh Raina and Yuvraj in the space of four balls, India hardly panicked as the 25-year-old finished the job in the company of MS Dhoni (25, 23b, 2x4) with a 61-run fifth-wicket alliance.

India, who were considered poor chasers not too long ago have now become experts at it. Hobart, Dhaka, Jaipur and Nagpur will go down as significant milestones in their ODI history. And all four featured blazing tons from Kohli.

There was a lot of similarity in India's chase between Jaipur and Nagpur. Dhawan was on 18 at Jaipur when Haddin dropped him and that proved vital in the outcome of the match.

On Wednesday, he was given a life by Glenn Maxwell when he was on 19. The left-hander made the Australians pay for it by scoring a brilliant hundred. His fluent knock provided Rohit ample time to get his eye in. Rohit missed out on a hundred, but he had done his job.

While the Australian bowlers came a cropper thanks to some brilliant batting by India, their Indian counterparts too went through a torrid time after Dhoni won the toss and put Australia into bat.

After playing on flat tracks so far in the series, India were hoping to get some turn when they arrived in Nagpur. They got plenty of it from the Jamtha wicket, but still failed to contain the Aussies.

India again struggled to stop Bailey. They continued to leak runs in the middle-overs and had no clue what to do in the death overs. Bailey (156, 114b, 13x4, 6x6) and Shane Watson (102, 94b, 13x4, 3x6) hammered the hapless Indian bowlers to all corners of the ground with their third-wicket stand of 168 runs.

There were plenty of long hops and half trackers. In between, Watson and Bailey also got enough width to essay the cut. They weren't afraid of coming down the wicket and putting doubts in the minds of the spinners. The spin trio of Ashwin, Mishra and Jadeja leaked 220 runs in 30 overs.

Bailey looked in total control again and posted his highest score. It was a typical Bailey innings which started with nudges, pushes and deft dabs. Once he settled down, he didn't take long to shift gears. He knows how to accumulate runs. With four fielders outside the circle in non-powerplay overs, he kept on picking the spots and hit boundaries at will. His fluent knock allowed Watson to settle down.

Watson, who has had a quiet series so far, nearly wasted yet another promising start when he was caught while trying to hit Jadeja over mid-wicket. However, the umpires called him back as Ravindra Jadeja had overstepped the bowling crease. Jadeja's error cost India 77 runs more as Watson showed he is relishing the new No.3 role.

Before being castled by Shami, he had completed his ninth ODI hundred. Bailey had another fruitful stand of 120 with Adam Voges (44*, 38b, 5x4), who played the anchor's role to perfection.

As good as Watson's and Bailey's efforts were, Virat's knock ensured that they were nothing but footnotes.

MOST HUNDREDS IN CHASES
Batsmen Hundreds Innings
Sachin Tendulkar 17 232
Virat Kohli 11 64
Chris Gayle 11 132
Sanath Jayasuriya 10 210
Saeed Anwar 10 105
MOST HUNDREDS IN SUCCESSFUL CHASES
Batsmen Hundreds Innings
Sachin Tendulkar 14 120
Virat Kohli 11 44
Sanath Jayasuriya 9 103
Saeed Anwar 9 59
Tillakaratne Dilshan 8 46
Chris Gayle 8 59
Adam Gilchrist 8 90
Ricky Ponting 8 104

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Krrish 3

Story: Each time evil awakens in the world, a superhero rekindles his superpowers. This time Krrish is back, with thrice the power to destroy the demonic Kaal and his bastion of beastly mutants.

Review: Evil doesn't raise its ugly head anymore. It raises a finger. But then 'Good' flies too. In 'Superhero' form - Caped, masked, winged - with muscles of steel and hearts of gold. Our comic-book phirang fantasy boys have flown high as 'Supermen' in Hollywood epics for eons. In India, only one man with an audacious flight of imagination - Rakesh Roshan - has thrice-over, superbly crafted a fantastical world 'alien' to Bollywood, with our very own amazingly evocative superhero - Krrish (Hrithik).

Leaping from where the prequel ended, Krishna (Hrithik) lives with his wife (Priyanka), and genius Dad, Rohit Mehra (Hrithik). In twirling black cape and mask, he hurtles across the city on heroic rescue operations, playing good hubby and doing odd jobs (as the alter ego). But his life is uproariously interrupted with the emergence of a dark and destructive world of an evil called 'Kaal' (Vivek). A maniacal villain, with special powers and a venomous will to erase inferior beings - the human race.

Kaal fuses DNA, to create an assortment of evil mutants called maanvars (manav+jaanwar) - a horned Rhinoman, red-eyed Antman, a Frogman (who gives lot of tongue) and a super-shapely chameleon Kaya (Kangna). He wants to spread a deadly virus to exterminate humanity, but Krrish uses his superpowers to save 'mankind' from the malignant 'mutakind'.

Hrithik is truly the stuff superheroes are made of. Brandishing his Greek-God looks and almighty powers. Displaying larger-than-life flair and flying shoulder-to-shoulder with any Hollywood superman. As the prosthetically pot-bellied and ageing Rohit, he is incredible. Vivek, as a physically disabled anti-hero is menacing as a 'hellboy'. His lunatic laugh and white-washed make-up make him fearfully fantastic. Priyanka is good in her limited role. Kangna in her gothic and deviously dark avatar looks stunning and pulls off an outstanding act.

With a visually riveting and emotionally engaging story, intriguing characters, sweeping VFX (unseen thus far on Indian celluloid) Rakesh Roshan's ambitious dream lives up. Yes, it's hugely inspired (by the Bats, Spideys and Wolverines of the West), but our superhero has his own 'X-factor'. Even with all the high-octane car crashes, explosions and 'animatronics', the philosophy is the force behind it all, yet, never overpowering the story.

The songs are slightly disappointing and background score (Salim-Sulaiman) is good, but unable to amp up the magnitude of the film.

For sheer vision, bravado and superlative execution, this one soars to new orbits. Latch on to this cape for an exhilarating ride.

Note: You might not like this film if sci-fi, fantastical films are not your scene.


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Samsung India launches its most expensive smartphone

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

(Samsung has launched its…)

NEW DELHI: Samsung has launched its Galaxy Golden flip phone with dual-touchscreens in India. The company has priced the new gadget at Rs 51,900, making it the most expensive device in its line-up in the country.

Galaxy Golden is powered by a dual-core 1.7 GHz processor and has 3.7-inch screens on the front and back. On the imaging front, there's an 8MP rear unit with LED flash and a 1.9MP front camera. The phone runs on Android 4.2 operating system, 1.5GB RAM and packs a 1,820mAh battery.


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Ankita Lokhande slaps Sushant Singh Rajput in public?

There seems to be trouble in couple Sushant Singh Rajput and Ankita Lokhande love life.

According to a leading daily, both were seen arguing with each other at Yashraj Studios in Mumbai. The argument took such an ugly turn that Ankita apparently slapped Sushant. The fact that they were not alone did not bother the angry TV actress.

A report in India Today says that Ankita called Sushant outside the studio and then checked his phone. They had an argument and she lost her cool and allegedly slapped her live-in partner.

Is Sushant seeing someone else or has success gone into his head? That is something we will have to wait and watch.


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No hidden treasure in Unnao, ASI stops excavation: Report

NEW DELHI: The Archaeological Survey of India has stopped digging for gold treasure at the fort of Raja Rao Ram Bux Singh in Unnao.

According to ASI officials, excavations have confirmed that there was no gold at the fort, Times Now reported.

Some pottery pieces from Buddhist era have been found from the site.

The excavation had begun on October 18 after a seer, Shobhan Sarkar, saw in his dreams that 1,000 tonnes of gold was supposed to be buried under the ruins of the 19th century fort.


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Patna serial blasts: Alleged mastermind held, several detained

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

PATNA: Making headway in the Patna blasts case, police have arrested two suspected terrorists, including one possibly the mastermind, and detained several others, even as the toll in the serial explosions rose to six.

A search operation by NIA and Patna Police is on at Gandhi Maidan, the area which witnessed six of the seven serial bomb blasts on Sunday that left 83 people injured, to locate explosives, if any, a senior police officer said on Monday.

The suspected terrorists have been identified as Tausim and Imtiyaz, official sources said.

SSP Patna Manu Maharaj earlier said that "one of the accused, who is being considered as the mastermind, has been arrested. He has confessed how the planning took place".

Three to four suspects have been detained, he said, adding, "We are in the process of interrogation so things will be clear very soon".

Maharaj said there were six-seven persons accompanying the alleged mastermind.

"Based on that information, we conducted raids. Information was given to Ranchi and subsequently our teams have gone there," he said.

Six persons were killed in the seven low intensity serial blasts of which six bombs went off in and around the venue of BJP prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi's mega rally at Gandhi Maidan shortly before his address before a huge gathering yesterday.

Patna city SP said the investigation is going on "so we can't divulge a lot of details. The accused has confessed to the crime and how it happened. He told us that six-seven teams came to Gandhi Maidan and surroundings areas of Patna and how they planted the bombs".

Meanwhile, the toll in the serial blasts rose to six after an injured person died at the Patna Medical College and Hospital (PMCH) on Sunday night.

Currently, 37 injured persons, many of them in critical condition, are being treated in the hospital.

Raids were being conducted in several areas of neighbouring Jharkhand on Monday in connection with the blasts.

Three persons detained after the blasts yesterday were released after interrogation last night, a senior police officer said in Ranchi.

Police recovered black powder, materials used to make IEDs, pressure cooker and extremist literature during the raids, he said.

In the wake of the multiple blasts in Patna, the Centre has asked all states to maintain high alert and tighten security during the festival season.

The home ministry also asked five poll-bound states to beef up security in election rallies, especially those being attended by top leaders.

The home ministry asked the states and union territories to keep strict vigil on sensitive places, markets, religious sites, railway stations, bus terminus and in other vital installations besides deploying adequate forces for their security.


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This'll be my last season: Angry Salman tells 'Bigg Boss 7' inmates

Bollywood star Salman Khan was so upset with TV actor Kushal Tandon's bad behaviour towards actress Tanisha Mukherjee on the show that he said it would be his last season with the reality show as the host.

The 47-year-old Saturday gave an earful to Kushal for insulting Tanisha last week.

"If you are thinking that you can clean your image, it's a misconception," Salman told Kushal, and added he too had faced it and realised that one's mistakes are engraved on people's memories.
"Because of this episode, this might be the last season for me," he said Saturday.

On Sunday, Salman talked about the issue again on Twitter responding to queries from his followers.

He wrote that according to "Bigg Boss" fans both should have been out, "but there was a lot more than wat you saw".

"You see an hour, I see the whole deal. Guess some of you guys may not react when some one speaks to female members of your family or women in that manner," Salman tweeted.

"But I do not. Most of us men and women stand up against men who run them down," wrote the super star and added that if this is not the culture, "it better become".

The actor also said that people get carried away during the show, and praised the concept.

"It's a good show to learn how to be physically and mentally strong. The tasks go on for 48 hrs and more. Without no proper sleep or food. Halwa hai kya (Is it a cakewalk?)," he wrote.

"I am only answering your question about BB ('Bigg Boss') because you are following me. This is a game. It's on TV so, I like to keep a check on it."

"The choice is yours if you want to watch it or not. Some times people do get carried away in fights. Everyone does and then they sort it out," he added.


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Dawood entered Indian dressing room in 1986, offered cars to players: Vengsarkar

NEW DELHI: Former skipper Dilip Vengsarkar today made a startling revelation about underworld don Dawood Ibrahim entering the Indian team dressing room and offering the players cars if they beat Pakistan in the final of the Sharjah tournament in 1986.

Vengsarkar disclosed that Dawood entered the team's dressing room and was introduced by the famous actor Mehmood as a businessman. However, Dawood was asked by the then India's captain Kapil Dev to get out of the dressing room.

"Actor Mehmood was in our dressing room. Kapil Dev was not in the dressing room at that time because he had gone out to address the press conference. Dawood was introduced by actor Mehmood," Vengsarkar said at a function in Jalgaon.

"No one recognised him but I had seen his photographs. Mehmood introduced him to us as a big businessman from here. Mehmood said he wants to announce a prize for us. He said 'If you beat Pakistan tomorrow, everyone will get a car'. Jayawant Lele was our manager then," he added.

Former BCCI secretary Jaywant Lele had also mentioned the incident in his book, 'I was There -- Memoirs of a Cricket Administrator'.

The series is most remembered for the last-ball six by Javed Miandad off Chetan Sharma in the final that helped Pakistan win their first Sharjah trophy.


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Ranji Trophy: Lahli's farmers make a killing on Sachin Tendulkar

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

LAHLI: For India's premier domestic tournament that seemed destined to be played to empty stands in forgotten venues, Lahli's Ranji Trophy tie between Haryana and Mumbai is proving quite an aberration.

With Sachin Tendulkar's final appearance for Mumbai, such is the frenzy over the man's presence that it's easy to forget there's a cricket match on. But it's not just the fan mania and a security avalanche.

Farmers of this unremarkable Haryana hamlet and surrounding villages have decided to cash in on the maestro's final Ranji outing by selling the complimentary passes given to them by the Haryana Cricket Association - with many going for anything between Rs 5,000 to 10,000.

Fans coming in from Delhi, Chandigarh and Ludhiana discovered that the association had distributed the passes to the sarpanch of each village, who subsequently passed them on to their farmers. But that has not deterred the fans. Placing the value of a Sachin farewell at par with an IPL outing in Delhi, many are simply happy to pay. "This is the last time we will get to watch Sachin play in our region. We don't mind paying such a price," a Delhi-based fan said.


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Google’s Nexus 5, Android 4.4 KitKat launch delayed

(Google's launch of the…)

NEW DELHI: Google's launch of the Nexus 5 smartphone and Android 4.4 KitKat mobile operating system has been delayed by a month.

It is expected that Google will now make the announcement in November, instead of October 28 as planned earlier, according to a report by Phones Review website.

Earlier, there had been media reports and also hints from KitKat's Twitter account that both the products would be launched on October 28.


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5 killed in 6 serial bomb blasts at Modi rally in Patna

PATNA: Five people were killed and 66 injured in six serial bomb blasts near the venue of BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi's rally in Patna on Sunday minutes before he reached there to address a huge gathering.

Hours before the multiple explosions, a crude bomb went off in a newly constructed toilet at the Patna railway station, 2km from the BJP's 'Hunkar rally' venue.

Five people died from blast injuries and 66 others were being treated for these injuries, according to Vimal Karak, deputy superintendent of Patna Medical College Hospital.

Five low intensity blasts occurred on the outer periphery of the Gandhi Maidan, Union home secretary Anil Goswami said in Delhi. One bomb went off before the Eliphistine cinema hall on the western side of the rally venue, police said. Tens of thousands of people had gathered at the rally venue.

Immediately after the explosion at the railway station, bomb disposal swept the area and recovered two more crude bombs, railway superintendent of police Upendra Kumar Sinha said.

One security personnel was injured while defusing a bomb recovered from the toilet, he said.

People were seen rushing the injured to the hospital as the explosions sparked panic.

At the rally, plumes of smoke billowed from a couple of sites even as BJP leaders, including Modi, addressed the crowd.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh condemned the blasts and appealed for calm. He spoke to Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar and asked him to speedily probe the blasts and ensure that perpetrators are punished.

"The Prime Minister has condemned the blasts in Patna and called for urgent steps to identify and take action against those responsible," a PMO statement sai

The home ministry sought a report from the Bihar government on the explosions and has sent teams of National Investigation Agency (NIA) and National Security Guard (NSG) to the state.

"I can't say whether it was a terror attack or political conspiracy. Only after the investigation, we will be able to tell anything," Union minister of state for home R P N Singh said.

Modi later said he was saddened at the blasts. "Blasts in Patna are deeply saddening and unfortunate. Condolences with families of deceased and prayers with injured. I appeal for peace and calm," the Gujarat chief minister said in a tweet.


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Haven’t become PM of India to redraw border: Manmohan Singh to Nawaz Sharif

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 26 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's displeasure with Pakistani PM Nawaz Sharif's on failing to restore ceasefire on the border followed a blunt message he delivered to Sharif in New York about a month ago when he said, "I have not become prime minister of India to redraw the boundary."

The PM's September 29 meeting with Sharif, which took place amid escalating firing on the Line of Control and the international border, began with Singh making no bones about his resolve to protect India's territorial integrity.

In fact, Singh's "Churchillian moment", reminiscent of the British leader's declaration in 1942 that he had not become the King's first minister to "preside over the liquidation of the British Empire", even surprised his senior aides as the PM brushed aside Sharif's arguments.

Singh responded to Sharif's attempt to raise India's "role" in Baluchistan, saying the matter had been raised by previous Pakistani PMs as well without an iota of proof being offered. The firmness must have struck Sharif, considering that it was Singh who heeded Islamabad's insistence to put Pakistan's allegation of Indian meddling in Baluchistan on the bilateral agenda.

Sources said Singh's unusually sharp words expressing his "big disappointment" with Sharif on Friday indicate his annoyance over the Pakistani PM not heeding an unambiguous signal that firing on the LoC and the border must stop.

On his way back from Beijing, Singh told the media, "Let me say that I am disappointed, because in the New York meeting, there was a general agreement on both the sides that peace and tranquility should be maintained on the border, on the Line of Control as well as on the international border and this has not happened."

In the New York meeting, Singh had also categorically rejected the Pakistani suggestion that restoration of the 2003 ceasefire agreement could be discussed by a politico-military committee, insisting the matter be sorted out at the military level.

The PM made it plain that Indian and Pakistani directors general of military operations must sort out the ceasefire violations and restore peace and tranquillity on the LoC and the international border.

Singh's insistence on the DGMO mechanism stemmed from India's view that Pakistan's civilian government could not be less accountable than the military. "The government in Pakistan is expected to implement the agreement arrived at in New York," said sources.

Singh's tough talk on Friday signals his waning patience as the political calendar in India begins to rapidly move towards the 2014 elections and Congress wards off the opposition charge of being soft on Pakistan's aggression on the borders.

Sources said the PM junked his moderate approach — even when being critical of Pakistan — as he felt nothing short of an unequivocal comment would work, given the rising tensions on the J&K border and LoC.

On Friday, the PM did express the hope that Sharif would "even at this late hour" recognize that the developments on the border do not augur well for both nations, but this time around he made it clear that the onus was on Pakistan to mend fences.

In the past, Singh has laboured hard to convince Pakistani leaders that combating terrorism and preventing hostile behaviour on the border was in Pakistan's interest. For him to give vent to his frustration would mean that he feels the scope for a middle ground with Pakistan is shrinking.

The episode and subsequent lack of action on the part of Pakistan has strengthened the assessment in India that Sharif remains a somewhat tricky customer who might say one thing at a meeting only to go ahead to do just what he wants.

The Pakistani PM is seen as neither willing nor capable of reining in the army, but the Indian government — at least in the current situation — has decided that it cannot continue to receive political flak at home without holding Sharif to account.


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New movie shows why Pakistan loves to hate India

ISLAMABAD: Militants overrun a Pakistani police academy and kill 100 officers. An Indian spy and her accomplice waltz in a glitzy flat in Islamabad to celebrate the success of their mission.

This is a scene from Waar (" Strike"), Pakistan's first big-budget movie which opened this month to enthusiastic audiences in the nuclear-armed South Asian country of 180 million.

Filmed with the support of the all-powerful military, the movie depicts every volatile aspect of Pakistan's rocky relationship with India.

Even in Pakistan itself, Waar is denounced by some liberals wary of what they see as fiery nationalistic rhetoric and scenes demonising India.

The narrative is simple and packed with action.

Indian villains team up with Islamist militants to plot spectacular attacks across Pakistan. Pakistani security forces jump in and save the day.

"Like any other action film, we wanted to show the triumph of good over evil," said director Bilal Lashari, 31. "And we wanted to do it with a great amount of spectacle and scale."

Politics aside, Waar is fun to watch. Helicopter gunships whizz over mountains and commandos lay siege to militant sanctuaries in Pakistan's picturesque, lawless tribal regions.

"The army was great in that they gave us a lot of logistical support," Lashari said. "All the scenes with the helicopters and the mountains - they couldn't have been done without the army."

Though yet to be screened in India, the film serves as a reminder of tensions between the neighbouring states, which have fought three wars since independence from the British in 1947.

India and Pakistan trade accusations of staging cross-border attacks and supporting militants in Jammu and Kashmir, where violence has seen a resurgence in recent months.

The movie has proved hugely successful. On a recent viewing in a packed cinema in the capital, attendees leapt to their feet to applaud patriotic scenes.

In one such moment, a retired officer takes on an Indian contractor on the roof of a building while a female Pakistani officer rushes to defuse a chemical bomb planted on the balcony.

Many cheered as the officer reduced the Indian man's face to a pulp. A woman turned to a group of giggling boys and scolded them for "laughing during such a serious movie".

"Of course India supports terrorism in Pakistan," said Sheila Raza, 23, as she left the cinema. "I think Waar is an accurate portrayal."

Record box office receipts

Presented almost entirely in English, Waar took more than three years to make and officially cost around $2.2 million in a country where the average film is made on less than $25,000.

Its distributors say Waar grossed more than $900,000 during the first week - a record for Pakistani cinema.

But some in Pakistan have mocked Waar as a propaganda movie. Cultural critic Nadeem Paracha said: "This film is basically the Pakistani state's fantasies being played out on a big screen."

India's film industry produces highly successful anti-Pakistan films of its own.

Bollywood film "Ek Tha Tiger", one of the Hindi film industry's biggest box-office successes in 2012, but banned in Pakistan, depicted a Pakistani intelligence agent choosing her love for an Indian agent over her country.

This year, a film based on an Indian operation to capture a fictional mafia don given asylum in Pakistan riled Pakistan's censor board. The villain in "D-Day" was loosely based on real-life gangster Dawood Ibrahim, who India says is harboured by Pakistan.


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Robin Thicke is comfortable naked

Robin Thicke is comfortable being naked.

The 'Blurred Lines' hitmaker admits he and his wife Paula Patton - who have been married since 2005 - regularly wander around the house without any clothes on and they want to try and encourage their three-year-old son, Julian, to do the same.

Speaking to Elle magazine, he said: ''In our household, nudity is not frowned upon. We're much more free with ourselves.''

The 'Baggage Claim' actress previously admitted that her beau's boastful claims in his 'Blurred Lines' video - which shows a balloon with the words ''Robin Thicke has a big d**k'' etched across it - are very much true.

She said: ''Robin's like, 'Listen, if I'm, you know, in the Miami Heat's locker room, I don't know where I stand, but ...but I think that the statement is fairly accurate!''

The couple became high school sweethearts after Paula fell for Robin's sexy singing ability, which led to their first smooch.

She said: ''He sang Jodeci's 'Forever My Lady' to me. He did a full-out R&B onstage performance in his dad's living room. Then he kissed me. It worked!''


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Indira Gandhi ordered a gold hunt in 1976; Pak sought share

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 25 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

NEW DELHI: The last time the Indian government, led by the redoubtable Indira Gandhi, went looking for hidden gold among private property, Pakistan also jumped on to the bandwagon.

In 1976, at the height of the Emergency, Indira ordered the Indian Army to march off to look for hidden treasure in Jaigarh fort, which was still a property of the Jaipur royal family. Legend had it that Man Singh had stashed away huge amounts of treasure from some of his campaigns. That legend persisted after India's independence. With Gayatri Devi imprisoned during Emergency, Indira thought it fit to search Jaipur royal properties for the treasure.

The correspondence finds space in an invaluable work of history, India-Pakistan Relations (1947-2007), edited by Avtar Singh Bhasin, released earlier this year and is mandatory reading for any student of history.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, then prime minister of Pakistan, heard about the treasure hunt and decided Pakistan should not be denied its share. In a letter to Indira on August 11, 1976, Bhutto said, "As your expedition of locating the treasure proceeds, I would urge you to remain cognizant of Pakistan's claim to its due share of this wealth. This is an asset which was not known at the time of partition between the two successor states (then called dominions) of India and Pakistan.

"However, the order that was enforced with the agreement of both governments did not fail to provide that any property or benefits can be shared between them where such sharing is just and equitable. The historical provenance of this treasure, regardless of the location of its physical discovery, makes it the joint patrimony of our two countries and I am confident that, with an approach based on equity, we will dis-countenance any usurpation and amicably arrive at a formula for the division between us."

Indira did not dignify Bhutto's claim with a response until December of that year. By then, the Army division sent to unearth the treasure returned empty-handed after three months of fruitless search. Responding to Bhutto on December 31, 1976, Indira said, "I had asked our legal experts to give careful consideration to the claim you made on behalf of Pakistan. They are of the clear opinion that the claim has no legal basis. Incidentally, the treasure has turned out to be non-existent."

Bhutto complimented Indira on abolishing the old royalty, saying, "Both our countries have taken the same view of the rights of the princely order and, with complete justification, abolished it as an appendage or association of the colonial regime. I am certain that no one can maintain the argument that your government's action involves confiscation of the private property of any individual or dynasty."

The Pakistani PM justified asking for a share of the riches. "It is clear that the treasure is a historical inheritance of the subcontinent which was bequeathed to it by its pre-colonial sovereignties, especially the Mughal emperors in coalition with their Rajput allies. That, before or during the anarchy which ravaged the subcontinent and invited foreign domination, these assets were misappropriated and hoarded by a particular warlord has no bearing whatsoever on their legal or moral ownership." Indira, however, would have none of it.


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Tanisha caught smoking in Bigg Boss

Bigg Boss 7 contestant Tanisha Mukherjee has been in news for all bad reasons off late, and now she is in news for smoking. Tanisha has been stressed out a lot lately and it is a known fact that she smokes. The pretty sister of successful actress Kajol, was seen smoking in Bigg Boss house and she was holding her cigarette pack while talking to her good friend Armaan Kohli.


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Mickey Virus

Story: The cops are cracking a cyber crime case and they hire hacker Mickey to crack the plot. It opens a lethal can of worms that no ordinary anti-virus can kill.

Review: We aren't internet keedas here, but let's try cracking into Mickey's (Manish) world of codes, crypts and consoles. This one isn't so deadly that we can't decode, or so simple that we just download and ESC (read: escape). So, risk it and hit ENTER!

The Delhi cops, headed by ACP Siddhanth (Chaudhari) and inspector Bhalla who can't tell a 'hawker' from a 'hacker' (Varun Badola) are investigating a case on cyber crime, where hackers are getting killed in broad daylight. They suspect a hound of hackers who are running this racket, and the only way to vandalize their plot is to find a hacker who can outsmart them and decrypt their devious designs.

There comes Mickey, the fairly unambitious, lazy Delhi boy, whose brain operates faster than any high-speed internet, and his zubaan needs a 'backspace' at all times. He is popular as 'Kung-Fu Chameli' in cyberspace, and strangely, he meets his woman of web dreams, Kamayani (Elli) in reality.

The cops hire Mickey, but as he unscrambles the case he gets 'spammed' by a well-programmed series of crimes, and he desperately needs to hit Ctrl+S (read: Save) before they take the 'Mickey' out of him.

Manish is apt for the role, he makes a good debut with confidence and promise. He flavour his lines with Dilliwala twang, though in scenes his repetitive expressions need to 'refresh'. From Mickey's hack-gang, Floppy (Rahgav Kakkar) is funny, and Chutney (Puja) is impressive. Elli looks like an animated creation out of a cyber-game. Performance - never mind! Varun Badola kills the other viruses in this game with his brilliant act.

Varma allows his characters to flourish in wit and humour. The plot is intelligent; there are laughs (sample: a tee printed - 'Jab Tak Hai Trojan'), some suspense and surprises too. Though direction is not error-free, it could've been more innovative and he often tips the balance between comedy and thriller.

This virus won't crash your system. Watch it!


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Stone pelting at Mahendra Singh Dhoni's residence

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 24 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

RANCHI: Indian skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni's residence came under attack on Wednesday night soon after the 4th ODI against Australia being played at JSCA international stadium was called off because of rains. The stone pelting occured at around 9.30PM stealthly as no one was seen on spot when the incident occured.

The frontage of the Harmu Housing colony bound residence of Dhoni which has a big tinted glass cover was shattered. Though Dhoni and his family members were not at home, all of them being at stadium at that time the news spread like wild fire.

When asked Dhoni's family members denied that the incident had anything to do with the match results. " It is the fifth time that the house was attacked and unless we verify the CCTV footages we are not going to accuse anyone blindly," said Gautam Gupta, Dhonis brother in Law.

Asking district administration to be more alert about security arrangement Gupta said that ab FIR would be lodged after verification of the footages.


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Salman is a fakir, who lives a simple life: Sanjay Leela Bhansali

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Sanjay Leela Bhansali, 50, is most comfortable only with himself. While he is fond of his mother and sister, he can be most honest and transparent only with himself. He is extremely observant and sensitive and has come to the view that relationships don't work for him. He gives all to his work and lives his life through his characters. Ahead of his upcoming film Ram-Leela, he talks to TOI about his love-hate relationship with his father, his mentor Vidhu Vinod Chopra and what made him add Leela to his name. Excerpts:

How did you think of becoming a filmmaker?
My grandfather was a rich man who stayed in a bungalow in Walkeshwar, but by 25, he went bankrupt and we had to move into a 200 sq ft place where, for a bathroom, you had to wait in a line for two hours. My father produced films in the 50s, but they were films like Jaazi Lootera that I have never seen. I was five when he took me with him to a studio, where a cabaret was being pictured. I was wondering why this girl was wearing so little clothes, was eating an apple and was jumping on a man with equally little clothes and then they kept throwing this apple at each other as it was not reaching the correct point. I was fascinated. I would wait for hours to listen to Vividh Bharati and would look at the small mirror and dance to Shammi Kapoor songs. I had to go through the red light area to go to school, as we lived two lanes from there. That one lane had six theatres, so life was fascinating. Then one day, a makeup trunk came with all kinds of wigs and costumes and that was the Pandora's box for me. I decided to be a director. Even though I was a brilliant student, going to college were the worst years of my life, as I was going there only to complete my graduation. I joined the film institute in the editing course and that is where I thought I would blossom. I lost my father while I was at the institute and did not know where to start till Vidhu Vinod Chopra came there and hired me to shoot a song in Parinda. I then landed up assisting Vinod for seven years.

What did you learn from Vinod?
I learnt the courage to speak and be fearless from him. He would write on his board — 'Damn I am good' with his autograph. He taught me to believe in my work and pushed me to speak. He would say, 'If you don't speak, how will you arrange your monies, how will you speak to your actors?' That was the opening phase. Of course, once I started speaking, I was told to speak less. I learnt the discipline and focus with which he worked. I would go for all music sittings with him and would sit at RD Burman's feet while he was composing his songs for 1942: A Love Story. Burmanda would say, 'If you want to celebrate a good song, you must eat and celebrate and order good food immediately. In 50 minutes flat, he made Ek Ladki Ko Dekha To Aisa Laga, threw the pen and said, 'Machhi mangao' and went straight to the kitchen to cook food. That innocence to discover and being excited about your work is what I learnt from these two people. Of course, RD passed away and did not live to see the success of his music.

Talk about RD Burman?
He was gorgeous, sitting in his black silk kurta and black silk lungi, records beautifully lying and stacked there in his white room with white gaddis and his harmonium with his unclear conversation and a sparkle in his eye, to listen to some new sound. I was mad about that man's music. His openness made him a great music director. Nobody lives music the way he did. I learnt to listen to people from him, even if it was from an assistant. Never to feel afraid of criticism is what I learnt from him. He was going through a critical time. The industry had moved him out. He had no work. A music company came to Vinod and said, 'Move him out of 1942 and we will give you double the money' and, of course, Vinod did not agree and asked them to leave the room. Burmanda was large-hearted. A man who would feed people when he made a good song. It was 7.30 in the morning and I was listening to a song from Kati Patang when Farah (Khan) called me to say dada was gone.

Let's talk about your father?
All through my childhood, I was told that films did not make money and that it was a world not meant to be in. There were a lot of people we had to take money from and a lot of people we needed to pay money to. I remember my grandmother would take me walking from Bhuleshwar to Colaba to collect 10,000 from a producer we had lent money to, in the past. That man would make us wait for hours and all through walking back, she would keep telling me how not to be in films. And yet my father took me 18 times to see Mughal-e-Azam. He introduced me to all kinds of music ranging from Bade Ghulam Ali Khan sahab's to Dada Kondke's. So I was completely confused as a child. We would be put into a good school, but would need to borrow money from our relatives to pay the fees. They would procrastinate giving it to us. The fact that they would come and ask for the money back would make me not come out of the house. I started feeling isolated. I relied only on music for anchorage and I would go into my imaginary world. My father had a love for life and lived it king-size even though we could not afford it. So I went to the other extreme of complete deprivation and simplicity to save for the times to come. I loved him immensely, but could not express it. Today, I regret that. I wish he was alive today. I get my angst, aesthetics and suffering from him. I feel the presence of the man as I am too average a person to have made the films I have. I still go to our old house, playing old music in my car to experience him. I am fulfilling what he dreamt.

Are there stars you worked with who are your friends?
They come and go and all the relationships are transitory and transactional. But I would call Salman and Rani my friends. They have been people I have been closest to and have loved immensely. I realise that I don't want anything from them and nor do they. Salman was temperamental. Sajid and Farah Khan had talked to him about me being this struggling director during Khamoshi when I first went to meet him at Filmistan. It was my birthday and he made me wait for six hours. But surprisingly, when he saw me, he said, 'I know you. We have some karmic connection.' He was a good man and cared for small things, but tried to be a brat. Inside he is a fakir, who lives a simple life. Rani lives for her parents and people she loves and is very expressive. They both gave me a lot of belief in myself.

Article continues

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Are you insecure?
Terribly. I am insecure about the fact that if my film does not do well, I will not be loved and there will be nobody to listen to or talk to. So I work very hard for people to appreciate my work. I saw my father and so many great stars, including RD Burman, go through that. I wait for that one call to come after the trailer that says people have liked it. Saawariya did not do well and I can never forget that Diwali sitting alone in the house. There were crackers bursting all around and there were newspapers slamming me and nobody at home, except my mother and me in our own rooms. I cried immensely. That wanting to be loved comes from my childhood and is a part of all my characters. Be it Salman in Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam or Shah Rukh in Devdas or Hrithik in Guzaarish or Ranbir in Saawariya. It is actually me seeking love. It is a residue of the emotions in my childhood, of me being the ugliest cousin, of seeing the treatment meted out to my family for basic survival.

What makes you possessive?
I have anger and angst towards life. To get that one meal or that school fee for the month, to get that ability to get what I want and cling on to it, is my state of mind. It comes from there that I won't let anybody take away what I have created. So I am possessive only about what I create as it is impossible to do that, given the circumstances I grew up in. My cinema is very personal. I remember my grandmother taking out her last silverware and taking it to Zaveri Bazaar to sell it. I would see that she would strangely go down, avoiding talking to me. That became Helen selling the piano in Khamoshi. My father loved his drinks. I made Devdas as a tribute to the half bottle my father last drank from, saved by my mother. And then when my grandmother came back from Zaveri Bazaar, she bought me a plastic pigeon from the money she had got. And that became Magic (Hrithik's pigeon) in Guzaarish. I was very attached to her. She had a box of coins and worked till she died. Every morning she would empty the jar and count the coins. That is the scene in Guzaarish. My childhood sounds and images are what is captured in my films.

All your films are seeking love. Where does that come from?
I have seen a stormy relationship as far as my parents are concerned. But my mother was too much in love with my father and my father loved us all a lot, but never expressed it. There was a big turmoil about how to handle relationships. It led to my isolation. But the day my father was in coma, despite everything, my mother refused to go home and kept sitting besides him holding his hand and praying. And for the first time, all he kept saying was Leela, Leela, Leela… I went to him and said, 'All your life you did not bother, now why are you calling out her name?' But that is the day I decided to add my mother's name to mine and from Sanjay Bhansali I became Sanjay Leela Bhansali. I realised that love is not about what you get, but about what you give. I understood what love stories were made of. All that he could not express in his life, he was expressing in that sub-conscious state.


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Obama grills Sharif over Mumbai attack trial, LeT; asks Pak to stop terror export

WASHINGTON: Any residual doubt that Pakistan is a duplicitous terrorist state was set to rest by the time Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif met US President Obama in the White House on Wednesday with leaked US intelligence reports that showed Islamabad acquiesced to Predator strikes on some terrorists targets even as the country's intelligence agencies shielded and helped others. The US president also implicitly accused Pakistan of exporting terrorism.

The disclosures relating to drone strikes from 2007 to 2011, when Gen Pervez Musharraf and Asif Ali Zardari were in power, did not stop Sharif from predetermined talking points during his two-hour meeting with the US president that included pleading for a stop to the attacks. "Pakistan and the United States have a strong ongoing counterterrorism cooperation. We have agreed to further strengthen this cooperation. I also brought up the issue of drones in our meeting, emphasizing the need for an end to such strikes,' Sharif said with a straight face, with US president next to him.

Obama, who had already spoken by then, ignored the drone issue altogether, but praised Sharif for his commitment in trying to reduce "incidents of terrorism inside of Pakistan's borders, and the degree to which these activities may be exported to other countries." Implicit in the remark was that Pakistan is a terrorism-exporting country, and the drone strikes were a legitimate US response in areas where Islamabad has no control and has ceded sovereignty.

The fact that Obama grilled Sharif over Islamabad's dodgy approach to terrorism, particularly in reference to India, was confirmed by the Pakistani prime minister himself. "He (Obama) asked, why the trial of the (Mumbai) terrorist attack in India has not started yet," Sharif told reporters soon after the meeting, adding, "He (Obama) has raised the issue of (Dr Shakil) Afridi. He spoke about cross-border movement. He also talked about Jamaat-ud-Dawa."

In public though, the US president was careful not to embarrass his guest too much. "We talked about security and the concerns that both of us have about senseless violence, terrorism and extremism. And we agreed that we need to continue to find constructive ways to partner together -- ways that respect Pakistan's sovereignty, that respect the concerns of both countries," Obama said in a nuanced explanation that provided the sub-text to the drones strike imbroglio.

The Obama administration was evidently compelled to leak intelligence reports of the back channel agreement on drone strikes with Pakistan after Sharif upped the ante ahead of his meeting with the US president in an address to the US Institute of Peace on Tuesday, saying the attacks infringed on Pakistani sovereignty, it is an irritant in bilateral ties, and he would raise it with Obama. US officials had tried to walk Sharif away from the subject by suggesting that such strikes were inevitable when Islamabad ceded sovereignty to terrorists and was even complicit in their activity, but faced with Sharif's intransigence, partly driven by domestic considerations, the administration leaked a trove of documents to the Washington Post that exposed Pakistan as a dishonest, two-faced country that helped terrorists it considered state assets.

The documents, the Post said, show that not only did US officials share information with Pakistan on drone strikes, but the two sides also clashed on occasions over Pakistani military-intelligence agencies being in cahoots with terrorists. These included time-stamped videos of terrorists dispersing material and themselves soon after being tipped off by an intelligence courier that a drone attack, about which US shared information with Pakistan, was imminent.

In one case, the report says, then US secretary of state Hillary Clinton cited "cell phones and written material from dead bodies that point all fingers" at a militant group based in Pakistan. "The US had intelligence proving ISI was involved with these groups," she is cited as saying. In another case, CIA deputy director Mike Morell is said to indicate that the CIA was prepared to share credit with Pakistanis for a drone strike if the agency could confirm that it had killed Ilyas Kashmiri, an al-Qaida operative suspected of ties to plots against India. The agency would do so "so that the negative views about Pakistan in the US decision and opinion making circles are mitigated."

Overall, the disclosures suggest that the United States is cognizant of Pakistan's sponsorship of terrorism, but instead of punishing the country, it will selectively leak information to walk it back from its self-destructive path. US President Obama's explicit reference to Pakistan exporting terrorism is the closest the US has come to publicly outing it as a terrorist entity.

But there is no indication though that Pakistan, dubbed Denialistan in some quarters, recognizes the gravity of the charges. In his USIP address, Sharif went so far as to assert that "Pakistan is neither source of nor epicenter of terrorism," even though his own political party, the Pakistan Muslim League, has well-chronicled links with terrorist groups such as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. The government in Punjab led by his brother is reported to make budgetary allocations to the internationally banned terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba aka Jamaat ul-Dawa, even as Washington appropriates US tax-payer dollars as aid to Pakistan.

None of these complications or contradictions is reflected in the 2500-word joint statement issued at the conclusion of the Obama-Sharif meeting. The statement, along with an elaborate fact-sheet, manages the optics of the visit and suggests that all is -- or will be -- hunky-dory between the two sides as the U.S tries to manage the relationship ahead of its 2014 drawdown from Afghanistan.


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Techie gang-raped by two drivers in Hyderabad

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 23 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

HYDERABAD: Two car drivers were arrested on Tuesday for abducting and raping a 23-year-old software engineer employed with an IT major. Shockingly, the Inborbit mall abduction incident reported on Monday was not just a case of kidnapping but murky details emerged on Tuesday with the police disclosing that the two drivers abducted the software professional from Madhapur at 8.20pm on Friday in a Volvo car, drove her for nearly four hours on several stretches, including the Outer Ring Road (ORR), and raped her at an isolated area near Open Mind Birla School, Tellapur. They later dropped her near her hostel at around 2.30am. The software professional moved to the city just two months ago.

During the six-hour ordeal, the car drove through two tollgates of ORR and high security IT hub zone, while her friends approached Madhapur police. However, the victim could not be rescued and the accused were nabbed four days after the assault.

Cyberabad police commissioner CV Anand told the media: "The duo–V Satish, 30, and N Venkateswarlu, 28, both car drivers from Yellammabanda near Kukatpally–picked up the victim near Inorbit mall at Madhapur at 8.20pm and after gang raping her, dropped the victim back at her hostel after six hours. We suspect their involvement in more such offences and they have to be interrogated further."

Satish, works as driver of Manoj Agarwal, a corporate executive and resident of Malaysian Township. Venkateswarlu and Satish are friends.

On October 18, Manoj Agarwal went out of station leaving his Volvo D6-S 60 Model car (AP 09TVA 2762) with his driver Satish. After his employer left, Satish invited Venkateswarulu to his house and the duo began their 'joy ride' towards Madhapur IT Zone.

At Mind Space junction near Inorbit mall, Satish saw the software engineer waiting on the road for transport and he asked her where she wanted to go. The victim told Satish that she wanted to go to Gowli Doddi or Wipro junction. Satish then asked her to pay Rs 50 and a deal was struck for Rs 40. During this time, Venkateswarulu, who was posing like a passenger, sat in the rear seat.


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Rumours of me behind Shahid-Kareena split are rubbish: Amrita

Actress Amrita Rao was reminded of the song Bambai Se Gayi Puna...Dilli Se Gayi Patna...Phir Bhi Na Mila Sajna, literally when she travelled over half of India to perform at a concert in Patna, recently.

"We boarded the flight at 8 in the morning and after sitting in the plane for nearly an hour, we were told to disembark and board another flight. So finally we reached Delhi. Whan pe bhi there was some problem, so we had to take a flight to Patna via Udaipur. Finally we reached Patna at 8 in the night only to be told that the concert I was supposed to perform in had been cancelled due to cyclone Phailin. So imagine, we crossed nearly half of India only to have dinner in Patna. It was funny but also very tiring," said Amrita.


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Ind vs Aus: Rain halts Indian run chase against Australia

NEW DELHI: Chasing 296-run target, India were 27/0 in 4.1 overs against Australia when rain interrupted the match again in the fourth ODI at Ranchi on Wednesday.

Scorecard | Match in Pics

Play has to start by 9:15pm for a 20-over innings to happen, which is required to comprise a full match and the target for India would be 150 in that case.

Rohit Sharma (9*) and Shikhar Dhawan (14*) were on crease for India at the time of the rain interruption.

Sent in to bat, Australia rode on a record 153-run partnership between George Bailey and Glenn Maxwell to recover from a jittery start and post a challenging 295 for eight against India in the fourth ODI on Wednesday.

Skipper Bailey (98) and Maxwell (92) missed their respective centuries but ensured that Australia recover from a difficult 71 for four to 224 for five through the team's highest partnership against India for the fifth wicket.

Brought in place of Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammad Shami's fiery first spell (6-1-21-3) ripped apart the Australian top order after India put the visitors into bat.

But the Aussies hugely benefited thanks to the butterfingered Indian fielders who dropped as many as six catches and the ground fielding was equally sloppy.

Bailey was dropped twice (on zero and 35) in what could have been regulation catches, while Maxwell too got reprieve on two occasions (on 44 and 69) at the JSCA Stadium.

As if it was not enough, Mitchell Johnson, on 15, was dropped by Raina, while in the last ball of the innings Shikhar Dhawan let one loose from James Faulkner as Australia posted a competitive target under overcast conditions.

With his personal best figures of 3-42, Shami was the pick of the Indian bowlers, while Vinay Kumar and Ravichandran Ashwin took two apiece and were expensive with economy rates of 6.50 and 6.33 each.

Jaydev Unadkat, who replaced the struggling Ishant Sharma, went wicketless.

Shami extracted swing from the pitch, bowling at around 140-145kphs to trouble the Aussie openers.

He castled Aaron Finch (5) with an inswinger that went through the gap between bat and bat in the second over, while left-hander Phillip Hughes took an outside edge with the India skipper taking a fine catch.

Shami's two-wicket burst, which reduced Australia to 24 for two in the sixth over, meant that for the first time in the series the opening duo failed to notch up the 50-mark.

The Bengal pacer almost had a third to his name in the next ball but Virat Kohli dropped Bailey at the third slip with the Aussie skipper yet to open his account.

With Shami on a roll, light drizzle halted the match for about 30 minutes when Australia were 28 for two after 7.2 overs.

But the rain subsided as Shami came to resume his spell and took the prized scalp of Shane Watson (14), in a replay of Finch's dismissal.

While Unadkat was not able to move the ball, Shami did it efficiently with sheer pace as the Aussies found it difficult to break free in the mandatory powerplay, going at four runs per over.

But the goodwork of Shami and Unadkat was undone by R Vinay Kumar whose slow pace and lack of movement was enough for Bailey to cut loose as the skipper smashed a six and two fours in a 14-run over.

India had the fourth wicket in Adam Voges (7) but Bailey had luck on his side again as India dropped the Australian captain for a second time with Ashwin being the culprit.

Bailey and Maxwell slowly repaired the damage and played the spinners intelligently to build on their partnership even as India's miserable run with catching continued.

Maxwell too got reprieve twice, by Yuvraj Singh and Dhoni, as Australia slowly tilted the match in their favour.

Dhoni's reliance on slow bowlers during the halfway stage helped the Aussies' cause as the duo completed their respective half-centuries.

While Bailey's innings was full of strokeplay, Maxwell tried innovation with his reverse and pull shots as Australia cruised to 201 for four in 35 overs.

Bailey smashed seven sixes and three fours before top edging a Vinay Kumar delivery to deep midwicket, where Rohit Sharma took a safe catch as the batsman missed his second century of the series.

Vinay Kumar took his second wicket dismissing a dangerous looking Maxwell who hit five sixes and six fours in a 77-ball knock as India slowly pegged themselves back.

But the sloppy catching ensured Australia's lower order -- Mitchell Johnson (25) and James Faulkner (25 not out) -- to post another challenging total, five runs shy of a fourth 300-plus total in the series.

Teams:

India: MS Dhoni (Capt.), Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina, Yuvraj Singh, Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran Ashwin, Jaydev Unadkat, Shami Ahmed, Vinay Kumar.

Australia: George Bailey (Capt.), Phillip Hughes, Aaron Finch, Shane Watson, Adam Voges, Glenn Maxwell, Brad Haddin, James Faulkner, Mitchell Johnson, Clint McKay, Xavier Doherty.


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'Corporate fraud' by General Motors India, says govt probe panel

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 22 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

The committee was set up to probe if the auto major had a role in violating the engine testing norms after it issued what was then the largest ever recall for flouting the compliance of production (COP) norms.

Dipak Kumar Dash, TNN | Oct 22, 2013, 01.16AM IST
NEW DELHI: A government-appointed panel to investigate General Motors India's recall of over 1.26 lakh Chevrolet Tavera vehicles has held the company responsible of committing "corporate fraud" and said its top management — including CEOs and managing directors — from 2005 to 2011-12 were involved in this.

In its report submitted to the road transport and heavy industry ministries, the three-member panel recommended imposition of penalty, apart from a systemic clean up to avoid recurrence of similar incidents in future. Although action has been suggested against the company as well as executives involved, the level of penalty has not been specified.

The committee was set up to probe if the auto major had a role in violating the engine testing norms after it issued what was then the largest ever recall for flouting the compliance of production (COP) norms. Under COP, companies have to produce vehicles and components that exactly match with the specification, performance and marking requirements approved by the testing agencies. GM India did not comment, saying it had not seen the report yet.

Government officials, however, said that during the investigation, the company has acknowledged to tempering of COP and type approval of Tavera's BS-III and BS-IV variants. They added that once the company realized that their engines were not consistent in meeting emission norms, the pre-selected and tested engines were fitted to vehicles that were sent for testing by government agencies.

The panel, headed by Nitin Gokarn, CEO of National Automotive Testing and R&D Infrastructure Project (NATRiP), involved with testing, validation and R&D, has given a clean chit to the testing agency — Indian Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI).

Government officials said that the probe panel could not interact with nearly 20 executives who were asked to leave GM after the irregularities came to light. "However, those sacked can't be singled out since the violation of COP norms benefitted the company and not only a few senior and junior executives," said an official, requesting anonymity.

During this period, the seven year period up to 2011-12, GM India had three MDs - Rajeev Chaba, Karl Slym, who is now with Tata Motors and Lowell Paddock, the current president and MD. Sources said that Paddock has told the probe panel that it's only because of him GM unearthed the irregularities and reported it to the government.

The committee has recommended that now the government should monitor recalls to randomly find out if the proper rectification is being done. To prevent such frauds in future, the panel has recommended measures including random check on samples from dealers, instead of manufacturing facilities. It has also suggested that the notification of COP date should be fixed by the testing agencies and companies should have no role in this. At present, the date of picking up samples for testing is decided mutually by the testing agency and the manufacturer, resulting in the possibility of collusion.

The panel has also recommended that COP process should begin from the start of production and this should be for the entire vehicle instead of confining it to auto parts. The committee has said that in case of non-compliance, the type approval should be withdrawn.


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Pak film depicting 'Indian agents' does roaring business

As a police compound here comes under terror attack, an 'Indian female agent' cum social worker in Pakistan is dancing with a mercenary celebrating their success. This is a scene from 'Waar', a film doing roaring business in Pakistan.

Said to be the most expensive Pakistani film ever to be made, the film is rumoured to be partly funded by the military, a charge denied by the film director Bilal Lashari.


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Armaan loses temper & punches Ellie in Bigg Boss

There have been a lot of instances in the Bigg Boss house that have made Armaan lash out on other housemates.

After he picked a fight with Kushal and Andy, people had started hating him and have been giving him advice on anger management. Even after repeated attempts, there seems to be no change in Armaan's behavior and today, his temper went up a notch higher.

During the weekly luxury budget task, select housemates including Armaan were asked to sit in a box and survive till the end of the task. The ones who are outside were asked to distract and instigate them to give up on the task. When the housemates were trying to distract Armaan by banging his box with their hands, Armaan lost his temper and accidently punched Ellie on her forehead. Everybody got hassled by this act and started blaming Armaan for it.

Armaan couldn't take this allegation and emerged out of the box breaking it. He started abusing everybody around him and told them that he did not do it deliberately. When Kamya barged in, he didn't even spare her and was seen hurling abuses at her. Further, he started fighting with Kushal and Asif while Apurva tried to calm him down but all in vain. Looking at Armaan's violent attitude, everybody decided to boycott him.


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I am bloody good at sex scenes: Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Written By Unknown on Senin, 21 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

Jonathan Rhys Meyers has admitted that he finds sex scenes pretty easy since he knows that he is really good at them.

Meyers said that one has to understand that in a sex scene, the whole world gets blurred out and the only person who exists is the woman who is made love to, the Daily star reported.

The 'Dracula' star said that if he is doing a sex scene he can really fall in love with actress for those moments that he is working with.

He finds them incredibly beautiful in every sense.

Meyers added that afterwards he can totally pull out of the character he is playing and be friends with the actress again.


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Chief engineer of detained US ship attempts suicide

NEW DELHI: The chief engineer of detained US ship Seaman Guard Ohio has attempted suicide in prison, according to Times Now.

According to reports, this is the second time that the chief engineer has attempted suicide.

The chief engineer has been isolated and has been kept under observation.

Earlier on Friday, the crew members of the ship MV Seaman Guard Ohio, carrying weapons without permit, were arrested by the Tamil Nadu police.

The ship was detained on October 12 by Coast Guard for carrying arms and ammunition off Tamil Nadu coast.

There were 35 members onboard, which included 8 Indians.

An FIR has already been registered against crew members for illegally carrying arms and ammunition.

Another case under the Essential Commodities Act has been registered against the crew for buying 1,500 litres of diesel illegally with the help of a local shipping agent.


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After mocking gold hunt, Modi attempts reconciliation

AHMEDABAD: Days after criticizing the treasure hunt in UP, Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi on Monday took a U-turn and praised seer Shobhan Sarkar based on whose dream the ASI is carrying out the excavation in Unnao district.

"Sant Shobhan Sarkar ke prati anek varsho se lakho logo ki shraddha judi hui hai. Main unki tapasya aur tyaag ko pranam karta hu (lakhs of people have reposed faith in seer Shobhan Sarkar over last many years. I salute his austerity and renunciation)," Modi tweeted.

Stressing on the need of getting back black money stashed away abroad, Modi demanded that the Centre should come out with a white paper on it.

"Bharat sarkar se agrah karta hu ki woh videsho mein jama kale dhan ke sambandh main ek white paper prastut kar desh ki janta ko ashwast kare (I urge the Indian government to come out with white paper on black money deposited in other countries and assure the people of the nation)," Modi said in the second tweet.

Modi's reconciliatory tone is being seen as a result of a reported letter written by followers of Sarkar castigating him for his remarks criticizing government's action of digging a temple fort premises in Unnao district of UP based on the seer's dreams.

Addressing a rally in Chennai on Friday, Modi had said, "The whole world is laughing at us over this bizarre exercise.

"Somebody dreamt and the government has launched an excavation...The money hidden by thieves and looters of India in foreign banks is much more than 1000 tonnes of gold. If you (government) bring back that money, you won't have to go digging for gold (in Unnao)," Modi had said.

The central government has, however, clarified that they have not told the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to go ahead for gold hunt based on vision of seer Shobhan Sarkar.


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Dhoni blasts non-performing bowlers, says can't be "spoonfed"

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 20 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

MOHALI: A disappointed Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni today did some plain talking directed to some of his non-performing bowlers and said that international cricketers need not be "spoonfed" and they should bowl at their strengths and not bleed runs.

"I think the last few overs were disappointing, it is an area of concern and it is getting worse. There was a bit of dew but not like in the last game. The individuals will have to step up, they have to come up with their plans and back their strength," he said after after India lost the third ODI by four wickets from a winning position.

It was not difficult to find out to whom Dhoni was directing his comments as his pacers have been struggling in the three matches so far in the ODI series.

Out-of-form Ishant Sharma gave away 30 runs today in the 48th over to turn the tide in Australia's favour.

"You don't need to spoonfeed bowlers at the international level. You need to come up with your plan, focus on your strength and execute your plans," he said when asked if he had given any specific direction to his bowlers.

Asked further about his bowling woes, especially in the death overs, he said, "We started well, Jadeja bowled really well in the middle overs. Also, we need more from the part-timers."

He also said that his side could have batted better on a good track at the PCA Stadium.

"I think we could have batted better, on a track like this. We were fortunate to get beyond 300, looked like we would get around 250," said Dhoni who took India's score to 303 for nine after the home side were reduced to 76 for four in the 13th over.

Australian captain George Bailey praised Faulkner for his stupendous 26-ball unbeaten 64, which included 30 runs he took from Ishant in the 48th over to turn the tide in the visiting team's favour.

"Faulkner's hitting was as good as I have seen. The bowling was fantastic, particularly after the other day. 300 is always imposing, but we were quietly confident when we came off the field. There is no easy game," he said.

"If I could learn to catch, we would have been chasing 20-30 less from MS (Dhoni)," he said, referring to his dropped catch of Dhoni when on 105 in the 49th over of India's innings.

Dhoni went on to hit an unbeaten 139 to take India to 303 for nine.

Man-of-the-Match James Faulkner said he targeted for Ishant in the 48th over as he knew that it would be difficult to hit R Ashwin out of the park.

"I didn't feel I could get Ashwin to the long boundary with his carrom ball. I wanted to knock him around for 7 or 8. I made a pretty slow start, so I need to do something," he said.

"I think Voges found it quite tough early on, but he stuck around all the way through, it was a good innings. It is going to be a cracking series now."

Voges, who made a valuable contribution in Australia's win with an unbeaten 76, said, "We just thought if we could have some batsmen in at the end, we could chase it down. The way Faulkner played was amazing."


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Scientific basis for Unnao gold hunt, ASI says

NEW DELHI: Dismissing suggestions that the Archeological Survey of India's (ASI) Unnao gold hunt was based on a sadhu's dream or pressure from the government, ASI officials said that there was strong scientific and historical basis for the dig.

"With due respect to the sadhu, ASI does not go about digging on the basis of dreams. It has not done so in its 150 years of its history. We are conducting the excavation on the basis of scientific reports and historical importance," Dr B R Mani, additional director-general of ASI, said.

Mani said that ASI had studied the preliminary investigations of the Geological Survey of India (GSI). The report submitted to the culture ministry on October 8 suggests presence of "prominent non-magnetic anomalous zone occurring at 5-20m depth indicative of possible non-conducting, metallic contents and or some alloys etc may be tested by excavation for further interest at the specific site."

He added that the first director-general of ASI Alexander Cunningham had in a report in 1862 indicated the historical significance of Daundia Khera identifying it with Hayamukha. Hayamukha was visited by Chinese pilgrim Hieun Tsang in the 7th century, who has identified this place as having five Buddhist monasteries.

When asked about the possibility of finding gold, Mani said, "We are looking for antiquarian remains. If we do find gold then it will be interesting but it will take two weeks to a month before an assessment on the potential of the excavation or the time taken can be made."

Any discoveries made will either be examined by experts at the site or taken to a laboratory for further assessments.

According to the culture ministry, ASI's decision to excavate the site was based on the GSI report to try and unearth and determine the nature of the reported deposits.


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Don't worry Ishant, it happens to everybody: James Faulkner

MOHALI: Ishant Sharma bore the brunt of James Faulkner's conscious decision to go after seamers in the third ODI and the game-changing Australian all-rounder offered his sympathies to the Indian spearhead, saying that every bowler has days when he ends up looking "silly out there".

Faulkner's 29-ball 64 turned the match on its head last night as Australia chased down 304 with three balls and four wickets to spare.

Faulkner particularly targetted Ishant in the 48th over, plundering 30 runs off it which changed the course of the game. Faulkner hit a boundary followed by two huge sixes, then stole a double and to add insult to the injury, once again dispatched Ishant's last two balls for the maximum in that over.

Later, he sympathised with Ishant, saying this can happen to any good bowler.

"There is always pressure to bowl at that stage. I know that as I have done that a few times for Australia...there are going to be days when you would look silly out there, and that has happened to me a lot of times, don't worry about that," Faulkner said.

"But there are also other times when you might bowl a good over and win a game for your team, that's cricket," he added.

The seven-match series is right now 2-1 in favour of Australia. Faulkner said after the mauling in the second ODI in Jaipur, the visitors' plan was to target the medium pacers when the asking rate was mounting towards the end last night.

"I didn't feel I could get Ashwin over the long boundary, with his carom balls," Faulkner told a post-match press conference here.

"I thought the only way we could win the game is to take on the medium pacers down from the other end and try and take 20 off each over...that was our only chance to be honest," he said.

"It was a kick in the guts, the second game in Jaipur. To score 360 and have them chase down the total was really disappointing. We knew we had to bounce back with a good game and now we are 2-1 up in the series. It's going to be a really tough contest for the next four games," he added.

Faulkner's unbeaten knock was studded with six sixes and two boundaries.

Indian skipper MS Dhoni's unbeaten innings of 139, which propelled India to a total of over 300, went in vain thanks to the heroics of Faulkner, whose blistering hits overshadowed another brilliant knock by compatriot Adam Voges (76).

Faulkner heaped praise on Voges, saying he played a very good innings.

"He batted exceptionally well with mature head and I am happy for him."

He also praised Australia's bowling. "I thought through the middle we bowled really well as a group and restricted the boundaries at one stage and I suppose India did the same to us...that's the one-day game there's going to be highs and lows," he explained.

Faulkner said the win hasn't "probably sunk in as yet." "To be pretty honest, it has been an unbelievable series so far. In the first three games, every single team that has batted first has posted over 300.

"So, It's been really good series so far and I am pretty sure that there is going to be some strong cricket played for the last four games."

Asked if the idea behind bowling first was the dew factor or was it just the way Aussies wanted to go about it, Faulkner said, "I am not sure about that, you have to ask George (Bailey).

"I said let's chase, let's try and get some early wickets and put them under pressure, which we did. I thought we bowled reasonably well at the start, there were some chances we created as a team.

"I suppose they got away from the City end to make 300, MS (Dhoni) batted exceptionally well, but in the end we won, which is a good thing."


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Google shares break $1,000 barrier as mobile pays off

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 19 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

SAN FRANCISCO: Google Inc shares jumped past $1,000 on Friday as investors bet on the Internet company's continued dominance of the mobile and video advertising businesses despite aggressive competition from Facebook Inc and Yahoo Inc.

Shares of the world's No. 1 search company rose more than 13 per cent to hit an all-time high of $1,008.18, swelling the company's market value by almost $40 billion. That vaulted Google past Microsoft Corp and Berkshire Hathaway Inc in capitalization and brought it to No. 3 among U.S. companies, behind only Apple Inc and Exxon Mobil Corp.

Google, which is also known for its Google Maps service, Chrome browser and Nexus line of smartphones and tablets, on Thursday reported a 23 per cent jump in net revenue from its Internet business. Advertising volume soared 26 percent - the highest rate of growth in the past year - and more than made up for an 8 percent slide in ad prices.

But given concerns about how US companies can increase revenue in an uncertain global economy, those numbers suggested Google was firing on all cylinders except for its perennially money-losing Motorola unit, analysts said.

"Google's ownership of the Android ecosystem makes Google like the house, in Vegas terms," said Stifel Nicolaus analyst Jordan Rohan. "The success of Android, which becomes more and more popular every day, is starting to really add up, and Google is collecting small tolls along the way."

Rohan said accelerating revenue growth outside the United States and the UK was impressive, particularly in South Korea and Japan. "That could go on a while," he said.

At least 16 brokerages raised their price targets on the stock to between $880 and $1,220. The shares traded at $1,006.44 on Nasdaq at midday.

"We view solid paid clicks growth to be a good indicator of demand, driven by the continued shift to mobile," JPMorgan analysts said. They had expected 21.5 percent growth in ad volumes.

A study in contrasts

Google's Friday rally also stemmed from investors' focus on Facebook and its own increasingly successful efforts to sell advertising on mobile devices. Google stock had gained just 26 percent this year, while Facebook's has almost doubled.

"The worst is behind Google from a sentiment perspective," Deutsche Bank analysts said.

Google and Facebook, which is expected to report its third-quarter results on October 30, also stand head-and-shoulders above the likes of Yahoo. The once-dominant Internet portal this week reported a tepid quarter, losing market share in display and search advertising.

Facebook rose 3.6 per cent to $54.08 on Friday, while Yahoo was up 2 per cent at $33.40. Baidu Inc, often called China's Google, gained 7.1 percent to $164.78.

Google's rally has already rewarded investors such as Fidelity Investments' $101 billion Contrafund.

Contrafund added to its stake in Google in the third quarter and got a big lift from the surging performance of Facebook and Tesla Motors Inc as well. The fund returned 8.94 percent in the third quarter, easily beating the 5.24 percent advance of the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index.

Some say Google still has room for improvement. JPMorgan analysts said continued efforts to counter declines in ad rates might yield a major opportunity in the upcoming holiday season.

Google earlier this year rolled out a service to help advertisers promote their products on a mix of smartphones, tablets and desktops. The move is also expected to bolster Google's overall advertising rates by mitigating the impact of mobile ads, which command lower rates.

Others say YouTube, the world's most popular video website, is still not fully tapped. Ads on the site increased more than 75 percent in the quarter from a year earlier, with 40 percent of traffic now coming from mobile devices.

"We estimate that Google's key YouTube asset generated approximately $4 billion in revenue in 2012, positioning Google extremely well for the strong growth in video advertising," RBC Capital Markets analysts wrote in a note.

Analysts at Jefferies said Google was among the companies best positioned to benefit in mobile, given the 1 billion mobile devices running its Android software. The Mountain View, California-based company sells applications and content through its Google Play Store.


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Was Dimple Kapadia married to Sunny Deol?

Bollywood's He-man Dharmendra's elder son and the action star of masses Sunny Deol has turned a year older today.

Born as Ajay Singh Deol, Sunny made his debut as a teenage romantic hero in Betaab but soon films like Arjun, Dacait, Yateem, Tridev and later the blockbusters Ghayal, Ghatak and Gadar: Ek Prem Katha established him as the action hero in Bollywood.

In fact his aura was so intense that after Amitabh Bachchan, he was hailed as the 'new angry young man' of Bollywood. Sunny perfectly played the role of a frustrated and angry unemployed youth and established his roots in the industry. Even before Salman Khan, it was Sunny Deol who mesmerized the audience with his bare-chested, bulging biceps while reminding us about Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Scwarzenegger.

However despite dhai kilo ke hathodawale haat, gorgeous actresses Amrita Singh, Dimple Kapadia and Raveena Tandon made the action king go weak at the knees. Despite married to Pooja Deol, Sunny allowed his reel affairs to spill out to real life. Even Amrita Singh was often heard saying that the only 'real man' in her life was Sunny Deol. Unfortunately, she had no idea then about Sunny's hidden relationship.

After the revelation of Sunny's married life, Amrita moved on and soon Sunny's relationship with Dimple Kapadia started making the rounds. Reports were rife that Sunny Deol had even given Dimple Kapadia the status of a wife, while still having a wife at home! Even though Sunny and Dimple fiercely guarded their personal lives, their involvement was evident.

However, after over 11 years of a long-lasting affair with Dimple, Sunny couldn't help but lend it to the beautiful and vulnerable Raveena Tandon, who was suffering from a nervous breakdown. On the sets of Ziddi, they became "good friends", immediately threatening the position of an already-dethroned wife, Pooja Deol, and the past reigning girlfriend Dimple. This acted as a catalyst in the husband-wife relationship, as Pooja decided that enough was enough.

Ups and downs have been remained part and parcel of Sunny's life. During his peak days in Bollywood, Sunny Deol suffered a chronic back problem. For many years, he has quietly and not so quietly been suffering from the problem. On many occasions in his career, he has been laid off because of his back yet his undying spirit and invincibility (as his real name suggests) is intact both in real and reel life.

In spite of lukewarm response to his last release Yamla Pagla Deewana 2, Sunny's 'sunny' spell at the box-office is still continued and the action king is ready to roar again with Bhaiyyaji Superhitt, Singh Sahab The Great and Ghayal Returns.


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Ind vs Aus: India in command, Australia five down in chase of 304

NEW DELHI: Adam Voges reached his half-ton to keep Australian hope alive in their chase of 304 despite early setback in the third ODI against India at Mohali.

Scorecard | Match in Pics

Voges's fifty came off 63 balls that guided the visitors past 200 mark.

Voges shared 83-run stand with George Bailey (43) before the skipper was trapped leg before by Vinay Kumar in the 37th over.

Shikhar Dhawan's brilliant throw then got Glenn Maxwell (3) run out, reducing the visitors to 174/5.

Bailey and Adam Voges helped Australia recover from early blows and took the score past 150 in 33 overs.

After a solid 68-run opening stand, Australia lost both openers Phillip Hughes, Aaron Finch and Shane Watson in quick succession to get reduced to 88/3 in 19.1 overs.

Vinay Kumar gave India first breakthrough in the 13th over by getting Phillip Hughes (22) caught behind after a good first-wicket stand.

Pacer Ishant Sharma then struck in the 17th over to send back Australian opener Aaron Finch after his gritty knock of 38, giving Australia second blow.

Finch (38 off 44 balls) was trapped leg before wickets by Ishant at the score of 82.

Ravindra Jadeja then joined the party by dismissing Shane Watson. Watson was trapped leg before after scoring 11.

Earlier, skipper MS Dhoni led from the front by smashing an unbeaten 139 as India recovered from a poor start to score a huge total.

Dhoni rescued India after early jitters as he played a responsible and sensible innings that came off just 121 balls, including 12 fours and five sixes.

The skipper also shared two significant partnerships -- putting on a solid 72-run stand for the fifth wicket with Virat Kohli (68) before joining hands with Ravichandran Ashwin (28) to put up 76 runs for the seventh wicket.

For Australia, Mitchell Johnson was the pick of the bowlers with figures of four for 46.

Put in to bat, India did not make an ideal start as openers Rohit Sharma (11) and Shikhar Dhawan (8), both of whom were instrumental in setting up a great platform for the team's massive 360 run chase in the previous game, today fell cheaply.

With India two down for 37, the onus was on Suresh Raina and Kohli to bail the hosts out of trouble.

But in the 13th over, Johnson struck back to see off Raina caught at the slip by Shane Watson before dismissing comeback man Yuvraj Singh off his very next delivery for a first-ball duck.

It was heartbreak for the fans of local hero Yuvraj, who edged an away going delivery to wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.

Raina and Yuvraj's dismissals in consecutive balls led to the run flow drying up.

Both Kohli and Dhoni also adopted a cautious approach as the duo confined themselves to scoring just in singles and twos. There was no boundary or a six hit for as many as eight overs.

Kohli broke the shackles in the 24th over and slowly but steadily completed his half-century to help the team rebuild.

Although Kohli and Dhoni failed to accelerate the scoring rate, they kept the scoreboard ticking before Glenn Maxwell returned the latter for a patient 68 off 73 balls, laced with nine fours.

Johnson then left the hosts reeling at 154 for six with all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja's wicket.

With the top and middle-order back in the pavilion, Dhoni showed a lot of character as he played with responsibility. He waited patiently for the loose deliveries to go for the fours and sixes.

Dhoni, mostly picked on James Faulkner and Watson. He began an over of Faulkner with two consecutive fours and then topped it up with a boundary and a six in Watson's over to release the pressure.

In the able company of Ashwin, he took India beyond the 200-run mark.

He tried to keep the strike so that the lower order had to face lesser number of balls. And almost single-handedly guided the team to a 300-plus total in the end.

Dhoni stole 21 runs in the last over, which was bowled by Faulkner.

He played his trademark helicopter shot to the delight of the packed PCA stadium crowd before hitting another six over the long off and a four to end the over.


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When CCI bent the rules for Sachin Tendulkar

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 18 Oktober 2013 | 22.14

MUMBAI: Even as a teen, Sachin Tendulkar's prodigious talent was there for everyone to see. The critical thing was: he needed a stage to exhibit it. "He was playing for the MIG Club, which participated in the lower-division tournaments. I requested Pravin Barve (secretary of the MIG Club) to let him play for the Cricket Club of India (CCI). Barve agreed to the idea," recalled former Mumbai captain Milind Rege, who was the cricket in-charge of the CCI at that time. "I spoke to his coach Ramakant Achrekar, whose only condition was that Sachin should get a spot in the first XI. Milind promised that Sachin would get to play," Barve reminisced.

Rege took Tendulkar to the CCI cricket committee, which was headed by former Test player Madhav Apte, also the president of the CCI at the time. There was just one technical glitch. The club had strict rules at that time and one of them stated clearly that the dressing room could not be used by anyone who was under 18. Even the 'playing membership' of the CCI was given only to players who were above 18. Sachin was 15 then.

"I and Raj Singh Dungarpur, who was a member of the CCI executive committee and succeeded me as the CCI president, had a discussion about Sachin. His talent was so evident. We wanted to give him exposure and the chance to play for a club for which many greats had played for. We decided to 'bend the rules' in his case and invited him to be a 'playing member.' The executive committee, based on mine and Raj Singh's assessment, decided to make an exception in his case," Apte revealed.

Tendulkar didn't look back from there on and Apte says he draws satisfaction till date that his decision "didn't prove to be wrong." "The first time I saw him play was at the Shivaji Park when I was leading CCI during the Purshottam Shield quarterfinals. Those who had seen him bat at the inter-school level knew about his talent. Hemant Kenkre (who led Sachin at CCI) asked me to have a look at him. He wasn't even 15 then, but cracked a brilliant 70-odd. Later, my teammates wanted to know my opinion about him. I said: 'If this boy keeps a stable head on his shoulders, he will play for India very soon. I am glad to say, he hasn't let any of us down," Apte says.

Rege, who played a key role in getting a young Tendulkar to play for CCI and later Mumbai too (as a selector), refuses to take any credit for the 'making of Sachin.' "Except his brother Ajit and Achrekar, who taught him cricket, nobody deserves any credit in Tendulkar's case. We were just facilitators in his path. Like all greats, he was a self-made man. He was completely different to any other kid of his age. He was a prodigy I haven't seen before or since," Rege says.


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Salman’s confessions on Bigg Boss 7

If you are an avid Bigg Boss fan, then this season sure is a pot-boiler. It has all the ingredients in the right proportions: romance, masala, bitching and fights.

What is even more interesting is that the host Salman Khan has found a platform to reveal his secrets on the sets. And he sure does it with an ease which was not there in earlier of the seasons. We bring forth a few revealing ones:

Elli's the one It's common knowledge now that Elli is Salman Khan's favourite contestant. Apart from singing songs for her and asking her to sing a few lines for him, mouthing dialogues from her upcoming film #Mickey Virus, Salman makes it more than obvious that he has a crush on the petite actress. In fact, he even went a step further in one of the episodes and said that Elli has a striking resemblance to Katrina Kaif. Salman looked amazed when Elli revealed that she wanted at least five kids after she gets married. And if this isn't all, Salman has never shown to ignore Elli in any of the weekend episodes.

Hair woes Salman revealed in one of the weekend episodes that he had hair fall issues during the time he was shooting for Tere Naam. The confession came after one of the tasks forced Apoorva Agnihotri and Sangram to shave off their head. Salman narrated an incident and admitted that the worse phase of an actor is when he starts to lose his hair. He further said that there was a time when he had terrible sinus problem and he had requested the filmmaker (Tere Naam) to postpone his shooting dates. And on a whim, he walked in his room and shaved off his hair. His dad was proud of him because he was able to face the fear and deal with it.

Anger management When tempers flew between Arman Kohli and Andy and the environment at the Bigg Boss house was mercurial, Salman narrated an incident with Govinda. He recalled how once when they were driving late at night, a bunch of young guys speed past them, waved and then abused (mother****) them before speeding off. Salman said that on Govinda's insistence, they drove ahead, caught up with the bunch of youngsters and when they stopped Govinda had said, 'Your mother is my mother... do you want to say anything more'. The youngsters were apologetic and apologized profusely to the stars before heading off. The host explained how important it is to control one's temper and never to let go and make situations worse.

Andy was misjudged Salman revealed that his opinion about Andy has changed over the past few weeks. Andy has been seen to portray an extremely neutral side and stand up to what he feels is right and wrong. Salman confessed that he was wrong about Andy and he admitted that he has started liking Andy for his open attitude and positive nature.


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ASI begins excavation at old UP fort after sadhu dreams of buried gold

UNNAO, UP: A team from Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) on Friday began excavation work at the fort of Raja Rao Ram Bux Singh here to dig out a hidden gold treasure, which a seer dreamt is buried there.

Amidst tight security, the 12-member team led by P K Mishra, Deputy Director ASI, would carry out excavation work at the fort in Daudiakala village, which was formally started by the District Magistrate Vijay Kiran Anand.

Earlier on Friday, the seer, Shobhan Sarkar, who had a dream that 1,000 tonnes of gold was buried in the remains of the fort, performed "boomi pujan" and marked the points to be excavated by the ASI team.

When asked about how much time it would take to dig out the treasure, Sarkar said Geological Survey of India (GSI) would be able to answer that accurately, adding the treasure would not be found concentrated at one place. "1000 tonnes of gold will not be found at one place but deep digging would have to be done at several points," Sarkar said.

Heavy police force has been deployed around the fort, where huge crowd has gathered to have a glimpse of the excavation work happening there. Barricades have been erected to control the crowd and media gathered at the spot.

Raja Rao Ram Bux Singh, who was martyred during 1857 fight with Britishers, appeared in the dream of the seer and asked him to take care of the gold treasure buried in the remains of his fort, said Swami Omji, a follower of Sarkar.

Sarkar reportedly convinced Union minister Charandas Mahant about his dream, following which a team of ASI and GSI officials surveyed the area. Mahant, minister of state for agriculture and food processing industries, had visited Sarkar's ashram here on September 22 and October 7 and assured him of appropriate action in this regard.

Meanwhile the ASI deputy director told reporters that ASI began the excavation work on the basis of the findings of a report by GSI.

"On the basis of surface findings like pottery and antiquities, we have decided to excavate that site. It has just started. As far as mound is concerned we have large number of mounds in gangetic valley which belongs to early historical period and historical period," Mishra said.

Replying to a query about whether the decision was taken on the basis of the seer's dream, he said, "actually a report by the GSI suggested that there may be gold or silver there. On the basis of findings of the report we have started the excavation and results will come soon."

The GSI submitted the report in the first week of this month, Mishra said, adding they have not confirmed the amount of gold buried there, but have suggested there could be some alloy.

He said the digging process would take over a month to complete.

Commenting on the event, Congress spokesperson Renuka Chowdhury said, "If the seer's dream is true or not we will get to know soon. The State Government has taken a decision to this effect."

District magistrate Vijay Kiran Anand said excavation process has started and it would take over a month to complete.

In view of the large gathering around the fort, the district administration has imposed prohibitory orders in Unnao to prevent any untoward incident.

"We have imposed prohibitory orders in the city," Anand confirmed.


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