Archive for March, 2008

Aamir Khan makes peace with Big B

A Bollywood cold war ended when Aamir Khan dropped in for a chat with Amitabh Bachchan.The three-month-long standoff between the two was triggered when Aamir was reported to have made some uncharitable remarks about the Big B’s prized film ‘Black’ on a deaf, blind and mute girl.

Confirming the unexpected development, Amitabh told IANS: ‘Yes, Aamir came to meet me. He was shooting next door at Mehboob Studios and dropped in to say hi. As simple as that.’

When asked how their meeting went, the Big B laughed and said: ‘Oh, grow up. It was just a normal thing that we all do when colleagues are shooting together. He has been over to our house, Jalsa, several times. He came home recently to pay his condolences when my mother passed away and again for the chautha. He also came to invite us to see his film ‘Taare Zameen Par’.’

Bachchan and family will now reciprocate Aamir’s peace gesture.

‘I’m waiting for all my family members to be in town so we can see Aamir’s film (’Taare…). Jaya was attending parliament. Abhishek is in Miami and Ash (Aishwarya Rai) too will be away. Once we’re all together, we’ll watch Aamir’s film.’

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Rajanikanth…

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Fear of being banned has calmed me: Sreesanth

Ayurvedic treatment may have played its part in calming down S Sreesanth, but the mercurial Indian pacer says another factor that has helped him control his infamous temper is the threat of an ICC ban that may be imposed if he crosses the line the next time.

“Ayurvedic treatment and yoga is helping me stay calm. And besides, if I mess up the ICC may ban me for at least three Tests and I keep this thing in mind when I take the field,” Sreesanth, who was here to launch a scholarship programme for kids, said on Wednesday.

“That is one of the reasons that has made me ’shanth’ (quiet) now. Even my name says santh,” he quipped.

The flamboyant pacer, who has a history of being involved in on-field spats with rival teams, said he has finally learnt to draw the line.

“For instance in Australia, I told myself that there is a very thin line between foolishness and bravery. So everytime I got angry over something, I just rushed back to my run-up to calm myself,” he said.

In fact, the tour Down Under was uncharacteristically quiet for Sreesanth where neither his temper nor his bowling could put him in spotlight but the Kerala bowler said he did have his moments despite coming back from an injury layoff.

“I couldn’t do all that well in Australia because I was coming back from a shoulder injury and had very little practice going into the series,” he explained.

“But I did play my role at crucial junctures and hopefully I will do better in the upcoming series against South Africa,” he added.

On the shoulder niggle that has been troubling him, Sreesanth said ayurvedic treatment has helped him recover from a condition where a surgery would have taken him off the game for at least six months.

“If I had gone for surgery then I was sure to miss out for six months. But a 21-day ayurvedic treatment program helped immensly to get me fit for the ODI series in Australia and it is getting better now. It has been tough but I am enjoying myself now,” he said.

Sreesanth feels next week’s three-Test series against South Africa at home would be tough for him as pitches in India have a reputation of being not too pace-friendly.

“It will be tough but this implies to all the fast bowlers not just me. But there has to be a way to succeed. I guess we just have to keep the basics right,” he said.

The 25-year-old bowler said the pressure of performing well in front of adoring home fans will also spur him to give his best.

“There will be pressure to perform well after the team’s success this season but I enjoy it. I guess, the more the pressure the more we perform well,” he said.

“I will not target any particular batsman as all of them are very good. I will just try to keep the basics right. I didn’t really do well in Australia but in India I generally perform better. I am a much more matured cricketer now,” he said.

He credited the improvement to bowling coach Venkatesh Prasad and fielding coach Robin Singh.

“It was really nice having Venky bhai and Robin sir. They helped me a lot. Robin sir assisted me in improving my bowling to left handers as he himself was a left hander

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Efforts to save Sarabjit will continue: Govt

India on Wednesday said it will continue to make efforts to save the life of Sarabjit Singh, who got a breather as Pakistan deferred his death sentence by 30 days.

“Government of India is continuing its efforts to save the life of Sarabjit Singh,” External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee told Parliament.

The Indian High Commission in Islamabad has been informed by Pakistan Foreign Office that President Pervez Musharraf has stayed the execution of Sarabjit Singh by a month, till April 30, he said in a brief statement in both Houses of Parliament.

“We have achieved partial success and we will continue to carry on our efforts,” Mukherjee said.

Sarabjit, who has been accused of involvement in bomb blasts, was to be hanged on April one.

While seeking clemency from Pakistan for Sarabjit, India had said that the impression that he is being executed in retaliation for the death of a Pakistani in Indian custody will “impinge on the positive atmosphere” between the two countries.

Sarabjit’s sister Dalbir Kaur had, on Tuesday, sent a written appeal for clemency directly to Musharraf and requested him for permission to visit Pakistan to meet her brother in jail.

Sarabjit was sentenced to death in 1991 for his alleged involvement in four bomb blasts in Lahore and Multan that killed 14 people. His family denies he is a spy as claimed by Pakistan and insists he accidentally strayed into Pakistani territory. var RN = new String (Math.random()); var RNS = RN.substring (2,11); var b2 = ‘ ‘; if (doweshowbellyad==1) bellyad.innerHTML = b2;

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US-India ties set to go over the moon

WASHINGTON: On matters of space flights and exploration, India has put its cards on table for the United States to see - literally.

At a luncheon meeting on Wednesday hosted by a Washington DC think-tank on K-Street, better known as a hang-out for lobbyists than space buffs, the tables were all named after Indian space pioneers – Dhawan, Chandrasekhar, Sarabhai…

It was an audacious display by a country that till recently was banished from the US space business by a rigid sanctions regime that didn’t allow the transfer of a screw, let alone its drivers. But this week, a top-flight delegation led by a person who an US interlocutor described as India’s “Mr Space” motored into town for talks on India’s mission to the moon and beyond, including Washington’s involvement in the Chandrayan series of flights.

There will be two US instruments and experiments among the nearly dozen that will go onboard Chandrayan-I, but as India’s space chief Madhavan Nair pointed out repeatedly, that reflects only a pittance of the potential for space cooperation between the two countries. Even with regard to supply of components, tight sanctions that are only being relaxed slowly have kept it down to $ 15 million annually when there is scope for $ 100 million.

“The process is slow, I wish it were faster,” Nair complained at the event hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, acknowledging the need for the US to protect intellectual property rights. But from a US businessman in the audience came remarks expressing resentment at the host country’s sanctions regime. It was a moment of sweet vindication.

In fact, so clued in are US space buffs about India’s giant leap in space exploration (which began as baby steps with US help) that Nair was examined closely on ISRO’s progress on developing a two-stage, two-orbit cryogenic engine that will engender a reusable space launcher. A technology demonstrator will be ready by 2012 and such a system will be operational by 2020-2025, Nair said boldly.

The Indian space program took off in the 1960s with considerable US help – something which New Delhi is now loath to admit. Not so Nair, who acknowledged that “when you were landing on the moon, we were still making pencil rockets.” He recalled listening to the Apollo moon landing on a cracking Voice of America broadcast while working on India’s nascent space program.

But much has changed in the four decades since; particularly after the US sanctions regime that began in the 1990s pushed India into indigenously developing a range of services that now enables it to launch Italian and Israeli satellites.

At the heart of the Indian confidence in its space program is the same theme that is attending Indian enterprise in everything from software services to manufacturing – low cost and high value. The Indian space program, Nair suggested, also has a Nano model to carry the world along. To date, the entire Indian space program has spent only about $ 2 billion to accomplish a wide range of feats. It has delivered $ 3 billion in value in the social sector alone, according to a study by a Chennai school of economics.

In contrast, NASA’s budget for 2007 alone - $ 16 billion. “The future of space lies in cooperation between countries, not competition,” smiled Nair as US space mavens strained their ears to hear him beyond his accent. “We look forward to greater cooperation with the United States.” No one missed the message.

Soon after the luncheon, Nair and his Indian space team trooped out to meet high officials at NASA and NOAA, knowing that the last remnants of the sanctions regime are falling by the way side, unable to resist India’s ‘Nano-isation’ of the world. On Thursday, they are scheduled to visit Caltech, the academic frontier of space studies, where they hope to clinch an agreement to collaborate on the ISRO-run Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology.

From all accounts, US-India space ties are poised to go over the moon.

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Mkt. statistics

SENSEX 14994.83 +161.37
NIFTY 4573.95 +40.95
RS/$ 40.62 -0.15

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Gold, silver plunge from record on weak global cues

After touching record levels, gold and silver fell in the bullion market here on Tuesday on selling by stockists influenced by a weakening trend in Asian markets.

Standard gold and ornaments, which set a new peak of Rs 13,560 and Rs 13,410 in previous day’s trading, tumbled by Rs 270 to Rs 13,290 and Rs 13,140 per ten grams respectively.

Silver followed suit and suffered a setback of Rs 1,300 to Rs 24,500 and weekly-based delivery by Rs 1,290 to Rs 26,070 per kg respectively. Silver coins lost Rs 200 to Rs 27,100 for buying and Rs 27,200 for selling of 100 coins.

Marketmen said emergence of selling by stockists to book profits mainly led to a fall in both gold and silver prices.

Gold fell to 994.38 dollar an ounce from all-time high of 1,032.70 dollar. Silver also fell by 0.7 per cent to 20.03 dollar an ounce.

Fresh softness in crude oil and recovery move in equity markets also reduced the precious metals demand, they added.

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SENSEX 14833.46 23.97
NIFTY 4533.00 29.90
DJIA 11972.25 21.16
NASDAQ 2177.01 -35.48
RS/$ 40.77 0.32

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Harbhajan keen to patch things up with Hayden

  Harbhajan Singh would be happy to patch things up with Australian pair Matthew Hayden and Andrew Symonds, the Indian off-spinner said on Tuesday.

Opening batsman Hayden was reprimanded by Cricket Australia for calling the Indian spinner an “obnoxious weed”. According to media reports in Australia, Hayden regretted his comments and was keen to clear the air with Harbhajan.

“These things happen in the game and I am happy if he wants to patch (things) up,” Harbhajan told a Mumbai tabloid on Tuesday. “I never had any problem off the field with him, he is more than welcome to come and talk it over. I always got on with the game and now if he wants to get on with the game, I am happy to talk to him. From my side the issue is solved.”

Harbhajan was also involved in a racism row after being accused of calling all-rounder Symonds a monkey in the second Test in Sydney.

The spinner denied the claim and was later cleared of racial abuse by the sport’s governing body. He was found guilty of the lesser offence of using abusive language.

Asked if he would invite Symonds for a chat, Harbhajan said: “I am more than happy to be friends with everyone. What happens on the field should be left on the field. If you say something you should be able to take it. Otherwise don’t say it. I will be happy to put the issue behind me.”

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ODIs………ICC ODI Championship

Rank
Team
Matches
Rating
1
South Africa
43
127
2
Australia
44
127
3
New Zealand
38
113
4
India
56
113
5
Pakistan
33
109
6
Sri Lanka
44
107
7
England
40
105
8
West Indies
37
96
9
Bangladesh
29
47
10
Ireland
8
28
11
Zimbabwe
31
18
12
Kenya
6
0

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