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How good bacteria keeps your skin looking youthful

New studies suggest that upping the “good” bacteria in our skin is essential for our immune system and can also combat wrinkles, sagging and pigmentation.

Just as good bacteria in your gut can calm your stomach, boosting levels of it on your skin can restore your complexion’s youthful plumpness and glow.

The beneficial bugs work on the surface to maintain moisture and radiance and fight the bad bacteria that cause redness, sensitivity, spots and other infections.

The bacteria also penetrate the deeper levels to repair skin DNA and build wrinkle-preventing collagen. So it’s not surprising that skincare companies are getting on the bug bandwagon, with a host of ranges containing ingredients to increase “beauty bacteria”.

Just as good bacteria in your gut can calm your stomach, boosting levels of it on your skin can restore your complexion’s youthful plumpness and glow
Just as good bacteria in your gut can calm your stomach, boosting levels of it on your skin can restore your complexion’s youthful plumpness and glow

First off the blocks are Aromatherapy Associates, which has just launched a new line of soothing skincare that is rich in prebiotics, which encourage the growth of good bacteria.

Next week, skincare brand NUDE, whose fans include supermodel Helena Christensen, will re-launch its skincare with an anti-ageing ingredient called n-probiotic, a live micro-organism derived from yeast.

These smart bacteria stimulate the skin to produce its own anti-ageing collagen and hyaluronic acids. It is claimed that in lab tests this probiotic reduced cellular damage by up to 50%, reduced irritation by up to 35% and activated cellular renewal by up to 70%.

Next month will also see the arrival of Idealia from French brand Vichy. Idealia serum and creams contain a probiotic derived from fermented tea. The company claims it can create “ideal skin” by reducing dark spots and wrinkles, improving texture and boosting radiance.

These are big boasts, yet there is serious science to back up the buzz about bugs. The 2011 Nobel Prize went to a team who showed how skin bacteria act as an important immune system for the body. Further studies have shown that probiotics can improve eczema and fight off acne-causing bacteria.

Professor Richard Tester, a research scientist at Glasgow Caledonian University, is conducting studies with the prebiotic GMH (glucomannan hydrolysate), which is derived from a type of yam. His soon-to-be published studies show GMH can promote skin healing and treat acne.

“Because this prebiotic can penetrate the skin surface, it also helps regenerate skin from within, rebuilding collagen, reducing wrinkles and bringing back its natural glow,” he says.

However, this is not an excuse to stop cleansing – if we did, we’d be left with several hundred types of “bad” bacteria on our faces, living off our sweat, sebum and dead skin cells. When this happens, our skin becomes irritated so in response the body creates free radicals and a collagen-digesting enzyme. The result? Wrinkles and sagging.

Unlike traditional treatments for wrinkles and acne – such as retinols and benzoyl peroxide, which irritate the skin – bacteria beauty boosters are very gentle.

 

Mitt Romney accuses Barack Obama’s campaign of seeking to divide America

Mitt Romney has accused his rival President Barack Obama of running a campaign built on “anger and divisiveness”.

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said the Democratic campaign had hit a “new low” by trying to link him to controversial views on rape recently voiced by another Republican, Todd Akin.

The Obama camp has accused Mitt Romney of extreme positions on social issues.

The Republicans are due this week to nominate Mitt Romney as their candidate in November’s presidential elections.

Mitt Romney has accused his rival President Barack Obama of running a campaign built on "anger and divisiveness"
Mitt Romney has accused his rival President Barack Obama of running a campaign built on "anger and divisiveness"

The party has been forced to delay by a day – until Tuesday – the start of its national convention in the Florida city of Tampa because of the approaching Tropical Storm Isaac.

“I would suggest that that’s a campaign of anger and divisiveness,” Mitt Romney said, referring to Barack Obama’s campaign in Sunday’s interview with US TV channel Fox News.

“That’s the kind of divisiveness that I think Americans recognize and I think it’s one of the reasons why his campaign, despite spending massively more than our campaign, that his campaign hasn’t gained the traction that he would have expected.”

Mitt Romney said the Democrats were now seeking to tie him to the remarks by embattled congressman Todd Akin, who sparked uproar by claiming women’s bodies could prevent pregnancy in cases of “legitimate rape”.

He described the remarks as “offensive and wrong”, urging the Missouri congressman to withdraw his candidacy for the Senate.

However, he admitted in Sunday’s interview that the controversy over the remarks “hurts our party and I think is damaging to women”.

Many voters do not yet feel they know Mitt Romney, and he will seek to boost his image at the Republican national convention in Tampa.

 

Total Recall revamp: Colin Farrell takes the lead as Doug Quaid

Colin Farrell talks about how a remake of Total Recall got him back in the action saddle and the challenge of living up to Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 1990 original.

It was a mixture of fun and fear that convinced Colin Farrell to take on his first big-budget action movie in years, in a role made famous by Arnold Schwarzenegger.

This year’s version of Total Recall casts the Irish actor as Douglas Quaid, an everyman living in the future after a chemical war has destroyed most of the earth.

Unsatisfied with life he pays a visit to “Rekall”, a company that specializes in implanting exciting false memories into people’s brains.

But as those who have seen the original will know – and those who haven’t may be able to guess – nothing is straightforward.

“I was a little bit skeptical, as one tends to get reading about remakes of films that people are very passionate about,” admits Colin Farrell.

“Total Recall is like Life of Brian for some people.”

Colin Farrell and Jessica Biel make a break from the bad guys who inhabit Rekall, the agency tasked with reinventing memories in Total Recall
Colin Farrell and Jessica Biel make a break from the bad guys who inhabit Rekall, the agency tasked with reinventing memories in Total Recall

But after finding the script “loads of fun” and falling in love with the “really beautiful world” director Len Wiseman had created, he jumped on board.

“It wasn’t like, <<I’m a serious actor, tell me why I need to be in this film>>,” he explains.

“I got the whole package and presentation.

“It’s a really big canvas, made for a much bigger audience, as opposed to the smaller films I’ve done in the last few years.

“I had an element of fear as well, because it had been so long since I’d done a big action film. So that kind of drew me towards it as well.”

Len Wiseman relocates the action from Mars back to Earth, with Kate Beckinsale taking the role of Quaid’s wife Lori that Sharon Stone took in the original.

So does Colin Farrell think they have pulled it off?

“Oh, I don’t know,” he sighs.

“It’s not a $125 million exercise in nostalgia, so I think there’s some people that made up their minds before a frame was shot.

“It wasn’t made for the purpose of trying to get away as far as possible. It just happened to tonally feel like a very different film, so I felt that it wasn’t repeating.”

Colin Farrell is full of Irish charm and light-hearted banter. But it seems he might still bear a few scars from his previous remake effort, horror movie Fright Night.

“You can’t do right for doing wrong with remakes,” he explains.

“I learned that the first time.

“You either rip something off too closely or you don’t put something in and people are like, <<I can’t believe they left that out!>>”

The actor says he can understand why movie-goers sometimes get frustrated with remakes.

“Film is a very nostalgic thing,” he said.

“If I heard one of the Indiana Jones or even The Goonies was being remade, I’d feel like someone was poking a finger of criticism at my youth in a way.

“It’s a strange one; it goes deep. I mean, it must go deep for the reaction sometimes.”

There are not many bigger action shoes to fill than those of Arnold Schwarzenegger. But Colin Farrell was in the frame from day one as far as Len Wiseman was concerned.

“I can’t help but picture somebody when I’m reading a screenplay. I have to put a face and a person to that voice and Colin was that person,” he explains.

“It was probably some of Colin’s bad-boy persona, mixed with the vulnerable side of him,” the director continues.

“There’s not that many people that have those together.”

These days Colin Farrell’s “bad-boy persona” seems to have been put to bed, with the actor now concentrating on being a father to his two sons and living a yoga-fuelled life in Los Angeles.

Co-star Jessica Biel, too, found solace in the discipline.

“We were so bruised up all the time,” says the actress, currently planning her wedding to singer Justin Timberlake.

“You really needed that kind of release after days of being strapped in a harness and hung from the ceiling and jumping across chasms.”

It was the “darker, more emotional” take on the story that persuaded Biel to play resistance fighter Melina, the woman Douglas Quaid sees in his dreams.

“The female characters are equally as strong, as intelligent and as capable as our main male character,” she says.

“Which is just kind of rare, honestly.”

“But unusual’s good, isn’t it?” comments Colin Farrell on the prominence of his female co-stars, while admitting it is “less nerve-wracking” to be fighting men.

“If I’m gonna miss my cue and connect with somebody’s face, I’d prefer it to be a dude than a woman,” he shrugs.

 

 

Samsung shares plunge after US jury orders $1BN in damages

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Samsung Electronics shares have suffered their biggest fall in a single day in almost four years, after a US jury found the technology giant copied designs from Apple.

The South Korean company’s shares fell 7% in Seoul trading, the most since October 2008.

The company was ordered to pay $1.05 billion in damages to Apple, in one of the most significant rulings in a global intellectual property battle.

Samsung will appeal over the verdict.

Analysts said investors were worried that the ruling could affect revenues.

Samsung Electronics shares have suffered their biggest fall in a single day in almost four years, after a US jury found the technology giant copied designs from Apple
Samsung Electronics shares have suffered their biggest fall in a single day in almost four years, after a US jury found the technology giant copied designs from Apple

“An adjustment in the next few days is unavoidable as the damage amount was much bigger than market expectations, and there are further uncertainties, such as the possibility of a sales ban,” said John Park, from Daishin Securities.

Apple has said it will seek an injunction to block sales of Samsung products in the United States, a key market, at a court hearing on 20 September.

One of the biggest concerns for Samsung is whether Apple will now target the Galaxy S3, which was not included in the recent trial, as it focussed on older products.

The flagship product is Samsung’s best selling smartphone and if it is included in a US ban on sales that would give Apple a major advantage in the market, analysts said.

A nine-member jury in San Jose, California ruled on 24 August that Samsung had infringed Apple patents for mobile devices.

It was the most closely-watched of many similar patent disputes being contested in courts around the world between electronics manufacturers.

In recent weeks, a court in South Korea ruled that both Apple and Samsung had copied each other, while a British court dismissed claims by the American company that Samsung had infringed its copyrights.

 

Maria Pantazopoulos drowned during Trash the Dress photoshoot in a Quebec park

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Canadian bride Maria Pantazopoulos has drowned during a photoshoot as she posed in her wedding dress in water at a Quebec park.

Real estate agent Maria Pantazopoulos, 30, drowned after her dress got wet and she was dragged into the river near a “violently” rushing waterfall in Canada.

Friends said she had been taking part in an increasingly popular ritual called “Trash the Dress”, in which brides pose for pictures while playfully destroying their wedding gowns.

Maria Pantazopoulos slipped and fell into the Ouareau River near Dorwin Falls, north of Montreal, on Friday afternoon. Her body was found about two and a half hours later.

The newly-wed yelled: “I’m slipping, I’m slipping, I’m slipping,” before falling off the rock she was perched on for her wedding pictures, according to CBC.

Canadian bride Maria Pantazopoulos has drowned during a photoshoot as she posed in her wedding dress in water at a Quebec park
Canadian bride Maria Pantazopoulos has drowned during a photoshoot as she posed in her wedding dress in water at a Quebec park

Maria Pantazopoulos had commissioned the shoot following her June 9 wedding.

Family friend Leeza Pousoulidis said: “She’s a really fun girl, and she just didn’t want her wedding dress sitting in a box in the closet.

“She said: <<I want to have fun with my wedding dress. I want to have great pictures and memories of me in my wedding dress>>.”

Leeza Pousoulidis said her friend was “a strong, tough girl”.

“She was very petite, but she was strong in character and in physical strength as well,” Leeza Pousoulidis told the Montreal Gazette.

“She was very happy and caring. She had a big heart.”

Maria Pantazopoulos slipped while she was being photographed by Louis Pagakis, who told CTV Montreal that he did everything he could to save her.

“She had her wedding dress on and she said, <<take some pictures of me while I swim a little bit in the lake>>,” he said.

“She went in and her dress got heavy, I tried everything I could to save her.”

Quebec provincial police spokesman Sgt. Ronald McInnis described the site as being elevated and rocky, with water “violently” rushing below.

“She was doing the photo shoot in about six inches or one foot of water when part of her wedding dress got soaked and became extremely heavy,” Ronald McInnis said.

“She started slipping and falling down when the photographer grabbed her but she was too heavy that he couldn’t pull her from the edge.

“Another person tried to grab her but also was unable to save her from falling into the river.”

Ronald McInnis said Maria Pantazopoulos, from Laval, a small Island north of Montreal, was found 100 feet from where she fell by a private diver who knows the river and volunteered to help with the search.

The diver pulled the young woman’s body from an area of the river which was 20 feet deep.

“She had sunk to the bottom,” Ronald McInnis said.

Two witnesses, believed to be the photographer and an assistant, were hospitalized for extreme shock.

Ronald McInnis said the bride’s husband was not present for the photo-shoot and neither were any family members.

However, her cousins and her brother went to the site when they heard that she had fallen.

“It’s horrible,” Ronald McInnis said.

“This is the first time I’ve heard of a story like that. I told my partner, this is a story that is going to go all around the world.”

Maria Pantazopoulos wanted the fun photos taken at the falls, perched on the rocks in her gown, Marco Michaud, a colleague of the photographer taking the pictures told CBC.

She chose the beautiful site, located near the small city of Rawdon, as the backdrop.

Maria Pantazopoulos’s family has declined to speak to the media.

 

Clot nets may be the future of stroke care

According to two studies, using small nets to extract blood clots from patients’ brains may be the future of stroke care.

Clots block blood vessels, starving parts of the brain of oxygen, which leads to symptoms such as paralysis and loss of speech.

Two studies, presented in the Lancet medical journal, suggest extracting clots with nets could improve recovery.

The Stroke Association said it was very excited by the treatment’s potential.

There are already techniques for reopening blocked blood vessels in people’s brains.

Some patients will be given “clot-busting” drugs, but this needs to be in the hours just after the stroke and is not suitable for everyone.

Other techniques have been developed to extract the clot. Some procedures pass a tube up through the groin to the brain. There the wire passes through the clot, forming a coil on the far side and then pulling the clot out. However, this is far from routine practice.

Clots block blood vessels, starving parts of the brain of oxygen, which leads to symptoms such as paralysis and loss of speech
Clots block blood vessels, starving parts of the brain of oxygen, which leads to symptoms such as paralysis and loss of speech

The latest methods involve a tiny wire cage instead of a coil. This pushes the clot up against the walls of the artery and enmeshes the clot in the wires, allowing doctors to pull the clot back out of the groin.

Two similar devices were compared with the current coil methods. One trial of 113 patients showed 58% had good brain function after three months, compared with 33% of those treated with the coil method, as well as a lower death rate.

Another study in 178 patients showed almost double the chance of living independently after treatment.

One of the researchers involved, Prof. Jeffrey Saver from the University of California, Los Angeles, said these techniques would become more common, as they are more likely to clear clots than drugs.

“Clot-busting drugs only partially reopen 40% of large blocked arteries. These devices partially reopen 70-90% of large blocked arteries.

“Second, these devices can be used in patients in whom it is not safe to give ‘clot busting’ drugs, such as patients taking anticoagulant medications, patients who had recent surgery, and patients who are between 4.5 to eight hours after stroke onset.”

In the long term he can see drugs being used as a first option and then clot removal if the drugs fail or cannot be used.

Responding to the research, the Stoke Association’s Dr. Clare Walton said clot-busters did not work for all patients so new techniques could help many patients.

She added: “Clot retrieval devices have the potential to be used with more stroke patients and are better at removing blood clots than clot-busting drugs.

“We are very excited about this potential new treatment and look forward to further developments.”

Dr. Philip Gorelick, from Michigan State University, said the studies were “major steps forward in the successful treatment of acute ischaemic stroke, and pave the way for new treatment options”.

The research was published to coincide with a European Society of Cardiology meeting in Munich.

 

Tropical Storm Isaac: Florida makes final preparations for the storm

People in southern Florida have been making final preparations for Tropical Storm Isaac, as it barrels to the US.

Hundreds of flights and sailings have been cancelled, high winds have already caused power cuts and oil rigs are facing possible closures.

Other US states are also on alert as forecasters warn that Isaac could strengthen further.

The storm has already caused havoc in the Caribbean, killing at least six in Haiti and bringing floods to Cuba.

The National Hurricane Center said the storm was moving at about 20 mph (30km/h) towards Florida’s southern tip, and was expected to begin battering the coastline during the day on Sunday.

It was packing sustained winds of 65 mph.

People in southern Florida have been making final preparations for Tropical Storm Isaac, as it barrels to the US
People in southern Florida have been making final preparations for Tropical Storm Isaac, as it barrels to the US

Residents of the Florida Keys, a thin island chain connected to the mainland by a single road, have been driving north all weekend.

They are well-used to the ritual of storm preparation, and many have boarded up their homes and businesses in preparation.

A few bars and restaurants stayed open late on Saturday to serve small groups of tourists and locals willing to risk the storm.

“We’ll just catch every place that’s open,” holidaymaker Ted Lamarche told the AP news agency.

Hurricane watches were put in place along the coastlines of western Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and south-eastern Louisiana.

Florida Governor Rick Scott declared a state of emergency to make sure emergency services would be ready when the storm hit.

The Republican Party has been forced to delay the start of its national convention in the western Florida city of Tampa because of the storm.

The eye of the storm is forecast to hit the US coastline further north, but with its effects felt up to 230 miles away, Tampa is expecting a soaking and powerful winds.

The Republican party, which is due to formally nominate Mitt Romney as its presidential candidate during the meeting, said the convention would begin on Tuesday, a day later than planned.

 

Jerry Nelson, voice of Sesame Street’s Count von Count, dies aged 78

Jerry Nelson, the puppeteer and voice of Sesame Street’s Count von Count, has died aged 78.

Jerry Nelson worked for more than 40 years on numerous projects featuring Jim Henson’s Muppets, including the TV series Fraggle Rock.

He suffered from emphysema and died on Thursday in Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

A Sesame Workshop statement said he would be remembered for “the laughter he brought to children worldwide”.

Jerry Nelson, the puppeteer and voice of Sesame Street's Count von Count, has died aged 78
Jerry Nelson, the puppeteer and voice of Sesame Street's Count von Count, has died aged 78

Jerry Nelson was born in Oklahoma, in the US, and raised in Washington DC.

He began puppeteering for Bil Baird, who produced and performed the puppetry sequence for The Lonely Goatherd in the film version of The Sound of Music.

Jerry Nelson’s first job with the Muppets was The Jimmy Dean Show in 1965 – replacing Frank Oz as Rowlf the Dog’s right hand.

He went on to work again with Jim Henson on Sesame Street, going on to animate some of the long-running show’s best-loved characters including Mr. Snuffleupaguss.

But it was his mathematics-obsessed Count von Count, modelled on Bela Lugosi’s interpretation of Count Dracula, with which he became most closely associated.

He continued to voice the character from 1972 until his death, though he ceased operating the puppet in 2004.

Jerry Nelson also performed many other characters on The Muppet Show, including Pigs in Space star Dr. Julius Strangepork, the boomerang fish-throwing Lew Zealand, and Kermit the Frog’s nephew Robin the Frog.

The Sesame Workshop said: “He will forever be in our hearts and remembered for the artistry in his puppetry, his music, and the laughter he brought to children worldwide through his portrayal of Count von Count, Herry Monster, Fat Blue, Sherlock Hemlock, the Amazing Mumford and many other beloved characters.

“We will miss his extraordinary spirit and the joy he brought to our Street.”

Paying tribute on its Facebook page, Lisa Henson, CEO of the Jim Henson Company, added: “Jerry Nelson imbued all his characters with the same gentle, sweet whimsy and kindness that were a part of his own personality.

“He joined The Jim Henson Company in the earliest years, and his unique contributions to the worlds of Fraggles, Muppets, Sesame Street and so many others are, and will continue to be, unforgettable.”

 

 

Beige Illusion Jeans: Asda trousers that will make you look a size smaller

Celebrities including Miranda Kerr and actress Melanie Griffith have been spotted creating the illusion of a skinnier size thanks to a dark panel down the side of the trousers.

Now all British women will get a chance to try out the effect, thanks to a £16 ($25) version on sale at Asda.

The beige Illusion Jeans are designed to slim and elongate legs by drawing the eye down the length of the body.

Asda created the jeans, available in sizes 8 to 24, for its George range after a quarter of women aged 16 to 70 said their legs were their main body hang-up.

Designer Kausar Mitha said: “The panel is slightly wider at the top, around the hip and thigh area, and then tapers down the leg.

“This is because women’s widest point is at the top of thigh. The panel draws the eye in and then follows the contour of the body, which creates an illusion of slimmer legs and hips.

“We tried five different-sized panels and this was the one that made the wearer look most svelte. The jeans are also made from stretch cotton, which gives a more toned look. The vertical panel adds an illusion of extra length.”

Miranda Kerr has been spotted creating the illusion of a skinnier size thanks to a dark panel down the side of the trousers
Miranda Kerr has been spotted creating the illusion of a skinnier size thanks to a dark panel down the side of the trousers

The trousers are Asda’s latest addition to a line that began with the Illusion dress in April.

The frock, which sold out within a week, was followed by the Illusion swimsuit in May. Next month, the retailer will launch a pair of Illusion jeans in blue with a black stripe on the inside thigh, for those who feel this is their problem area.

Victoria’s Secret model Miranda Kerr was spotted last month in a pair of beige-and-black trousers similar to the Asda jeans, while actress Melanie Griffith was recently pictured in a black-and-white version.

Kate Winslet kicked off the trend for optical-illusion clothing when she wore a white-and-nude dress with black panelling to the premiere of Mildred Pierce at the Venice Film Festival last September. Since then, a host of celebrities – from Kate Moss to actress Liv Tyler – have donned the flattering dresses.

Kausar Mitha said: “We have had lots of customer demands for slimming clothes. Legs are always a focus point that people are not happy with so we wanted to give them a product that made them appear a dress size smaller and gave a smoother silhouette.

“Lots of celebrities have been wearing illusion clothes recently. We wanted to give our customers something similar but affordable.”

George brand director Fiona Lambert said: “Shopping for jeans that look and feel great can be hard for women. George has come to the rescue, using clever design to create something flattering in a staple wardrobe item for every woman.”

However, critics last night labelled the burgeoning market in slimming clothing “dangerous”.

Image consultant Angela Marshall, owner of Appearance Management, said: “There is a lot of pressure to be thin. Even very slim celebrities are wearing clothes designed to make them look even smaller. This sends out a dangerous message.

“The trend for slimming clothes has gone too far. A lot of designers don’t even know how to make clothes for a curvy shape.

“I wish the fashion industry would let people be what they are born with. We need to start celebrating healthy bodies.”

 

Two businessmen spend $16,000 on two bottles of ’82 Petrus at 21 Club in New York

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Two business associates visiting New York City spent $16,640 on two bottles of Petrus ’82 wine alone at 21 Club.

The pair’s waiter said he had to do everything he could to keep his jaw from crashing to the ground when they ordered the second bottle.

“He said: <<Bring us another one>>”, the 21 Club’s wine director Phil Pratt told the New York Post.

“At that point, you smile, and you try not to jump up and down and wave your arms too much.”

“It’s one of the most famous wines in the world,” he said.

Two business associates visiting New York City spent $16,640 on two bottles of Petrus '82 wine alone at 21 Club
Two business associates visiting New York City spent $16,640 on two bottles of Petrus '82 wine alone at 21 Club

The landmark speakeasy restaurant says it has sold only five similar bottles in the last three decades.

With the two bottles’ sale to the first-time diners this past May, “21” reports having only three left in their cellar after ordering 12 when the bottles first came out.

“It’s not a wine we normally sell,” said Phil Pratt who was especially stunned when the diners ordered the bottles on what felt like a pure whim.

However, he added: “The gentleman knew what he was ordering.”

They accompanied the first bottle with appetizers of a house caesar salad and peekytoe crab salad.

Once their appetizers were finished, Phil Pratt said he was summoned over again, with the couple’s request to bask on a second bottle over plates of dover sole and steelhead salmon.

“It was a little strange, especially when one of the guys was drinking coffee throughout the meal, too. But I don’t judge. It’s their money; they can do what they want with it. If he wants Coca-Cola in his wine, I’m OK with that,” Phil Pratt told the Post.

Despite an obvious world-wide desire for the wine, and the restaurant’s remaining few bottles possibly rising in price, Phil Pratt told the Post that he doesn’t expect them to stock up on more.

He said counterfeit wine is largely to blame.

“There’s an old saying that more bottles of ’82 Petrus have been sold in Las Vegas than ever existed,” he said.

It’s a risk he said they’d rather not take with their continuing purchase.

The men’s check closed at $18,736.18, with a $400 gratuity and two complimentary cookies thrown in on the side.

 

Snooki gives birth to a baby boy named Lorenzo Dominic LaValle

Snooki has given birth this morning to a baby boy at a New Jersey hospital.

Jersey Shore star and her fiancé, Jionni LaValle have called their first child Lorenzo Dominic LaValle, and he weighs a healthy 6 lbs, 5oz.

The reality TV star tweeted after the birth: “I am SO IN LOVE with my son Lorenzo Dominic ! I had my little man last night, healthy at 6lbs! HE’S MY WORLD!”

Snooki later gushed: “Being a mom is an amazing feeling!!! I love my little man to death! Jionni is such a cute dad.”

A representative for Snooki told MTV: “The world just got another Guido!!!”

The musicchannel congratulated their biggest star and said: “We couldn’t be happier for Nicole and Jionni on the healthy delivery of their baby boy!

“We look forward to Lorenzo’s first trip to the Jersey Shore and can’t wait to see his first animal print onesie.”

Snooki and her fiancé, Jionni LaValle have called their first child Lorenzo Dominic LaValle
Snooki and her fiancé, Jionni LaValle have called their first child Lorenzo Dominic LaValle

Snooki went into labor this morning and simultaneously tweeted a picture with the caption “fierce”.

Luckily it wasn’t of her, but rather of a trio of big cats – a lion, tiger and cheetah.

The news of her labor emerged after Snooki was seen checking into the maternity unit at her local hospital.

TMZ confirmed the reports: “We’re told she is at a hospital in New Jersey now and is expected to deliver her little meatball to the world some time in the near future.”

Earlier in the day Snooki had written: “I’m a balloon waiting to pop” as she prepared for the birth of her first child.

Snooki,and fiancé Jionni LaValle announced that they were to be parents in May.

They revealed that they were expecting a boy, which they planned to name Lorenzo.

Earlier this week, Snooki admitted she was feeling apprehensive about becoming a parent for the first time.

She told In Touch Weekly magazine: “I’m nervous that I’m not going to be a good mom. I just really hope I know what I’m doing!”

Snooki even said that while she had become famous for her partying and drinking on Jersey Shore, her pregnancy is crazier than anything she experienced throughout her time on the MTV show.

She said: “At the Shore you’re going to hook up, get into a fight or go to jail. You only have three options. But being pregnant you have no idea what’s going on!”

After the birth she also has plenty of work planned, with her MTV spin-off series alongside castmate Jennifer J-WOWW Farley recently picked up for a second season.

However, next time around, the show will now relocate to a large house on Johnson Avenue, in Manchester, New Jersey.

 

Pussy Riot members fled Russia

Two members of punk-rock group Pussy Riot, who are being sought by Russian police, have fled the country, the band’s Twitter account says.

Three members of the group were jailed this month for staging an anti-Vladimir Putin protest in a Moscow cathedral.

The pair who fled has not been named but the husband of one of the jailed women said the duo had taken part in the cathedral protest in February.

Many in the West condemned the Pussy Riot sentences as disproportionate.

However, the Kremlin has rejected accusations by musicians and some governments that the case was politically motivated.

Two members of punk-rock group Pussy Riot, who are being sought by Russian police, have fled the country
Two members of punk-rock group Pussy Riot, who are being sought by Russian police, have fled the country

Maria Alyokhina, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Yekaterina Samutsevich were found guilty of “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” and jailed for two years.

The Twitter account called Pussy Riot Group said: “In regard to the pursuit, two of our members have successfully fled the country! They are recruiting foreign feminists to prepare new actions!”

Nadezhda Tolokonnikova’s husband, Pyotr Verzilov, told Reuters news agency: “Since the Moscow police said they are searching for them, they will keep a low profile for now. They are in a safe place beyond the reach of the Russian police.”

He suggested that this meant a country that had no extradition arrangement with Russia.

Pyotr Verzilov told Reuters: “Twelve or even 14 members who are still in Russia actively participate in the band’s work now, it’s a big collective.”

The jailed women are appealing against their sentences.

Following the verdict, Russian police said they were actively searching for other members of the group who had taken part in the cathedral protest.

But they gave no names and did not say how many were being sought.

The jailed women said their performance of a “punk prayer” on 21 February in the Christ the Saviour Cathedral had been to highlight the Russian Orthodox Church leader’s support for Vladimir Putin.

Their brief, obscenity-laced performance, which implored the Virgin Mary to “throw Putin out”, enraged the Orthodox Church.

 

 

Unicredit in Iran sanctions probe

Italian bank Unicredit has confirmed it is co-operating with a US investigation into a possible breach of sanctions.

The bank is thought to have broken sanctions against Iran, according to reports by the Financial Times and Reuters, although this has not been confirmed by Unicredit.

The probe centres on a German subsidiary, HypoVereinsbank, which the major Italian bank bought in 2005.

The news follows similar revelations about two UK banks.

Unicredit originally admitted in January as part of a regulatory filing that it was working with US authorities over a sanctions breach, but without naming the country involved.

“A member of the Unicredit group is currently responding to a third party witness subpoena from the New York County District Attorney’s Office in connection with an ongoing investigation regarding certain persons and/or entities believed to have engaged in sanctionable activities,” the January filing said.

Unicredit is thought to have broken sanctions against Iran, according to the Financial Times
Unicredit is thought to have broken sanctions against Iran, according to the Financial Times

According to Unicredit’s latest statement, which does not name Iran either, the investigation is also being conducted by the US Department of Justice.

Last month the US Senate released a report detailing how HSBC helped launder money for Iran, as well as for other US-sanctioned governments of Burma and North Korea and for Mexican drugs cartels.

Then, earlier this month, Standard Chartered Bank – which is headquartered in London, but mainly active in the Middle East, Africa and Asia – agreed to pay New York regulators $340 million to settle claims that it had concealed $250 billion in transactions with Iran.

Meanwhile, Royal Bank of Scotland is also understood to be facing investigations into whether it has broken sanctions against Iran.

The bank would not comment, but confirmed that it had voluntarily approached US and UK officials with information after an internal inquiry uncovered possible infringements.

Germany’s Commerzbank also warned last week that it may have to make a hefty payment to settle a US investigation into its own violations of sanctions on Iran and other countries.

Press reports earlier this month suggested that another German bank, Deutsche Bank, is also being investigated by the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, the Federal Reserve, the US Justice Department and Manhattan’s district attorney’s office for alleged infringements of US-Iran economic sanctions.

Deutsche Bank refused to comment on the reports.

Iran has been subject to US economic sanctions since 1979. The current system operates under the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.

The sanctions were toughened in 1997 by then-President Bill Clinton, who signed an order for sanctions that prohibited “virtually all trade and investment activities with Iran by US persons, wherever located”.

Under US criminal law, violations of the Iranian Transactions Regulations may result in a fine up to $1 million and/or jail for up to 20 years.

As part of the sanctions regime, until 2008, banks in the US in some circumstances were allowed to undertake so-called U-turn transactions with Iranian financial institutions.

Those U-turn transactions move money for Iranian clients among non-Iranian foreign banks, such as those in the UK and the Middle East. They are cleared through the US, but neither start nor end in Iran.

To ascertain whether these transactions are permitted, US clearing banks use the wire-transfer messages they get from banks, using the SWIFT payments system.

If the banks do not have enough information to make the call, they are supposed to freeze the assets.

The allegations involving Standard Chartered and HSBC both centred on U-turn transactions.

Standard Chartered was accused of stripping the messages of data that showed the clients were Iranian, replacing it with false entries.

The UK-based bank said that not only did “99.9% of the transactions” relating to Iran comply with U-turn regulations, but that the total value of transactions that did not comply was under $14 million – converse to the $250 billion worth of Iran transactions US regulators said it had hidden.

In July, a US Senate Committee found that HSBC carried out 25,000 transactions totalling $19 billion that were connected to Iran between 2001-07, which it suggested was evidence that the bank may have broken economic sanctions.

 

Syrian opposition say scores of bodies have been found near Damascus

Syrian opposition activists say scores of bodies have been found in a town near the capital, Damascus, accusing government troops of a “massacre”.

Many of those killed in the town of Darayya were victims of execution-style killings, the activists said.

According to unconfirmed reports, 200 bodies were discovered in houses and basement shelters.

Without commenting on the activists’ claim, Syrian state TV said Darayya was being “cleansed of terrorist remnants”.

Meanwhile, Syrian Vice-President Farouq al-Shara has greeted an Iranian delegation in Damascus, quashing weeks of speculation that he had defected to the opposition.

President Bashar al-Assad, who also met the Iranian delegation, said Syria would continue its current policy “whatever the cost” and accused Western nations of a regional conspiracy.

The forces of President Bashar al-Assad launched an assault on Darayya on Saturday, after days of heavy bombardment.

Syrian opposition activists say scores of bodies have been found in a town near Damascus, accusing government troops of a "massacre
Syrian opposition activists say scores of bodies have been found in a town near Damascus, accusing government troops of a "massacre

The attack was part of a wider campaign to reclaim the southern outskirts of Damascus, where rebels have been regrouping since being driven out a month ago.

Activists on the ground later posted unverified video footage on the internet, which shows rows of bodies side by side in the Abu Auleiman al-Darani mosque.

The activists say that many of the victims had gunshot wounds to the head and chest and were killed during house-to-house raids by government troops.

“Assad’s army has committed a massacre in Darayya,” an opposition member told Reuters.

The activist added that most of the victims had been killed at close range, and some died from sniper fire.

The opposition Local Coordination Committees group put the death toll for Saturday at 440 across Syria.

Another opposition group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, says 320 people were killed in Darayya over five days, not on Saturday alone.

The claims by the activists have not been independently verified because of restrictions placed on foreign media across Syria.

The official Syrian state news agency said: “Our heroic armed forces cleansed Darayya from remnants of armed terrorist groups who committed crimes against the sons of the town and scared them and sabotaged and destroyed public and private property.”

Meanwhile Vice-President Farouq al-Shara was seen entering his office for a meeting with an Iranian delegation, following weeks of rumors that he had defected.

State media said a “fake” email had been sent out saying Farouq al-Shara had been sacked and that this was “completely wrong”.

After welcoming the Iranian team, President Bashar al-Assad accused some Western and regional countries of trying to “deviate Syria from its stance”.

State news agency Sana quoted him as saying: “Because Syria is the cornerstone, foreign powers are targeting it so their conspiracy succeeds across the entire region.”

Local activists say the type of mass killing reportedly carried out in Darayya, with dozens of bodies being discovered following government raids, has increased in recent months.

Human Rights Watch said it was not a new pattern, but was now happening in more areas and in greater numbers.

An earlier report from United Nations observers found that both sides had carried out massacres, but the Syrian army was responsible for a far greater number of deaths.

Fighting continued in other parts of Syria on Sunday, including in the second city of Aleppo, where fighter jets dropped bombs on rebel-held positions in what was described as the fiercest fighting there in the past week.

In a separate development, the head of the UN mission to Syria left the country after the mission had been wound up.

Senegalese Lt. Gen Babacar Gaye joined a UN convoy to Lebanon on Saturday.

Last week, the UN decided against extending the mission, which was originally part of a six-point peace plan for Syria.

However, the ceasefire mandated by the plan never took hold and rising violence forced the UN monitors to be confined to their hotels since June.

 

Riviera Romagnola: a mixture of pride and embarrasement

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During the summer holidays, some Italians make for fashionable islands like Capri or the calm waters of Lake Garda.

But those who head to the Riviera Romagnola on the Adriatic coast, have a rather less serene experience.

With a mixture of pride and embarrassment – that is how locals tell you they are off on holiday to the Riviera Romagnola.

It is often preceded by “just” and invariably accompanied by a sheepish giggle, quickly followed by an explanation of the benefits. A sort of confession and justification.

What is unique about this coast, stretching 68 miles from Ravenna down to the south of Rimini, is its enormous popularity – in spite of the unanimous agreement that the sea is, well, just not very nice.

It is a turbid greenish-brown that makes you feel like you are swimming in a giant muddy puddle.

Most astonishing of all is that nobody cares. That is because bathing is not what coastal tourism here is about.

What is unique about Riviera Romagnola is its enormous popularity  in spite of the unanimous agreement that the sea is just not very nice
What is unique about Riviera Romagnola is its enormous popularity in spite of the unanimous agreement that the sea is just not very nice

One tourist said: “Romagnola invented the <<beach without sea>>.”

Camilla is from Bologna and has been coming every summer since she was a toddler. The Riviera Romagnola is, she says, in her DNA.

“From the age of five to 13, I spent June and July here with my grandparents.”

Her working parents would come down at the weekends.

“During the week the only people on the beaches are little kids and old people,” she grins.

But come the weekend, the entire demographic changes, and the coast is overrun by Italy’s 16-to-35-year-old beautiful people.

Incredible to think that not long ago this was mostly undeveloped, malaria-infested marshland.

It was the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, born nearby, who really launched it as a tourist destination, promoting development, building large concrete holiday camps and spending his own summer holidays here in Riccione.

It became the seaside destination for the children of millions of north Italian factory workers.

Since then, the Riviera Romagnola has never looked back. Rimini with the legacy of its homegrown film director Federico Fellini, Cervia with its historic salt pans, Milano Marittima constructed last century by Milanese builders… all these resorts are now famous nationwide.

The appeal of the Riviera Romagnola today is all down to the shrewd charm of the Romagnoli. They have earned a reputation for unequalled seaside hospitality.

From push-chair to pensioner, the Riviera promises something for everyone, with the emphasis on fun and indulgence.

Hundreds of top quality seafood restaurants, thousands of piadina kiosks selling the famous local flatbread, millions of overflowing gelato cones. Every sport, health and shopping facility your heart desires.

As for evening entertainment, there are live bands playing waltzes for the old-timers, exclusive VIP beach parties for the new-timers and – most famous of all – Italy’s top nightclubs.

It is St Tropez meets Blackpool, Ibiza meets Bognor Regis – as tacky as it is chic, as trendy as it is kitsch.

But if you prefer unspoilt, deserted beaches, the Riviera Romagnola is not for you.

An aerial view would look like a vast washing-line of neatly-hung checked tea towels – some 140,000 beach umbrellas.

For about 15 euros ($19) a day, you can rent one with a couple of sun loungers and inhale the suntan lotion and cigarette smoke of those next to, behind and in front of you, while listening to a selection of conversations in surround-sound.

Most of your sun-kissed neighbours are probably neighbours back home. It is the city transposed to the sand. Beach clubs are known as “bagni” and these holidaymakers are as faithful to their bagno as a Yorkshire man to his local pub.

“It’s just like in the song,” laughs Camilla.

“Stessa spiaggia, stesso mare – same beach, same sea.”

“Ours was Bagno 146 at Miramare di Rimini. My grandparents’ umbrella was in the front row so we had an unobstructed sea view.”

She giggles and I notice it again – that mix of pride and embarrassment.

At the beach, the music starts at 4:00 p.m., clashing with the music from the bagno next-door. Even the sound of the sea cannot drown it out.

Whether your beach club favors chill-out or live DJ sets, you can never escape the annual “tormentone” – a tormenting summer hit you hear everywhere and cannot get out of your head until well into the autumn.

At 1:00 p.m. almost all the sun loungers are empty and, feeling like a seaside squatter.

 

Hugo Chavez orders Amuay refinery blast investigation

President Hugo Chavez has ordered an urgent investigation to find the cause of a huge explosion at Venezuela’s biggest oil refinery.

The death toll after the blast at the Amuay plant in Falcon state, in the north-west of the country, has now risen to 39, with more than 80 others injured.

Hugo Chavez declared three days of national mourning.

Earlier, Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez said a gas leak had caused the blast.

Hugo Chavez said the tragedy had touched all families in the country.

The death toll after the blast at the Amuay plant in Falcon state, in the north-west of the country, has now risen to 39, with more than 80 others injured
The death toll after the blast at the Amuay plant in Falcon state, in the north-west of the country, has now risen to 39, with more than 80 others injured

“I want to send out to the families of those who died, civilians and military, all our pain, mine, that of all my family, everyone in the national government and the people of Venezuela,” he said.

“It has been decided to have three days of mourning, national mourning because this affects everyone in the big family of Venezuela.”

Venezuelan Vice-President Elias Jaua said 18 of the victims were members of the National Guard stationed at the plant.

Another 15 were civilians, and six bodies remain unidentified, he said.

Venezuelan authorities say the worst is over and the fire is now under control.

Amuay, on the Paraguana peninsula, is part of the Paraguana Refinery Complex, which also includes the Cardon refinery.

It is one of the biggest refinery complexes in the world with an overall capacity of 955,000 barrels per day, Reuters news agency notes.

The accident has halted operations at the refinery, but Rafael Ramirez said he expected production to be resumed by Monday.

Rafael Ramirez said that Venezuela had enough fuel supplies to guarantee continued exports and domestic supply.

The blast occurred at 01:11 on Saturday.

It unleashed a huge fire that destroyed two fuel tanks and stopped production at the plant.

“The gas cloud exploded, igniting at least two storage tanks and other facilities at the refinery,” the energy minister told state TV.

“It was a significant explosion, there is appreciable damage to infrastructure and to houses opposite the refinery,” said Rafael Ramirez.

Falcon State Governor Stella Lugo said nearby houses had been damaged by the blast.

Local resident Nelly da Lugo said it would be too dangerous for her family to remain in the area:

“PDVSA (Venezuela’s government-run oil company) should buy all of these houses and get us out of this community because we are at a very high risk here.”

Venezuela has the world’s biggest certified oil reserves.

But critics blame under investment by the state-controlled oil company for a decline in production and safety standards.

Refineries have suffered from a long list of problems including power failures and accidents.

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Typhoon Bolaven heads toward Okinawa and is expected to hit later on Sunday

Strong Typhoon Bolaven is heading toward the Japanese island of Okinawa.

Slow-moving Typhoon Bolaven is expected to hit later on Sunday, with forecasters saying it could develop into the strongest storm to strike the island in more than 50 years.

Residents have been told to stay indoors and protect themselves against the strong winds and heavy rains.

State broadcaster NHK said gusts could overturn cars, while waves around the island could reach 12 m (40ft).

Strong Typhoon Bolaven is heading toward the Japanese island of Okinawa
Strong Typhoon Bolaven is heading toward the Japanese island of Okinawa

Japan’s meteorological agency estimated wind speeds near the storm’s centre at around 180 km/h (112 mph), while extremely strong gusts were reaching 252 km/h.

All domestic and international flights out of the island’s Naha Airport have been cancelled.

According to news agency AP, some 200 households are already without electricity and around 300 people have taken shelter in public buildings on the island.

Typhoon Bolaven has already affected parts of China and comes just after Typhoon Temblin, which caused widespread damage in Taiwan earlier this week.

The latest typhoon is the 15th destructive storm of the season in East Asia.

 

Louise Clarke of Pan’s People dance troupe dies aged 63

Louise Clarke, founder of Top of the Pops dance troupe Pan’s People, has died aged 63.

Louise Clarke died from heart failure at Ipswich Hospital in Suffolk, UK, on Saturday with members of her family at her side, her publicist Philip Day said.

Pan’s People first appeared in 1968 and spent eight years as the resident dancers on the weekly music show.

Louise Clarke, founder of Top of the Pops dance troupe Pan's People, has died aged 63
Louise Clarke, founder of Top of the Pops dance troupe Pan's People, has died aged 63

Louise Clarke is the second member of the group to pass away. Flick Colby died at the age of 65 in May last year.

Philip Day, who has been a publicist for Pan’s People for more than 40 years, said Louise Clarke “was a lovely, lovely lady, she was a real darling”.

“Of all the clients I have had the good fortune to represent during all of those years, they were perhaps the most fun to work with, certainly the easiest to work with, were loyal to a fault and the very best at what they did.”

The group’s final appearance on Top of the Pops was in April 1976, when they danced to Silver Star by The Four Seasons.

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Samsung will appeal in Apple case in US

Samsung announces it will appeal against the US court ruling that the firm stole designs from Apple to make smartphones and computer tablets.

The jury in San Jose, California ordered Samsung to pay Apple $1.05 billion in damages.

In response, Samsung accused Apple of using US patent laws to try to dominate the smartphone market.

Analysts say the ruling is one of the most significant in a global battle over intellectual property.

In recent weeks, a court in South Korea ruled that both technology firms had copied each other, while a British court threw out claims by Apple that Samsung had infringed its copyright.

But the year-long US case has involved some of the biggest damages claims.

Samsung announces it will appeal against the US court ruling that the firm stole designs from Apple to make smartphones and computer tablets
Samsung announces it will appeal against the US court ruling that the firm stole designs from Apple to make smartphones and computer tablets

Samsung described Friday’s decision as “a loss for the American consumer”.

“It will lead to fewer choices, less innovation, and potentially higher prices,” the firm said.

The statement added that it was “unfortunate that patent law can be manipulated to give one company a monopoly over rectangles with rounded corners”.

Apple, however, said it applauded the court “for finding Samsung’s behavior willful and for sending a loud and clear message that stealing isn’t right”.

It said it intended to seek injunctions to block US sales of Samsung products at a follow-up hearing on 20 September.

The two firms account for more than half of global smartphone and tablet computer sales.

The nine-person jury at the federal court in San Jose, California had to consider 700 questions about each side’s claim that its rival had infringed its intellectual property.

It deliberated for less than three days before coming to a unanimous decision, rejecting all of Samsung’s claims and upholding five of Apple’s allegations, including:

• Some of Samsung’s handsets, including its Galaxy S 4G model, infringed Apple’s design patents for the look of its iPhone including the system it uses to display text and icons

• All the disputed Samsung devices had copied Apple’s “bounce-back response”, which makes lists jump back as if yanked by a rubber band

• Several Samsung devices incorporated Apple’s facility allowing users to zoom into text with a tap of a finger

Apple had wanted $2.5 billion in damages. Samsung had sought $519 million.

It may also seek to use this ruling to block other devices powered by Google’s Android software that it believes replicate elements of its user-interface, including current models by Samsung as well as other firms.

 

Ellen DeGeneres sold Malibu beach house for $13M six months after buying it from Brad Pitt

TV presenter Ellen DeGeneres has made a $1million profit by selling her Malibu beach house just six months after buying it from Brad Pitt.

Ellen DeGeneres bought the luxury four-bedroom home from Brad Pitt for $12 million and has sold it to cosmestics mogul Victoria Jackson for $13 million.

The oceanside property has sweeping coastal views of the Pacific Ocean and Point Mugu State Park, a lap pool and a modern kitchen.

Ellen DeGeneres has made a $1million profit by selling her Malibu beach house just six months after buying it from Brad Pitt
Ellen DeGeneres has made a $1million profit by selling her Malibu beach house just six months after buying it from Brad Pitt

Brad Pitt bought himself the 4,088 square-foot home on the Encinal Bluffs shortly after his divorce from Jennifer Aniston.

But despite being made up of two houses it was still not big enough for his rapidly expanding family with fiancée Angelina Jolie.

This is not the only change for Ellen DeGeneres.

Ellen DeGeneres and wife Portia de Rossi recently downsized from a palatial $49 million Beverly Hills compound to a more manageable $18 million 8500sq ft in the exclusive Trousdale Estates area of the city.

Their new home was designed by famed architect Hal Levitt and built in 1958 on an acre sized plot, which includes a swimming pool.

It features glass walls, soaring ceilings, several fireplaces, a library, four bedrooms and six bathrooms, along with views across Los Angeles.

The couple, who this week celebrate their fourth wedding anniversary, sold their previous home to American Idol host Ryan Seacrest.

That property was 2.87 acres, a whole city block, and boasted a main house comprising of 9,200 square foot, three adjacent guest-homes, and a selection of sprawling wildlife ponds.

 

 

Neil Armstrong dies aged 82

Astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the Moon, has died aged 82.

His family says he died from complications from heart surgery he had earlier this month.

Neil Armstrong walked on the Moon on 20 July 1969, famously describing the event as “one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind”.

Last November Neil Armstrong received the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest US civilian award.

Astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the Moon, has died aged 82
Astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the Moon, has died aged 82

Neil Armstrong was the commander of the Apollo 11 spacecraft. He and fellow astronaut Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin spent nearly three hours walking on the moon.

The mission was his last space flight. He left the US space agency NASA to teach aeronautics in 1971.

Born in 1930 and raised in Ohio, Neil Armstrong took his first flight aged six with his father and formed a lifelong passion for flying.

He flew Navy fighter jets during the Korean War in the 1950s, and joined the US space programme in 1962.

Correspondents say Neil Armstrong remained modest and never allowed himself to be caught up in the glamour of space exploration.

“I am, and ever will be, a white-socks, pocket-protector, nerdy engineer,” he said in February 2000, in a rare public appearance.

In a statement, his family praised him as a “reluctant American hero” who had “served his nation proudly, as a navy fighter pilot, test pilot, and astronaut”.

 

France piles pressure on Greece to pass reforms demanded by international creditors

French President Francois Hollande has urged Greece to prove it can pass reforms demanded by international creditors, after talks with PM Antonis Samaras.

Greek PM Antonis Samaras has been appealing for more time to introduce the reforms.

But Francois Hollande said no further decision could be taken until European ministers consider a major report on Greece’s finances, due in September.

Donors including the EU insist Greece has to make major spending cuts.

These are needed if Greece is to secure the next tranche of its bailout.

French President Francois Hollande has urged Greece to prove it can pass reforms demanded by international creditors, after talks with PM Antonis Samaras
French President Francois Hollande has urged Greece to prove it can pass reforms demanded by international creditors, after talks with PM Antonis Samaras

The Greek government is under pressure to win concessions from Europe to placate the tired nation and lessen the likelihood of a destabilizing period of social unrest.

Antonis Samaras is seeking an extension of up to two years for the necessary reforms, in order to provide Greece with the growth needed to improve its public finances.

In talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier this week, he was told that the decision would depend on a report from the so-called troika – the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the European Central Bank (ECB) and the European Commission.

Francois Hollande also said Europe needed to consider the report before it could make any further decisions on Greece.

He said decisions on whether to grant Greece more time should be taken when European finance ministers meet in early October.

“We’ve been facing this question for two and a half years, there’s no time to lose, there are commitments to reaffirm on both sides, decisions to take, and the sooner the better,” he said.

Greece’s continued access to the bailout packages depends on a favorable report from the troika.

Athens is trying to finalize a package of 11.5 billion euros ($14.4 billion) of spending cuts over the next two years.

It is also being asked to put in place economic and structural reforms, including changes to the labor market and a renewed privatization drive.

The measures are needed to qualify for the next 33.5 billion-euro installment of its second 130bn-euro bailout.

Greece needs the funds to make repayments on its debt burden. A default could result in the country leaving the euro.

 

“Nordic Thunder” Justin Howard Wins Air Guitar World Championship 2012

Justin Howard, also known as “Nordic Thunder”, has won the 17th annual Air Guitar World Championship in northern Finland.

Dressed in a leather Viking outfit, Justin Howard narrowly beat his rival “Aristotle”, or Matt Burns from New York.

Dutchman Theun de Jong finished third in the competition, which has been held in the Finnish city of Oulu since 1996.

The 18 finalists included competitors from Japan, Britain, Russia, Czech Republic and Estonia.

“Nordic Thunder” Justin Howard reportedly gave an “energetic” performance, sliding across the stage bare-legged, and won with a total of 34.6 points to Matt Burns’ 34.4.

Air guitarists will usually perform a 60-second solo performance with an imaginary guitar-like instrument.

They are marked on their technical prowess and stage presence, with competitors jumping, sliding and crowd diving to impress the judges.

Finland hosts a number of unusual events, including an international mobile phone throwing contest and wife carrying.

Empire State Building shooting: New York police injured all nine bystanders

New York’s police chief has confirmed today that all nine people injured in Friday’s Empire State Building shooting were hurt as a result of police fire.

During the incident, which was captured by surveillance cameras, police officers shot dead a gunman who had just killed a former work colleague.

Commissioner Ray Kelly said bystanders had been hit by bullets or fragments of bullets striking objects.

They suffered minor injuries and all are expected to survive.

New York's police chief has confirmed today that all nine people injured in Friday's Empire State Building shooting were hurt as a result of police fire
New York's police chief has confirmed today that all nine people injured in Friday's Empire State Building shooting were hurt as a result of police fire

Detectives are still trying to establish what drove the gunman, t-shirt designer Jeffrey Johnson, to ambush Steven Ercolino, vice-president of a clothing firm.

According to police, Jeffrey Johnson hid behind a car and killed Steven Ercolino with five shots as he arrived for work in Manhattan soon after 09:00 a.m.

“It appears that all nine of the victims were struck either by fragments or by bullets fired by police,” said Commissioner Ray Kelly.

Video released by police shows the moment when officers challenge Jeffrey Johnson and open fire as he appears to draw a gun in a busy street.

“We have on tape the perpetrator pulled his gun out and tried to shoot at the cops,” NY Mayor Michael Bloomberg said earlier.

“Whether he got off any bullets or not [is] to be determined.”

Jeffrey Johnson lost his job last year and is believed to have held a grudge against Steven Ercolino.

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Graphic cigarette warnings blocked by US court

An appeals court in Washington has ruled that US government cannot force tobacco firms to put large graphic health warnings on cigarette packages.

It said the government’s plan undermined free speech in America.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had wanted to put nine pictures of dead and diseased smokers to convey the dangers of cigarettes.

However, tobacco companies had argued that the images went beyond factual information and into anti-smoking advocacy.

The ruling comes as a number of other countries have ordered similar pictures to be placed on all cigarette packets.

An appeals court in Washington has ruled that US government cannot force tobacco firms to put large graphic health warnings on cigarette packages
An appeals court in Washington has ruled that US government cannot force tobacco firms to put large graphic health warnings on cigarette packages

Australia has gone a step further, banning even tobacco company logos from the cartons.

The US Court of Appeals affirmed an earlier lower court ruling in a 2-1 decision.

It said the case raised “novel questions about the scope of the government’s authority to force the manufacturer of a product to go beyond making purely factual and accurate commercial disclosures and undermine its own economic interest”.

The court said that in this case it was “by making every single pack of cigarettes in the country a mini billboard for the government’s anti-smoking message”.

It added that the FDA “has not provided a shred of evidence” that the images would directly advance its policy aimed at reducing the number of smokers in America.

The verdict was welcomed by tobacco companies, with Lorrilard Tobacco’s describing it as “a significant vindication of First Amendment principles”.

The FDA has so far made no public comment on whether it intends to appeal against the ruling in the US Supreme Court.