Thursday, October 27, 2011

Threatened to withdraw support

Increase in the prices of petrol in the UPA's house in the sweat of Congress to extinguish the fire erupted.
Voice in unison with her colleagues after the UPA value on Congress to support the feelings of my colleagues have tried to cool his anger. Not increase the prices of diesel and cooking gas as their susceptibility to the common people, everyone present has tried to temper. Congress to take every step to the government on the issue appealed. The prime minister's return to more stringent approach than before Mamata Banerjee has started to negotiate. And the Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee talks with Trinamool leader Mukul Roy, the then Commerce Minister Anand Sharma met in Kolkata, Trinamool supremo. Mamata Banerjee's feelings explicit consent of Congress before the government has sought relief from the common man.
Congress media department chairman and general secretary Janardan Dwivedi said that "companies are raising the price, it is difficult to explain to people. All companies also have the right government. For governance - the way we understand the imperatives of the administration. But it must overcome if the government should take some steps. " Rollback or reduction in taxes, he parried the question and that whatever steps possible to take it. "
Congress spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi said anything threatening to her, but it's allies worry that rising costs are agreed by the party. Anyway, she came forward openly in support of the DMK. DMK leader TR Baalu ​​said that the common man's problems and the issue must be raised in Parliament. Similarly, NCP and National Conference on the 11th in the 16 months Nakabile afford to increase prices of petrol and said that they were not consulted about it. National Conference president Dr Farooq Abdullah said he would raise this issue at the next meeting of the Cabinet. NCP leader Tariq Anwar similar relief from the inflation of the Prime Minister and Congress president Sonia Gandhi asked him to take immediate steps.
All con-stricken
- Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Congress spokesperson
Without consulting the government of any gasoline, diesel, kerosene and coal prices rise is one-sided ... General public, in spite of the burden we bear it all are two years .. but someone will have to go through the voice
- Mamata Banerjee, West Bengal Chief Minister
We are very much concerned. The price of gasoline again and again should be done to rein in growth
- Tariq Anwar, NCP spokesman
The next meeting of Cabinet in this issue [price] will be discussed
- Farooq Abdullah
The judge also commented: -
Central and state governments can not absolve itself of appreciation. Petroleum companies to court their balance sheets and quarterly reports.
- Kerala High Court Justice Ramachandran Nair and Justice PS Gopinathan cn

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Cool California

Hollywood executive and winery owner Frank Rich says the movie and wine businesses have plenty in common -- especially as this year's late California harvest has winemakers waiting in the wings for grapes to ripen.
Both of California's famed industries require big up-front investments, significant sales and marketing budgets, and are heavily dependent on star power -- whether from a smoldering starlet or a complex Cabernet Sauvignon grape.
"The difference is that grapes don't talk back. Although, sometimes they show up late -- as we're seeing this year," said the former Walt Disney Studios president and current owner of Frank Family Vineyards in Napa Valley, which sells wine for $30 a bottle and more.
Growers around the Golden State are harvesting grapes later than usual this year. The take is anticipated to be smaller than normal, due to heavy spring rains and the second summer in a row of cooler-than-normal temperatures.
The California Department of Food and Agriculture is forecasting 2011 wine grape production of 3.30 million tons, down 9 percent from 3.63 million tons in 2010.
California's unusually mild 2011 weather is expected to have intensified flavors in surviving grapes, which should result in higher quality.
So far, California's harvest of Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Sauvignon Blanc all have been below long-term average yields per acre, said Steve Fredricks, president of Turrentine Brokerage, which specializes in bulk wine and grape sales.
The shortfall may put upward pressure on prices, particularly for wines in the $2 to $4 bottle range, he said.
After paying more for grapes, producers of those wines "are going to have less of a desire to sell it at that price," Fredricks said.
Rich, who now is launching TheOnlineNetwork.com and is an executive producer on shows like USA Network's "Royal Pains", says his yields so far have been mixed.
The Chardonnay harvest has been light, but the winery has more Sangiovese than ever before, said Rich.
Despite the smaller harvest, Frank Family Vineyards' winemaker Todd Graff said he is increasing production 50 percent to 60,000 cases to meet what he sees as rising demand.
Graff, who tends three vineyards totaling more than 260 acres around Napa Valley, plans to get there by buying grapes from other growers.
"This year we plan to grow (production) a lot, even with the lighter crop," said Graff, who recently boosted his own Hollywood credentials when he helped "Royal Pains" writers find winery equipment that could be used by the show's star -- a so-called "medical MacGyver" -- to save lives.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Posh Bingo


posh bingoEnglish author and bookmakers' favourite Julian Barnes finally won the Man Booker Prize for fiction on Tuesday, despite once dismissing the coveted award as "posh bingo".
The 65-year-old triumphed with "The Sense of an Ending", which at 150 pages was described by one review as a "novella".
It was his fourth time on the Booker shortlist -- Barnes was previously nominated for "Flaubert's Parrot" in 1984, "England, England" in 1998 and "Arthur and George" in 2005.
Stella Rimington, a former British spy chief who chaired the panel of judges this year, told reporters, "We thought that it was a book which, though short, was incredibly concentrated, and crammed into this very short space a great deal of information you don't get out of a first reading.
"It's one of these books, a very readable book, if I may use that word, but readable not only once but twice and even three times."
Ion Trewin, administrator of the prize, said it was not the shortest work to win the Booker. That honour goes to Penelope Fitzgerald's "Offshore" which came in at 132 pages in 1979.
Barnes, who has been critical of the prize in the past, said he was relieved to have won at the fourth attempt.
In his acceptance speech at a glitzy awards ceremony in London's medieval Guildhall, he likened himself to Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges, considered one of the greatest authors never to have won the Nobel Prize in Literature.
"Borges, when asked, as he continually was, why he had never won the Nobel Prize, always used to reply that 'In Sweden there was a small cottage industry solely devoted to not giving Borges the Nobel Prize'.
"And at times over the last years, in occasional moments of mild paranoia, I wondered whether there wasn't perhaps some similar sister organisation operating over here.
"So I am as much relieved as I am delighted to receive the 2011 Booker Prize."
SALES BOOST EXPECTED
Barnes received a cheque for 50,000 pounds ($80,000), a flurry of media attention and, perhaps most importantly, a major boost in sales.
"Writers it tends to drive mad with hope and lust and greed and expectation," he told reporters after receiving the award.
"I was saying that the best way to stay sane is to treat it as if it's posh bingo. That is ... until you win it, when you realise that the judges are the wisest heads in literary Christendom."
Rimington and her judges came under fire in recent weeks for stressing the importance of "readability" when judging the winner, a term interpreted by some as dumbing down one of English-language fiction's top accolades.
Writers from the Commonwealth, Ireland and Zimbabwe are eligible.
The sniping in the narrow world of British "literati" even led to a rival award being set up to champion what its backers said was a more high-brow approach to writing.
Rimington defended her stance, arguing that entertainment and literary criticism were not mutually exclusive.
"We were not talking about only readability as some of you seem to have thought," she told reporters.
"We were talking about readability and quality. You can have more than one adjective when you are talking about books."
Asked whether she had been bothered by the media debate in the run-up to the announcement, she replied:
"I've had a long life in various different careers, and I've been through many crises of one kind or another (against) which this one pales, I must say."
The Sense of an Ending, published by Random House, tells the story of Tony, a seemingly ordinary man who discovers that his memories are not as reliable as he thought.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Friend Uses Real Pistol As Toy

A 10-year-old boy was accidentally shot dead by his 12-year-old neighbour with a firearm while they were playing cop and thief in west Delhi, police said Monday.
Chandan, a Class 6 student, was shot dead Saturday night in Raghubir Nagar by his friend, police said.
Chandan's friend has been sent to an observation home and his father Ram Chander and another person have been arrested, police said.
Police said the children were playing on the ground floor of the building, in which their families lived on rent, when Chandan's friend picked up a home-made pistol lying in a bag and shot him during the course of their game.
The landlord of the house saw Chandan lying on the ground and informed his family. Chandan's parents rushed him to hospital.
'The doctors first thought it was a normal head injury but later found bullet marks on the head,' said V. Renganathan, additional commissioner of police.
It was when Chandan succumbed to his injuries that police were informed and the investigation was launched.
Police said the boy who shot Chandan told his family members about the incident but they destroyed the evidence.
'When Chandan's family was at the hospital, his friend's father Ram Chander and his friend Mukesh washed the blood stains and threw away the pistol,' said a police officer.
Ram Chander, who hails from Azamgarh, came to Delhi six months ago and was working with a dairy in Rajouri Garden area. 'His friend Mukesh had come to his house and the pistol belongs to him. We are checking his previous records,' the officer added.
'We have arrested Chander and Mukesh and the boy who fired the bullet has been apprehended and sent to an observation home,' Renganathan added.