Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Want a weekend job? Willing to travel 12 hours? Try the NHS

We've all heard stories about the NHS. Here's another one that makes you shake your head and wonder what they were thinking.

One of the doctors working in Aberdeen's (Scotland) out of hours service travels a fair distance to get to work. Every Friday morning, he leaves his home in Poland, takes a flight to Glasgow, is picked up at the airport and driven four hours to Aberdeen, where he works the weekend covering the out-of-hours shift. The journey takes him 13 hours. This is on top of a full working week as a doctor in Poland.

Foolhardy? Or desperate? Read the full story here.

PS: All those stories that you hear about GP's earning hundreds of thousands of pounds are false. Really.

Friday, February 02, 2007

Women Writers on Show at National Portrait Gallery

Women fiction writers from the 1920s to the 1960s are celebrated in a new display at the National Portrait Gallery, London until June 17th.

The display includes portraits of 24 children's writers; crime and romance writers including Dorothy L. Sayers and Dame Barbara Cartland; novelists once described as 'middle-brow' like Rosamund Lehmann and Elizabeth Bowen, whose books combine middle-class domesticity with sophistication; and writers like Radclyffe Hall, who tackled issues of female sexuality and faced scandal.

The photographers featured in this collection include Paul Tanqueray, Cecil Beaton, Man Ray and Bill Brandt, and range from studio portraits to images of the writer at work.

For more information visit: http://www.npg.org.uk/live/prelwomenwriters.asp

Thursday, October 12, 2006

The End of the World

Revealed: The Day When We'll All Die

Scientists have calculated the year when the human race will cease to exist. It will be October 31, otherwise known as Halloween. But there is no need to worry yet as the year is 2,252,006 - more than two-and-a-quarter million years from now.

The date was announced by a team of European geologists and palaeontologists after millions of fossils from central Spain were analysed.

It confirms suspicions that mammal species have an average lifespan of 2.5 million years and modern man has already been around for 250,000 years.

The reason for the life cycle is thought to be a blip in the Earth's orbit which means it does not get as close to the sun as usual, triggering rapid cooling.

A report in Nature Journal says the subsequent ice age would destroy all human life.

Saturday, May 14, 2005

The Mystery of the Piano Man

Mr.R forwarded me this very intriguing bit of news lately...
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Mystery of the silent 'Piano Man' whose only language is music
By Cahal Milmo
17 May 2005


He was found in tuxedo, white shirt and tie - from which all labels were cut. His shoes were rubbed clean of identifying marks. And in the five weeks since he was found in north Kent, walking in darkness by the sea in dripping clothes, the slightly built man with deep brown eyes has not said a word.

But he does make beautiful music. He plays the piano for hours at a time, providing repeated renditions of his own classical compositions. According to those who have heard him, he is talented - some say exceptionally so.

The "Piano Man", as he has become known, also draws - producing sketch after perfect sketch of himself and grand pianos.

He sits, incommunicado, in a locked, hospital ward close to the M25, possibly in expectation of someone claiming him as their own or offering a clue as to his identity. But those caring for the 6ft-tall virtuoso, who is in his twenties or thirties and was found on a beachside road on the Isle of Sheppey on 7 April, admitted yesterday there was a chance they would never know his real name, or where he came from.

His social worker, Michael Camp, said staff were at a loss to help a patient who seemed to have gone out of his way to ensure his own anonymity.

Mr Camp, based at the Medway Maritime Hospital in Gillingham, said it was a "possiblility" his client would never be identified. "But I'm rather hoping it won't be. It's been such a long time, it would be difficult never to know. But if nobody can name this guy I don't see how we can possibly find out. Every label has been removed from his clothing so we do not know where he might have come from. In 20 years of working in mental health, I have never seen anything as severe."

His carers are working on the basis that he has suffered amnesia or a breakdown due to a sudden trauma. But they say without an identity it is impossible to offer full treatment.

The National Missing Persons Helpline and care workers said they had been inundated with calls, both from the UK and overseas, following the publication of a his picture. A number of those calls were from America. But they said claims to have identified the man, variously placing him in locations from Sussex to concert halls across Europe, were being treated with caution.

Ramanah Venkiah, manager of the health unit in Dartford where the man is being cared for, said: "He is a vulnerable young man and we must be careful."

The blond-haired enigma, who goes nowhere without a sheet of manu-script music, has given no indication as to how he came to be wandering on the seafront. Such is his fear of strangers that the picture taken of him by carers to help publicise the case had to be taken paparazzi-style from a distance.

Although he was soaking wet when found, he was physically uninjured and he remains fit and well. Initial theories that he may have been attending a funeral or playing a concert in the area have led nowhere.

Interpreters fluent in Latvian, Polish and Lithuanian who visited him to see if he was eastern European also failed to elicit a response. Theories that he is an asylum-seeker who was dropped off the Kent coast have also been dismissed.

Reports that he had drawn a Swedish flag were downplayed yesterday after it emerged that he had, in fact, drawn a flag with a cross but in pencil and with no colours. Mr Camp said: "I believe he understands English. He gives slight nods, I think to show he understands something I've said."

The man has recovered enough to cater for his basic needs, but he avoids television and radio, choosing instead to produce a detailed pencil drawing every few days of a piano casting a deep shadow from its open lid. He has also written musical script.

Staff at the West Kent NHS and Social Care Trust say his only solace is his music. Mr Camp said: "When I first saw him in Gillingham, he was left with a pencil and paper and when we came back he had drawn a perfect piano.

"We took him to the hospital chapel where there is a piano. The first time he played it was for four hours, non-stop. He plays beautifully and he sounds professional.

"If you put him in front of a piano, his whole demeanour changes. He completely relaxes and is oblivious to people around him."

Although his current accommodation does not have a piano, managers said they have provided an electronic keyboard. Among the pieces he has played are extracts from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake and longer pieces that seem to be his own work.

The plight of Mr X drawn parallels with David Helfgott, the pianist whose breakdown was the subject of the 1996 film Shine, starring Geoffrey Rush, who won an Oscar for his performance.

Marjorie Wallace, head of the charity Sane, said: "It is not uncommon for the language of music to remain intact even when all other mental processes may be shattered by physical, emotional or mental trauma."

Anyone who recognises the man can contact the National Missing Persons Helpline on 0500 700 700.

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Friday, February 18, 2005

The headlines

Hunting banned from midnight. (They can train their hounds to chase fox and other animals, the animals can take part in the hunt, they can do everything what they did before in the name of sport, but they can't let the hounds kill the animals. The more humane way, apparently is to shoot the poor defenceless animal quivering with fright somewhere in a cold English wood. That's what I understand of the new law, and it has made hunting fans furious. Calls for defiance are out already.

Come to think of it, the animal might die of sheer terror before the gunshot ever hits it. And they call it sport.)

A lost city found post Tsunami. (The sea returns what it takes away. Might take centuries, but it gives back.)

Charles and Camilla - change of wedding venue annoys Queen (does anybody care?)

A wedding gift from the amazing dabbawallah's of Mumbai for the royal wedding. (Imagine Camilla in a nine-yard saree...might look better than a wedding dress surely..)

Rabri and the vamp make news. I prefer the vamp.

Britain supports India's bid to be a member of the UN security council, but is not very enthu about granting us veto powers.

More professionals joining the Catholic priesthood in India. (I wanted to, too, but they wouldn't let me stay in the seminary.)

In other news, India-Pak seem to be singing 'yeh dosti...' these days, Amisha Patel snaps all ties with her family, Gutkha is banned (is it effective? Tell me, MW's!), there's talk of an eastern coastline from Colaba to Wadala which I'm sure will not happen in my lifetime atleast......

On the personal front, Mr.R and I am relieved that our (few) house hunting days are over (for now). We're moving (a bit) closer to London, where Mr.R's taking up a new job. Finally decided on a place to rent for now and we'll move end of the month. A new place, a new job, places to go, people to meet, hills to climb (our new place is on a hill - easy weight loss!)

Tonight we're off to hear a Nat Cole concert locally. Promises to be fun. The world goes on. Hope you are having a good time too :)
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PS: Anybody out there who knows a thing or two about digital cameras and photography?

Sunday, October 10, 2004

Of Live Ammunition and Item Bombs

There are a lot of deadly objects moving around the country and we don't even know it. Ammunition, supposed to be scrap from war torn countries like Somalia, Iraq and who-knows-where turns out to be 'live' and is turning up all over North India. Very smugly I thought that we were safe here. And a whole jeep-load of scrap (thankfully rusted) turns up in Navi Mumbai yesterday! Very worrying to think that you could be standing next to a truck/tempo full of shells that could destroy a lot more than bodies if it turns out to be more than just dead scrap...And customs is still searching........

Worrying indeed to see a show called 'Item Bomb' where girls in their teens or barely out gyrate in an attempt to imitate a pole dance, try to be sensual, but end up looking desperate and not really succeeding in being enticing. The winner ultimately was a girl from Belarus, who gets a chance to dance in a movie with Sanjay Dutt, even though she has no clue about who he is. As for the rest of the girls, they go back to their homes, to their intent watching of TV and practicing dance steps for next years contest. Being an item is now a career option.

Talking of new career options that are now available, it seems that being on telly, in music videos or in filmi films is the latest rage. Even children are not spared by the gusto to bare all and get a chance to see yourself on screen. Or perhaps it is the subliminal parental wish to put onto your children your own dreams and desires..... I know of a ten year old girl who is spending her days worrying about what to wear for Navratri, auditioning for local garba, debating on tattoos...Her parents give her an apple for snacks (which may not be a bad thing), ensuring that she grows up to be as thin as her elder sister (which may not be a good thing). At ten, this girl is concerned that her arms are 'fat' (and she's reed thin). She's concerned because her sister teases her that she'll not be thin. Her mind is on the clothes she wears, on the latest video, on the outfits worn by an actress in a new release. At ten, her life revolves, almost completely, on making it to the screen - big or small doesn't matter. There are Unit Tests around the corner, but that can wait. Being on TV is more important.

Star News has had an expose over the weekend on their show 'Red Alert' where they claim to have exposed (pun not intended) top models/actresses in prostitution ring in Delhi/Mumbai. Undercover (oops!) journalists kept changing cell numbers and identities over the months of talking with pimps, agents, the women themselves. The more well known the face, the higher the rate, sometimes going into lakhs for a popular telly serial actress.....No faces were shown, not yet anyway - the Red Alert continues next week, either a gimmick to increase tv ratings or a very possible recount of a world that's indeed out there. Easy money to maintain a lifestyle that determines your value by the way you look and dress. The lure of fame is too strong to resist earning thousands/lakhs in a few hours - money that could get you into a serial/movie, which in turn can make you a darling of the nation.....The lure of fame is too strong..

This then is the new face of India. Where girls (and boys) from small towns, little cities and big metros will do anything and everything for their fifteen minutes of fame. The innumerable TV contests for India's best wannabe actors leaves many broken hearts in the winners wake, but the chance of being up there, of making it in front of the TV cameras and being watched by the nation (and hopefully, a Bollywood director) makes it worth the elimination. There will be more of them next year. Younger sisters, brothers, cousins of today's wannabe's sprouting all over our TV sets like their life depended on it.

And really, for most of them, it does.

Friday, July 30, 2004

The Last Resort.


Nine am. Friday morning. The day looks good. I'm walking toward office and it's drizzling, but not enough to make me open my red umbrella. The cell rings. It's my mother. Asking if I heard the news. I instantly thought for a moment that there was a disaster like a bomb-blast or trains had stopped or something like that (If it was something to do with the family, she would have just given the news). And she says "Nafisa Joseph died". And I was stunned. Not that I know her personally, but it was one of those things - you react with shock at unbelievable news. The TV channels say that she apparently committed suicide by hanging herself in her apartment. And I'm at a loss for words. It reiterates what we always knew - people are not what they seem. Behind smiling faces could lie a broken heart, shattered dreams, torn lives..... Who could have said that she was so depressed that she had to end her life? She hosted a successful show on telly, was actively involved with PETA, and did hundreds of things - during none of which she showed signs of being desperate enough to use the last resort. I liked her poise, the way she dressed and carried herself......

What must it be like to have nothing to look forward to? What must a person be going through to reach a point when there seems to be no option but to take your own life? I've felt like that sometimes, but I've always recovered from those blues, because there's always tomorrow. Perhaps it's not as easy for many others........

Tum itna jo muskura rahe ho....kya gam hai jisko chupa rahe ho......