30.11.08

The art of the album title

It's an art form in itself, and one of the toughest tasks in pop. You can spend a year, eighteen months, two years honing a dozen songs for your new album; you think they all sound like hit singles, and yet a pithy, snappy album title still eludes you. Weep, then, for Take That who were quite pleased with themselves after thinking up Circus only to discover Britney Spears was set to release her new album on the very same day with the very same title.

Take That have dully retitled their album The Circus. Calling it At The Circus could have led to some intriguing artwork, or they could have borrowed an old Lilac Time album title, the exotic and uplifting Paradise Circus - itself borrowed from the name of a roundabout in central Birmingham.

Come up with the right name and you've got instant good will and good press. It doesn't have to be as Daily Mail-baiting as Never Mind The Bollocks, or the Revolting Cocks' 1989 effort Beers Steers And Queers. Kylie Minogue came up with the apposite Impossible Princess in 1997. Just as it was about to hit the shops Princess Diana died and, in case some clowns misunderstood her and assumed she was attempting to inveigle herself into the royal family, the name had to be changed. As a replacement title, "Kylie Minogue" hardly got the pop buds tingling, and - no coincidence, surely - none of the singles taken from it made the Top 10.

A self-titled album may work for a debut but, if not, they are frighteningly cheerless. Edwyn Collins' old band Orange Juice cleverly titled their third album The Orange Juice, which made it sound definitive and important even though it was rather boring. The Beatles took it to an extreme with their 1968 double which was simply called The Beatles and came in a plain white sleeve. Presumably against the group's wishes, the public rebelled against this minimalist statement, instantly retitling it The White Album. It originally had the working title of A Doll's House which, along with suitably intricate artwork, was scrapped late on. Leicester band Family got wind of this and cheekily titled their 1968 album Music From A Doll's House.

Marc Bolan was pop savvy enough to abbreviate his band's name from Tyrannosaurus Rex to T Rex, and cool, sexy song titles (Jeepster, Telegram Sam, Children Of The Revolution) were his forte. Practise makes perfect, I suppose - he christened his first album My People Were Fair And Had Sky In Their Hair, But Now They're Content To Wear Stars On Their Brows. Allegedly it's one of Mark Owen's favourite albums - which puts The Circus into sharp perspective.

Scot or Sassenach?

It's St Andrew's Day on Sunday - when the Scots celebrate their Scottishness. So why don't the English celebrate St George's Day in the same way? Test your knowledge of Scots and Sassenachs with the Today quiz.
LINK

Peter Kay voted UK's top comedian

Peter Kay
Kay's autobiography has sold more than 1m copies

Phoenix Nights star Peter Kay has been overwhelmingly voted the UK's favourite comedian in an online poll.

The 33-year-old, whose observational comedy routines are rooted in his Bolton upbringing, was chosen by 63% of the 3,000 adults polled.

Slapstick star Lee Evans came second in the poll, with 19% of votes, followed by Alan Carr and Catherine Tate.

Jo Brand topped a list of the least popular comedians, which also included Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand.

UK'S FAVOURITE COMEDIANS
1. Peter Kay
2. Lee Evans
3. Alan Carr
4. Catherine Tate
5. Dawn French
6. Rowan Atkinson
7. Al Murray
8. Jack Dee
9. Eddie Izzard
10. Frankie Boyle
The pair, who came under fire for their crude phone calls to actor Andrew Sachs last month, placed second and eighth respectively.

Victoria Wood was the third least-popular, followed by Ricky Gervais and TV Burp star Harry Hill.

Kay first came to notice after winning Channel 4's So You Think You're Funny competition in 1997, only a year after he started performing as a stand-up.

His comedy often revolves around familiar domestic scenes, such as the dangers of dunking biscuits in a cup of tea, and the bizarre dances seen at British weddings.

UK'S LEAST FAVOURITE COMEDIANS
1. Jo Brand
2. Jonathan Ross
3. Victoria Wood
4. Ricky Gervais
5. Harry Hill
6. Jimmy Carr
7. Paul Merton
8. Russell Brand
9. Spike Milligan
10. Alan Bennett
He has been called "the Oasis of comedy" because his routines are "workaday, northern and so full of joie de vivre that you can't help but sing along".

Television success came in 2001 with his sitcom Phoenix Nights, which told the story of a struggling northern social club.

Kay played the club's owner, wheelchair-bound Brian Potter, as well as doorman Maxwell "Max" Bygraves.

In 2006, one of Potter's lines - "Garlic bread, it's the future, I've tasted it" - was named the best comic one-liner in an online poll.

He recently returned to television with reality show spoof Britain's Got The Pop Factor... And Possibly A New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly On Ice.

In the same poll, Only Fools And Horses was named best TV comedy, followed by Fawlty Towers, Blackadder and Red Dwarf in that order.

The survey was conducted for the online bank Smile in November.

Caine reveals Italian Job ending

Sir Michael Caine
Sir Michael Caine played Charlie Croker in the 1969 caper

The mystery of The Italian Job's cliff-hanger has been resolved after almost 40 years by Sir Michael Caine.

The 1969 film ends with a gang of gold thieves hanging over a ravine in a bus. Every step they take towards the loot threatens to tip them into the abyss.

"Hang on lads, I've got a great idea," says Sir Michael's character, Charlie Croker... and then the credits roll.

The star says he would have saved them by "switching on the engine", burning off petrol until it righted itself.

"I crawl up, switch on the engine and stay there for four hours until all the petrol runs out," he said.

"The van bounces back up so we can all get out, but then the gold goes over."

Italian Job
In the film, the gold is smuggled out of Turin in Mini Coopers before being loaded onto the bus
"There are a load of Corsican Mafia at the bottom watching the whole thing with binoculars. They grab the gold, and then the sequel is us chasing it."

Sir Michael first revealed his version of the events in a BBC One documentary marking his 70th birthday, but gave fuller details at the 2008 Visit London Awards this week - where he was named London's favourite Londoner.

He even suggested that the alternative ending had been filmed in 1969, but producers later decided against using it.

'Plausible'

His disclosure comes as the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) holds a competition to find the most original, and plausible ending to the film.

Dr Richard Pike, chief executive of the RSC, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that Sir Michael's explanation was just "one of those many plausible routes to securing all that gold".

"I guess what we're looking for are the detailed calculations to show that, if you were to burn all that petrol off, would it be sufficient to allow the coach to balance?"

Dr Pike added that almost 1,000 entries had been received for the competition, despite the stipulation that "the judges will not accept any solutions that involve the employment of a helicopter".

"Beyond Michael Caine's own proposal, which a number of people have put in, others have suggested jumping out of the bus and going down and getting the gold," he said.

"Others have suggested superconductivity and the use of magnetism - although some people have pointed out, quite rightly, that gold is not magnetic.

"Other options involve even melting the gold, using the burning of the petrol, and in a sense sucking the liquid gold towards the fugitives."

The competition winner will be revealed on 8 January 2009.

Its aim is to promote greater understanding of science, and to highlight the 100th anniversary of the periodic table, of which gold is one of the 117 elements.

28.11.08

10 things fungi have done for us

Marmite, the yeast extract spread
Fungi-derived Marmite is mighty
Mycologists are a rare breed, and scientists worry the UK will miss out lucrative fungus-based discoveries. Like what?

Mushroom risotto. And umbrellas for fairies. Obviously fry-ups, which go without saying. But apart from these, what have fungi ever given us?

All manner of discoveries, says Dr Peter Roberts, of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and one of eight mycologists left in the UK, such as:

1. Marmite. Ditto Vegemite and Cenovis, the Australian and Swiss versions. Love it or hate it, the dark salty spread so tasty on toast is a yeast extract, and yeast is a type of fungi.

2. Beer and bread too are made with yeast, and both are staples of the British diet. Beer is fermented with the fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae (brewer's yeast), or Saccharomyces carlsbergensis for lager-making, developed by Danish mycologist Emil Hansen. Wine, cider and perry traditionally use naturally-occurring yeasts for fermentation.

3. Quorn - the meat substitute - has perhaps less mainstream appeal but is popular with vegetarians who miss the mouth-feel of flesh. Sausages, mince and mock-chicken fillets are made from this vat-grown filamentous fungus. "A British success story," says Dr Roberts. Fearing a future shortage of protein-rich foods, scientists in the 1950s and 60s set about finding an alternative. After more than a decade of testing, Quorn products went on sale in 1985.

4. Orchids, like vegetarians, feed on fungi. The lush tropical blooms which bedeck boutique hotels and corporate suites are parasites of fungi, relying entirely on their fungal hosts for seed germination and subsequent growth.

Expensive truffle
A very sought-after fungi indeed

5. And gourmands, too. Truffles. Mould-ripened cheeses such as camembert, brie and stilton. Mmmm. And soy sauce and miso paste are among the many fermented foodstuffs in Asian cooking.

6. Soil and compost are broken down and enriched thanks to fungi, which account for 90% of nutrient recycling in ecosystems. "They basically turn dead leaves and wood into soil," says Dr Roberts. Fungi breaks down cellulose, and are the only organisms that can rot lignin, the hard constituent of wood.

7. Statins, the money-spinning anti-cholesterol drugs, were originally derived from fungi, notably Monascus ruber and Penicillium citrinum.

8. Penicillin, the pharmaceutical that has saved countless lives, was originally derived from a fungus, Penicillium chrysogenum. Several other antibiotics are also fungal in origin.

9. LSD, a drug, but not for medicinal purposes, was originally isolated from Claviceps purpurea in the 1940s by Albert Hofmann, a chemist with a particular interest in hallucinogenic fungi. He was also the first to isolate psilocybin from magic mushrooms.

10. And finally, fungi have given us athlete's foot, thrush and ringworm - and our houses dry rot. Perhaps less to be thankful for in these cases.

10 things we didn't know last week

Snippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. The 999 emergency number was chosen over 111 because telegraph wires rubbing together in the wind transmitted the equivalent of a 111 call.
More details

2. In space, an item as small as a toolbag can be seen from Earth.
More details

3. There are only eight mycologists in the UK.
More details

4. US intelligence kept a file on Tony Blair's personal life.
More details

5. Premium chocolate tasters don't swallow the goods.
More details

6. Police use curry to combat alleged drugs possession.
More details

7. A dog's mucus enhances its sense of smell.
More details (Daily Mail)

8. The speechwriting "tricolon technique" has been used by Julius Caesar and Barack Obama.
More details (Times)

9. A French cologne has a scent inspired by the smell of human sperm.
More details (Guardian)

10. Gordon Brown writes to X Factor contestants.
More details (Times)

Comic Batman reaches end of road

Batman RIP (image courtesy of DC comics)
Bruce Wayne has fought crime in the comics since 1939

Warning: If you do not want to know about the plot of Batman RIP, stop reading now.


Batman's alter ego Bruce Wayne has apparently been killed off in the latest issue of the superhero comic.

Scottish writer Grant Morrison revealed earlier this year that Wayne would either retire or be killed in a clash with crime syndicate Black Glove.

The story - Batman RIP - sees Batman shot by villain Simon Hurt, who claims to be Wayne's father Dr Thomas Wayne.

Morrison told BBC News there would be "a lot more twists and turns to come" before the story was finally resolved.

'Definitive story'

"It's great that it stirs up such passion," he said.

"Nobody loves Bruce Wayne more than me, and I hope everybody understands that this is part of the great ongoing adventure of Batman."

The caped crusader first appeared in comics in 1939, and has spawned a 1960s TV series and a host of films.

The "death" of Wayne's father - shot alongside his mother by a robber when he was a boy - was the catalyst for the young industrialist to become the vigilante crime fighter Batman.

In the final scene, Hurt tries to escape in a helicopter after shooting Batman.

But the wounded superhero throws himself at the helicopter, causing it to crash. The comic story ends without a frame showing Wayne's body, however.

Batman
Bruce Wayne has fought crime in the comics since 1939

Morrison, from Glasgow, told BBC News on Friday that the next two issues of the Batman comic would see a "summing up" of the superhero's career before "the absolute, final fate" of Bruce Wayne was revealed in a sister publication, Final Crisis, in January.

"It's the end of a story that goes back to 2005, a story to tell the definitive story of Batman," he explained.

"We wanted to see what would happen if the most evil, richest people in the world decided they didn't like Batman, and decided to take him apart piece by piece and destroy him.

"And then have Batman come back, and we could see why he's so great," added Morrison.

The storyline included clues which dated back to Batman comics from 40 years ago, he added.

Wayne may be dead, but publisher DC Comics shows no sign of bringing to an end the Batman franchise.

Frontrunners to take over as Batman include Tim Drake, who has been Robin since 1991, and Dick Grayson - the original Boy Wonder - who now protects Gotham City as Nightwing.

It is not the first time a superhero has met an unfortunate end in the comic world.

Last year, Captain America was killed after being shot by a sniper in New York.

Wham 'most played Christmas song'

George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley of Wham
Wham reached number two in the UK singles chart in December 1984

Wham's Last Christmas is most played festive track of the last five years, according to the company that collects royalties for composers and musicians.

The Performing Right Society puts the 1984 hit at the top of their chart of seasonal songs, just ahead of Band Aid's Do They Know It's Christmas.

The Pogues come third with Fairytale of New York, recorded with the late Kirsty MacColl and first released in 1987.

Other featured artists include Slade, Mariah Carey and Bruce Springsteen.

Carey's song All I Want for Christmas is You comes fourth in the chart, just ahead of Springsteen's version of the popular standard Santa Claus is Coming to Town.

MOST PLAYED CHRISTMAS HITS
Wizzard on Top Of The Pops
1. Last Christmas - Wham!
2. Do They Know It's Christmas? (original 1984 recording) - Band Aid
3. Fairytale of New York - The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl
4. All I Want For Christmas Is You - Mariah Carey
5. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town - Bruce Springsteen
6. Stop The Cavalry - Jona Lewie
7. I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday - Wizzard
8. Merry Xmas Everybody - Slade
9. Lonely This Christmas - Mud
10. White Christmas - Bing Crosby
Source: PRS
The live recording, which took place at Long Island University in 1975, was originally the b-side to My Hometown and famously features the Boss bursting into laughter.

Iconic

Jona Lewie's 1980 single Stop the Cavalry comes sixth, despite not being originally conceived as a Christmas song.

The anti-war song does, however, feature the line "wish I was at home for Christmas", while its brass band arrangement and chiming bells make it a common inclusion on Christmas playlists.

Surprisingly, Wizzard's ubiquitous I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday and Slade's iconic Merry Xmas Everybody chart relatively low at seven and eight respectively.

Mud's Lonely This Christmas comes ninth in the poll, one place ahead of White Christmas by Bing Crosby.

The crooner's 1942 recording of the Irving Berlin song, which was originally featured in the film Holiday Inn, has sold at least 50 million copies, according to the Guinness Book of World Records.

The PRS collects royalties when songs are played on radio, TV, online and in public places and distributes them to its 60,000 members.

Jona Lewie, who is finishing work on his third album, told the BBC News website he was still proud of his biggest hit and had not tired of hearing it on the radio.

"The only time you might hear the song would be at Christmas, so that's not very often throughout the year," he said.

Out of the other nine tracks on the list, he said his favourite was Fairytale of New York.

He added: "I'd like to have seen Greg Lake's track [I Believe In Father Christmas] in there, and Elvis Presley's Santa Claus Is Back In Town - it would have been nice to get a bit of blues in there."

27.11.08

30th November 2008

30th November 2008
National Day of Scotland.

(day 334, 32 remaining) (LY 335/32)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Andrew the Apostle,

St Sapor,
and St Cuthbert Mayne.

History Test for November 30th

Born today in 1874, who wrote 'A History of the English-Speaking Peoples'? -Sir Winston Churchill

Oscar Wilde died today in 1900. Who portrayed him in the film 'The Trials of Oscar Wilde'? -Peter Finch

Which pop group topped the UK pop charts today in 1985 with 'I'm Your Man'? -Wham!

Comedienne Joyce Grenfell died today in 1979. Which phrase from her monologues was used for the title of her autobiography? -George, Don't Do That!

Which American humorist was born Samuel Langhorne Clemens today in 1835? -Mark Twain

Events today...

1630 A plague in Venice claimed the lives of 16,000 people.

1840 Napoleon I's remains were returned from St Helena to Paris.

1872 England and Scotland played the first international football match. They drew 0-0.

1900 Oscar Wilde, the noted - and notorious - Irish wit and playwright died in a Paris rooming-house aged 46, in povery and all but forgotten by his once large circle of admirers.

1901 Death of Edward John Eyre, Australian explorer.

1914 Charlie Chaplin made his film debut in Making a Living, a Mack Sennett one-reeler, without his trademark moustache and cane.

1919 Women were allowed to vote for the first time in the French elections.

1924 The last French and Belgian troops withdrew from the Ruhr.

1925 The US sent warships to Hankow in China, to prevent Communist attacks on foreigners.

1936 The Crystal Palace at Sydenham designed by Joseph Paxton and originally constructed in Hyde Park to house the Great Exhibition of 1851 bumed down.

1939 The USSR invaded Finland.

1954 A resident of Alabama state was injured when an eight and a half pound meteorite crashed through her roof.

1956 American boxer Floyd Patterson became the youngest boxer to win the world heavyweight title when he knocked out Archie Moore in Chicago.

1957 Death of Benjamin Gigli, Italian tenor who was regarded as the successor to Caruso.

1959 Hitchcock's movie "Psycho" went into production.

1962 Sean Connery married Diane Cilento.

1976 Evergreen (theme from "A Star is Born") by Barbra Striesand was released.

1979 Death of Zeppo Marx, one of the four Marx Brothers.

1983 Dutch brewery millionaire Alfred Heineken was kidnapped in Amsterdam.

1986 Death of Cary Grant, US film actor.

1986 The rapidly developing Iran-Contra scandal claimed two prominent heads: Admiral John Poindexter, President Reagan’s National Security Davisor, and Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North of the National Security Council staff. It had emerged that $30million of profits from secret sales of embargoed arms to the Iranians were passed on to the US-backed Contras in Nicaragua to finance their struggle against the democratically elected Sandinista government.

1987 Death of James Baldwin, US writer.

1988 PLO leader Yasser Arafat attempted to enter the USA to address the UN General Assembly in New York, but was refused a visa.

1989 Germany’s left-wing terrorist group the Red Army Faction blew up Alfred Herrhausen, the head of the Deutsche Bank, in Frankfurt.

1989 In the Philippines, rebels attacked Cory Aquino’s presidential palace and seized parts of three military bases.

1994 Death of Lionel Stander (aged 86) Actor Max in 'Hart to Hart'.

1994 The cruise liner "Achille Lauro" caught fire killing two. The crew and passenger were forced to flee off the coast of Somalia and it sank two days later. The ship had been famous in 1985 when it was hijacked by Palestinian extremists.

1995 President Bill Clinton visited Northern Ireland. He was the first U.S. President to do so.

1996 Death of Tiny Tim (aged 64) Novelty singer 'Tip toe through the tulips'.

1999 It was announced that the Beef-on-the-Bone ban would be lifted over Christmas.

2003 Police launched an investigation after a convicted paedophile was found battered to death in his home on Teesside.

2003 The draw for the Euro 2004 finals was made. England were to meet France, Switzerland and Croatia in their group.

2003 Frank Lampard's first-half penalty was enough to beat Man Utd and put Chelsea top of the Premiership.

2004 US Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge announced his resignation from President Bush's cabinet.

2004 Reports of Home Office letters raised new questions on whether David Blunkett "fast-tracked" a visa for his ex-lover's nanny.

2004 The High Court lifted an injunction banning a man from taking his chronically-sick wife to Switzerland for an assisted suicide.

2004 John Peel's widow and children announced they would finish writing the autobiography which the DJ was in the middle of when he died.

2005 A gradual rise in the state pension age to 68 was part of a major proposed shake-up to the UK pensions system.

2005 A poll showed that Julia Roberts remained the highest paid actress in Hollywood despite taking a career break.

2006 Pope Benedict XVI visited a Turkish mosque in what was seen as an attempt to mend relations with Muslims.

2006 Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt pleaded for leniency when he was sentenced for his part in the 1993 Mumbai bombings.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 30 November 2008)

Andrea Pallandio, 500 (born 30 November 1508)
Italian architect whose neo-classical style was much imitated throughout Western architecture.

Jonathan Swift, 341 (born 30 November 1667)
(Died 1745) Author 'Gulliver's Travels'.

Mark Twain, 173 (born 30 November 1835)
Died 1910. (Born Samuel Langhorne Clemens) American novelist, author of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

Sir Winston Churchill, 134 (born 30 November 1874)
Died 1965. English statesman who, as prime minister, steered Britian through World War II.

L. M. Montgomery, 134 (born 30 November 1874)
(Died 1942) Writer 'Anne of Green Gables'.

Virginia Mayo, 88 (born 30 November 1920)
American actress who starred in films such as Up In Arms and The Secter Life of Walter Mitty.

Efrem Zimbalist Jr., 85 (born 30 November 1923)
American actor whose films include Wait Until Dark, The Chapman Report, and Airport 74.

Allan Sherman, 84 (born 30 November 1924)
(Died 1973) Novelty singer 'Hello Muddah Hello Faddah'.

Dick Clark, 79 (born 30 November 1929)
Producer, DJ, Game show host.

Frank Ifield, 71 (born 30 November 1937)
Singer - biggest UK hit 'I Remember You'.

Robert Guillaume, 71 (born 30 November 1937)
Actor 'Benson'.

Ridley Scott, 71 (born 30 November 1937)
Director - 'Alien' 'Bladerunner' 'Thelma and Louise'.

Roger Glover, 63 (born 30 November 1945)
Member of Deep Purple and Rainbow.

David Mamet, 61 (born 30 November 1947)
Playwright director.

Mandy Patinkin, 56 (born 30 November 1952)
Actor 'Chicago Hope'.

June Pointer, 54 (born 30 November 1954)
Died 2006. Youngest of singing group - The Pointer Sisters.

Andy Gray, 53 (born 30 November 1955)
Ex-soccer star and TV presenter

Billy Idol, 53 (born 30 November 1955)
Singer - biggest UK hit 'White Wedding'.

Lorraine Kelly, 49 (born 30 November 1959)
TV presenter.

Gary Lineker OBE, 48 (born 30 November 1960)
Footballer and TV presenter.

Robbie Jeffrey, 39 (born 30 November 1969)
Let Loose

Des'ree, 38 (born 30 November 1970)
Singer.

29th November 2008

(day 333, 33 remaining) (LY 334/33)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Radbod,
St Brendan of Birr,

St Saturninus, martyr,
and St Saturninus or Semin of Toulouse.

History Test for November 29th

Name the star of the fifties films `Operation Petticoat' and 'North By Northwest', who died today in 1986. -Cary Grant

'The Gay Divorcee' opened on Broadway today in 1932. Name its star who went on to appear in many Hollywood musicals. -Fred Astaire

Who left his final opera - `Turandot' - unfinished when he died today in 1924? -Giacomo Puccini

Born today in 1952, which Rugby full-back was capped 25 times by England. -Dusty Hare

Born today in 1929, which former editor of the Daily Express and News of the World is now a broadcaster? -Derek Jameson

QUOTE “Ours is composed of the scum of the earth.” - The Duke of Wellington, British general, on the British army, 1831.

Events today...

1530 Cardinal Wolsey was arrested as a traitor and recalled to London. On the way he died at Leicester, and was buried there in Abbey Park.

1641 The first English newspaper was published.

1775 Invisible ink was invented by Sir James Jay.

1780 Death of Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria.

1864 At least 150 Indian warriors, women and children were killed at Sand Creek, Colorado Territory by 750 US cavalry under the command of Colonel John M. Chivington. Some 200 Cheyenne and Arapho warriors along with 500 women and children had surrendered at Fort Lynn, 40 miles (64 km) away, after three years of war. Having been disarmed and sent to Sand Creek they were helpless in the face of the dawn massacre.

1897 Charles Jarrott, riding a Fournier, won the first ever motorcycle race to be staged around a track in Richmond, Surrey.

1902 Carl Nielsen's opera Saul and David was premiered in New York.

1907 Florence Nightingale, the "Lady of the Lamp", was presented with the Order of Merit by Edward VII for her work during the Crimean War.

1909 Russian novelist Maxim Gorky was expelled from the Revolutionary Party for his bourgeois lifestyle.

1924 Death of Italian composer Giacomo Puccini (aged 65), whose works include Tosca and La Boheme.

1929 Admiral Richard E. Byrd, the noted American explorer, followed his triumphant first flight over the North Pole in 1926 by performing a similar feat over the South Pole. From his base camp, "Little America", in the Bay of Whales Admiral Byrd and his three-man crew took off in their Ford Trimotor. The 1600-mile (2575 km) round trip over the Pole and back again took them 19 hours.

1932 The first performance took place of Cole Porter's The Gay Divorcee in New York starring Fred Astaire and featuring the song Night And Day.

1934 The Duke of Kent and Princess Marina were the first royal couple to have their wedding televised.

1939 The emergency "999" was introduced in the Britain.

1943 The first summit conference between Russian prime minister Joseph Stalin, US president Franklin D. Roosevelt and British prime minister Winston Churchill opened in Tehran. The intention was to discuss the progress of the war and to plan for the future - in particular the co-ordination of the Normandy landings planned for June 1944 with a simultaneous Russian attack on Germany from the east. Also on the agenda were the possibilities of Russia entering the war against Japan and the post-war foundation of a United Nations organisation.

1945 Yugoslavia was proclaimed a Federal People's Republic, under Tito's leadership.

1947 The UN approved Britain’s plan for a partition of Palestine.

1954 Death of Sir George Robey (aged 85) English music hall legend.

1955 "Long Tall Sally" was recorded by Little Richard.

1957 Death of Erich Wolfgang Korngold (aged 60) Composer.

1959 Grammys were won by Bobby Darin for his song "Mack the Knife" as "Record of the Year" and by Frank Sinatra for "Come Fly With Me" as "Album of the Year".

1965 In Britain, housewife Mary Whitehouse announced the formation of the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association, a watchdog body to halt sex, violence and bad taste in the BBC.

1971 The British government announced a fund of £3 million ($5.5 million) for thalidomide victims.

1974 German terrorist leader Ulrike Meinhof was jailed for eight years.

1975 World champion racing driver Graham Hill (aged 46), father of Formula One star Damon Hill, was killed when a light aircraft he was piloting crashed on a golf course in Elstree, Herts.

1978 Horrified rescue workers came across a bizarre mass suicide at the site of the Reverend Jim Jones's People's Temple in Guyana. Alerted by the disappearance of Congressman Leo Ryan and his five colleagues on a mission to investigate Jones's cult, they found more than 900 corpses scattered about the Temple grounds. Survivors found huddled in the bushes testified that the dead had drunk Kool-Aid laced with cyanide on the orders of their leader Jones; he apparently described it as "an act of revolutionary suicide" before shooting himself in the head. Jones was formerly a Methodist minister.

1981 Death of Natalie Wood (aged 43) Actress 'Rebel without a Cause' 'West Side Story'.

1985 Astronauts from the shuttle "Atlantis" practised assembling some equipment whilst space walking. This was done as an experiment for building future space stations.

1986 Death of debonair British-born actor Cary Grant (aged 82), star of many films including The Philadelphia Story, Arsenic and Old Lace and To Catch a Thief.

1987 The presidential election in Haiti was cancelled by the provisional government.

1988 3000 died when a hurricane struck in Bangladesh and India.

1989 Rajiv Ghandi resigned as Prime Minister of India after his Congress Party lost its majority in national elections.

1989 Romanian gymnast and Olympic gold medal-winner Nadia Comaneci escaped to Hungary and asked for political asylum.

1990 Following intensive diplomacy from President Bush and Secretary of State James Baker, the UN Security Council approved Resolution 678, authorising member governments to use "all necessary force" to ensure Iraq's complete withdrawal from Kuwait by January 15 the following year. This was the first authorisation of force by the UN since the Korean War, and marked a significant stepping-up of the pressure on Iraq.

1990 Germany began airlifts of food to Moscow.

1990 The UN Security Council, at the urging of the USA, authorised the use of force against Iraq if it did not withdraw totally from Kuwait by 15 January 1991.

1991 Death of Ralph Bellamy, US film actor.

1996 Peter Moore, a homosexual cinema owner, who killed four strangers for pleasure, was jailed for life at Mold Crown Court.

2003 Seven members of a Spanish intelligence team were killed in an ambush south of Baghdad.

2003 Beyonce Knowles and Bono were among stars at Nelson Mandela's South Africa gig to boost the fight against Aids.

2003 A woman was hit in the face with a firework let off before the Wolves v Newcastle United match.

2003 Fifa's Sepp Blatter questioned why the FA were letting Rio Ferdinand play for Man Utd after missing a random drugs test.

2003 Snooker: Stephen Hendry beat Ronnie O'Sullivan 9-4 to reach the final of the UK Championship.

2003 Boxing: Scott Harrison regained his WBO featherweight title by stopping Manuel Medina.

2004 Ukraine's outgoing leader Leonid Kuchma said only a new vote could end the crisis over the presidential poll.

2004 Tony Blair backed David Blunkett amid claims he misused his position to do favours for his ex-lover.

2004 More than 72,000 copies of the new version of charity single Band Aid were sold on its first day of release.

2005 Music mogul Simon Fuller settled copyright action against X Factor's Simon Cowell out of court.

2005 Drummer Tony Meehan, a founding member of UK pop group The Shadows, died aged 62.

2005 I'm A Celebrity... contestant Kimberley Davies left the show after hurting herself in a stunt.

2006 Traces of a radioactive substance were found on two BA planes at Heathrow during probe into an ex-spy's death.

2006 The royal editor of the News of the World and another man admitted conspiracy to intercept voicemail messages.

2006 Chancellor Gordon Brown confirmed his baby son Fraser had been diagnosed with cystic fibrosis.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 29 November 2008)

Gaetano Donizetti, 211 (born 29 November 1797)
Italian composer of more than 75 operas, inciuding Lucia di Lammermoor and Daughter of the Regiment.

Christian Doppler, 205 (born 29 November 1803)
Austrian physicist.

Thomas Cook, 200 (born 29 November 1808)
pioneer of the holiday package tour

George Eliot, 189 (born 29 November 1819)
Author, real name - Mary Ann Evans

Louisa May Alcott, 176 (born 29 November 1832)
(Died 1888) Novelist 'Little Women'.

Busby Berkeley, 113 (born 29 November 1895)
(Died 1976) Director choreographer '42nd Street'.

C S Lewis, 110 (born 29 November 1898)
(Died 1963) Writer 'The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe' - 'Shadowlands' was based on his life.

Berry Gordy, 79 (born 29 November 1929)
American songwriter and record producer who founded Tamla Motown, the first all-black record company.

Derek Jameson, 79 (born 29 November 1929)
journalist and broadcaster

Dame Shirley Porter, 78 (born 29 November 1930)
politician

Diane Ladd, 76 (born 29 November 1932)
actress

Jacques Chirac, 76 (born 29 November 1932)
French politician

John Mayall, 75 (born 29 November 1933)
Blues singer guitarist.

Joel Whitburn, 70 (born 29 November 1938)
Chart researcher.

Diane Ladd, 69 (born 29 November 1939)
Actress 'National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation'.

Sir David Steel, 69 (born 29 November 1939)
Politician.

Chuck Mangione, 68 (born 29 November 1940)
Jazz musician.

Felix Cavaliere, 64 (born 29 November 1944)
Member of The Young Rascals.

David Rintoul, 60 (born 29 November 1948)
actor

Garry Shandling, 59 (born 29 November 1949)
Comedian 'Larry Sanders Show'.

Dusty Hare, 56 (born 29 November 1952)
Rugby Union- Leicester and England full back

Joel Coen, 54 (born 29 November 1954)
Producer writer - of Coen Brothers fame 'Barton Fink' 'Fargo'.

Santiago Luna, 46 (born 29 November 1962)
Golf- Spanish player

Andrew McCarthy, 46 (born 29 November 1962)
Actor 'St Elmo's Fire' 'Mannequin' 'Weekend at Bernies'.

Lisa Maxwell, 45 (born 29 November 1963)
entertainer

Kim Delaney, 44 (born 29 November 1964)
Actress - 'LA Law' 'NYPD Blue'.

Drew Docherty, 43 (born 29 November 1965)
Boxing- British bantamweight champion

Wallis Buchanan, 43 (born 29 November 1965)
Member of Jamiroquai.

Martin Carr, 40 (born 29 November 1968)
Member of Boo Radleys.

Jonathan Knight, 40 (born 29 November 1968)
Member of New Kids on the Block.

Pierre Van Hooijdonk, 39 (born 29 November 1969)
Soccer- Nottingham Forest and Holland striker

Ryan Giggs, 35 (born 29 November 1973)
Footballer - Manchester United.

Pub to be converted into place of worship

A church famous for its hard line stance against drinking has bought a pub to bring its parishioners together.

But the Free Church of Scotland is adamant its purchase, through property firm Bruce and Co, has nothing to do with trying to deny anybody the chance of enjoying a drink.

It has acquired the Carinish Inn on the island of North Uist in the Hebrides for around £395,000. The pub will be converted into a church complex serving three different island communities.

A downturn in tourism trade to North Uist, due in part to a dismal summer, is understood to have persuaded owners the Macinnes brothers to put the three-star Visit Scotland rated pub and restaurant-with-rooms on the market.

The Free Church was keen to acquire a building able to act as the focus for a currently scattered congregation.

Spokesman Rev Iver Martin told The Publican the new church would bring together worshippers currently meeting in small numbers on Berneray, North Uist and Grimsay.

“This is not about the church wanting or trying to close down pubs,” he said. “It’s just the case that this building came on the market and is ideal.”

The church would have preferred a new build but the pub is in a good central site, has full disabled access and a large car-park.

The purchase goes against the trend which has seen former churches being converted to licensed premises – for example in Glasgow’s West End two landmark former churches already play host to major “arts-with-bars” hybrid ventures.

Two pubs in South East England are also facing conversion into places of worship. In October the Skinny Dog in Aylesbury was sold to the Toheed Ul Islam Association to be redeveloped into a mosque, whilst regulars at the Swan on Clapton Common in East London are campaigning against the conversion of the pub into a synagogue by the Stamford Hill Bobov Jewish community.

Quiztime Quiz

1. In which year was the first London Marathon run?
1981
2. What is the highest denomination of Euro note?
500 Euro Note
3. Which was founded first, the RAC or the AA?
RAC - 1897 / AA - 1905
4. Which Premiership Football Club were originally called West Gorton?
Manchester City
5. Which animal is the symbol of the motor manufacturer Suzuki?
Rhino
6. How many members were there in the group Village People?
Six - a leather-clad biker, a cowboy, an Indian, a soldier, a sailor and a construction worker
7. Which five words precede 'I've hungered for your touch' in the song Unchained Melody?
Oh my love, My darling
8. Which TV comedian's autobiography was called 'It's Hello from Him'?
Ronnie Barker
9. Casanova, the man reputed to be the greatest lover of all time, lived during which century?
18th
10. The Scottish town of Perth appears on the label of which famous Scottish Whisky?
Bells
11. From which language does the word yoghurt originate, is it: Egyptian, Turkish, Finnish or Russian?
Turkish
12. What is the surname of the brothers who formed the pop group Right Said Fred?
Fairbrass
13. True or False - Between 1937 and 1945 Heinz produced a version of Alphabetic Spaghetti especially for the German market that consisted solely of little pasta swastikas?
True!
14. Which organ in the body recycles old blood cells?
Spleen
15. Which safety device was first fitted to a 1973 General Motors Chevrolet?
Air Bags
16. Which fish, growing to a length of over 6ft, is the largest of the flatfish?
Halibut
17. What was the last British coin to be abolished?
Halfpenny (1/2p) in 1984
18. What would you grind in bed if you suffered from Bruxism?
Your Teeth
19. If four dice are stood on top of each other, each with the 6 at the top, what’s the sum of all the hidden faces?
Twenty Two
20. Which of the following sports have never been events in the modern olympics, 3 out of these 4 have been, can you pick the one that hasn’t - Rope climbing, Bear Wrestling, Wild Boar shooting, or Live pigeon shooting?
Bear Wrestling

21. Who am I - This person was born in 1926, both he and his brother have been awarded knighthoods, He joined the BBC in 1952 as a trainee and was made controller of BBC2 in 1965, Before this he had studied Zoology at Cambridge University?
Sir David Attenborough
22. Which product is made in a factory next to the Bass Brewery in Burton on Trent and takes its name from the French word for an earthenware cooking vessel?
Marmite
23. Who is the first character to speak in the film "Star Wars"?
C3P0
24. Hydrated Magnesium Silicate is more commonly known by what name when used in the home?
Talcum Powder
25. Which European country is bordered by the following other countries, Yugoslavia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece?
Macedonia
26. Which animal was the Pagan symbol of wealth?
Pig - which is possibly why children keep piggy banks!
27. What is the only sport in which the ball is always in the possession of the team on defense, and the offensive team can score without touching the ball?
Baseball
28. All-day opening for pubs was introduced in which year?
1988 (20 May)
29. What's the name given to the explosive consisting of Nitro-glycerine, Nitro-cellulose, Woodpulp and Potassium nitrate?
Gelignite
30. One Point each - Only three words in standard English begin with the letters "dw." They are all common, name them?
Dwarf, dwell, and dwindle
31. Which British university has the most students?
The Open University
32. What cocktail gave its name to a song by The Eagles and film starring Mel Gibson?
Tequila Sunrise
33. Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart appeared in many episodes of which TV series?
Dr Who
34. How many legs does a Butterfly have?
Six
35. If you fly due south from Reyjkavik, in Iceland, which land will you reach first?
Antarctic
36. How is Major Boothroyd better known in James Bond films?
Q
37. Which was the only jet fighter used by Britain in the Falklands War?
Harrier
38. Which song contains these lyrics "Here's a little song I wrote, You might want to sing it note for note"?
Don't Worry Be Happy - Bobby McFerrin
39. Who is the most impersonated woman in the world?
Marilyn Monroe
40. How do Airline Pilots know when the Queen is in residence at Windsor Castle?
They are told NOT to fly over it!

Tiebreaker - In total how many times did the Beatles perform at the Cavern Club?
292

Maths Puzzle - Multiply the number of masts there are on a clipper sailing ship by the number of times the baton changes hands in an athletics relay race, and take away the number of horses there are in a polo team?
3 x 3 = 9 - 4 = 5

Quiztime Quizzes


25.11.08

Quiztime Quiz

1. One point for title / artist - On August 1st 1988 MTV broadcast its first video, what was it?
Video Killed the Radio Star / Buggles
2. What is special about the glue on Israeli postage stamp?
A- it’s non-fattening, B- it tastes of oranges, or C- it’s guaranteed kosher
C- it’s guaranteed kosher
3. What Summer Olympic sport would come first on an alphabetical list?
Archery
4. The British military refers to them as "blue on Blue" incidents - what does the US military call them?
Friendly Fire
5. Which famous movie was known in Mexico as the Rebel Novice Nun?
Sound Of Music
6. Formula I racing, In which country is the A1-Ring?
Austria
7. What swimming stroke uses the dolphin leg kick?
Butterfly
8. What Looney Tunes cartoon character has the middle name Ethelbert?
Wile E. Cotyote
9. In the five Rugby Union World Cups to-date which is the only country to be in the top four every time?
New Zealand
10. What was the first number one song on the Pop charts sung entirely in Spanish?
La Bamba - Los Lobos
11. The Austin A 7 was the initial name of which model of car?
Mini
12. What might you find in a SHIPPON?
A- ships, B- Japanese cars, or C- cows
C- cows. (another name for a byre)
13. True or False - an american couple are claiming a miracle has occurred on their daughters face. John & Regina Salter, who are both blind, claim the acne spots on their 15 year old daughters forehead spell 'virgin mary' in braille?
False
14. "Little hope around" is an anagram of which football team?
Hartlepool United
15. What is the title of Kate Bush's only number one hit in the UK charts?
Wuthering Heights
16. Which was the first TV soap to bore us with Sunday repeats?
Eastenders
17. Whose whisky distillery in Lynchberg, Tennessee has been declared a US national historic place?
Jack Daniels
18. Who once described a wine on TV as like "sweaty gym shoes on hot tarmac"?
Jilly Goolden
19. Marlborough, Guiseland and Hawkeshead are wine producing districts in which country?
New Zealand
20. One point each - Name the seven clubs that have been ever-present in the English Premiership since it began in 1992?
Arsenal, Aston Villa, Chelsea, Everton, Liverpool, Manchester Utd, Spurs

21. Which Year - A British Rail announcer bungled by telling three hundred people that their mystery trip from Hull would end at Knaresborough, Buckingham Palace opened its doors for the first time to tourists, Flight Lt, Nicky Smith became the armed forces' first female pilot, George Bush and Boris Yeltsin signed the second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, James Bulger is killed in Liverpool, All the members of the Zambia national football team lost their lives in a planecrash and Lorena Bobbitt cuts off the penis of her husband John Wayne Bobbitt?
1993
22. According to folklore, what does the sandman help children to do?
Sleep
23. Who was the American president when the Berlin wall was constructed?
John F Kennedy
24. What does the Koran name as the forbidden fruit?
A- banana, B- apple, or C-peach
A- banana
25. In darts, what is the lowest score from three different trebles?
Eighteen
26. Which country introduced the world's first ambulance service - France, England or Switzerland?
France
27. Where will you find a Unique Resource Locator?
Internet or Worldwide Web - URL is a website address
28. The bay leaf is obtained from the leaves of which tree?
Laurel
29. If you sail due east from Scarborough, in which country will you arrive?
Germany
30. On a cruise ship, what are held by davits?
Lifeboats
31. Where in England was the British Grand Prix held in 1955,1957,1959,1961,and 1962?
Aintree
32. According to the lyrics in a song from My Fair Lady, in which three places do hurricanes hardly ever happen?
Hertford, Hereford & Hampshire
33. Cats are feline, dogs are canine, what animals are caprine?
Goats
34. What is chyme?
A– a stuffed pork joint, B– partially digested food in your stomach, or C– a type of bell rope
B– partially digested food in your stomach
35. One point each - Name Britain's three high security hospitals for the criminally insane?
Broadmoor, Rampton, Ashworth
36. In which sport might you have a "hog", "kiggle kaggle" and "pot lid"?
Curling
37. What film features the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad?
Kill Bill - Volumes 1 & 2
38. A rooster named Cornelius is on the packaging of what product?
Kellogg's Corn Flakes
39. What was written on the cake that makes Alice in Wonderland grow big?
Eat Me
40. What is the next number in the following sequence 1, 2, 5, 10, 20?
50 - coins in circulation

Tiebreaker - What year was whipping children made illegal in Britain?
1932 - so that's when it all started going wrong!
The largest ever teddy bears picnic was held in Dublin in 1995. How many bears were there?
33,573

Bonus - What TV show, each week, featured the crash of an M2-F2?
The Six Million Dollar Man

28th November 2008

(day 332, 33 remaining)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Stephen the Younger,
St Catherine Laboure,

St Simeon Metaphrastes,
St James of the March,
and St Joseph Pignatelli.

History Test for November 28th

Name the oldest scientific organisation in Britain, which had its first meeting today in 1660. -The Royal Society

The writer Washington Irving died today in 1859. He created Rip Van Winkle, who slept for how many years? -Twenty

Born today in 1757, who wrote the poems 'Songs of Innocence' and 'Songs of Experience'? -William Blake

`Carry On' star Kenneth Connor died today in 1993. Which character did he play in the TV comedy `Allo `Allo'? -Monsieur Alfonse

Who reached Number One in the UK pop charts today in 1970 with `I Hear You Knockin'? -Dave Edmunds

QUOTE “A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the Light, but rather because its opponents eventually die out, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.” - Max Planck, German physicist, 1934.

Events today...

1520 Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan sailed through the Straits at the tip of South America and reached an ocean which he named the Pacific.

1660 The Royal Society was chartered in London.

1680 Death of Giovanni Lorenzo Bemini Italian sculptor.

1859 Washington Irving, the first successful American-born writer, died at his Tarrytown New York home, aged 76. In 1820 he published The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon Gent, a collection of amusing stories that included "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Leger of Sleepy Hollow". The book launched him as writer, which was all he had ever wanted to be although he never quite reproduced its success latterly he concentrated on non-fiction, producing biographies of Christopher Columbus, Oliver Goldsmith and George Washington - after whom his father had named him and by who he was blessed at his inauguration in 1789. A modest and kindly man of great charm, he never married, although there is a persistent legend that Mary Shelley was in love with him in the 1820s.

1905 Austrians gain universal suffrage.

1905 The Irish political party Sinn Fein was founded by Arthur Griffich in Dublin.

1907 King Leopold II of Belgium handed over control of the Congo to the Belgian government, ending 20 years of absolute rule by the monarch.

1909 In France, a law was passed allowing women eight weeks' maternity leave.

1917 Fred and Adele Astaire debuted on Broadway in the show "Over The Top".

1919 Nancy Astor was elected member of parliament for Plymouth, becoming Britain's first woman MP.

1932 Groucho Marx made the first of his first radio broadcasts.

1945 Death of Dwight F. Davis, founder of the Davis Cup tennis tournament.

1948 Edwin Land's first Polaroid cameras went on sale in Boston.

1950 The Korean War took a devastating new turn when an estimate 200,000 Chinese troops poured over the River Yalu. Chou En-Lai, the Chinese foreign minister, had repeatedly warned that his country would resist US forces crossed the 38th Parallel into North Korea, but his warnings were ignored by the West. Now the US Eighth Army, along with large forces of Marines and South Koreans, was in humiliating retreat in appalling weather.

1954 Death of Enrico Fermi, Italian physicist.

1960 Mauritania gained independence.

1967 All horse-racing was banned in Britain owing to an outbreak of foot and mouth disease.

1968 Death of Enid Blyton, English children's book author.

1971 In Rome, 100,000 demonstrators marched against fascism.

1974 Elton John was joined by John Lennon on stage at Madison Square Gardens in New York. The two were at number one with their song "Walls and Bridges" and this was the first time that John had performed on stage for three years.

1976 Death of Rosalind Russell, (aged 65) Actress.

1977 "Elvis" the stage musical opened in London with Timothy Whitnall, Shakin' Stevens and P.J. Proby all playing the "King" at different stages of his life.

1978 Amid growing fundamentalist opposition, the Iranian government banned religious rallies.

1979 Ringo Starr's house in Los Angeles was destroyed in a fire.

1983 Rock stars played a gig in Dallas Texas to raise money for multiple Sclerosis research. Among those performing were Eric Clacton, Jeff Beck, Joe Cocker, Jimmy Page, Bill Wyman, Kenny Jones, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Lane.

1983 The British government announced that it would end opticians' monopoly on the sale of spectacles.

1988 Cabinet Secretary Sir Robert Armstrong, the British government's chief witness in its attempt to prevent publication of retired MI5 agent Peter Wright's memoirs, admitted to a Sydney court that he had unintentionally given "misleading evidence". In his book Spycatcher, Wright alleged that the late Sir Roger Hollis, former MI5 chief, was a Soviet double agent. Wright's attorney, Malcolm Turnbull, previously questioned Sir Robert about the government's apparent selectivity in going after Wright but not prosecuting two previous authors who had made similar accusations. Armstrong's contention was that Wright was a government employee, and therefore subject to different criteria, and that the decision not to prosecute was made by the Attorney General, Sir Michael Havers. Now he admitted that the decision had in fact been taken by "a group of advisors", not by Havers; inadvertently, he said, they had been "economical with the truth".

1990 Margaret Thatcher, Conservative Prime Minister since May 1979 (and the longest serving this century) handed her resignation to the Queen. Later that morning John Major was formally appointed in her place. The November 1 resignation of Sir Geoffrey Howe, deputy Prime Minister and the last serving member of Mrs Thatcher’s original 1979 cabinet precipitated the leadership crisis. Howe was openly critical of her hostile attitude to Europe, especially over monetary policy. Ex-minister Michael Heseltine, another Thatcher critic, challenged her for the leadership of the Conservative Party and in the ensuing ballot she failed by four votes to secure the 15 per cent margin needed to avoid a second ballot. Although she announced her intention to stand again, she finally stood down after protracted consultations with senior colleagues.

1993 Death of Kenneth Connor, English actor.

1993 The Northern Ireland peace process and Prime Minister John Major's credibility were dealt a blow when secret government contacts with the IRA were publicly disclosed.

1994 Jeffrey Dahlmer, a serial killer, was beaten to death in prison in Wisconsin. A fellow inmate clubbed him to death while cleaning a toilet.

1996 A planned space walk was prevented when a hatch stuck on "Columbia". It was later discovered that a loose screw was to blame.

1999 Eight people were injured when a naked man with a Sword ran amok in a South London Church.

2000 Death of Len Shackleton, footballer.

2000 The Netherlands voted to allow euthanasia under certain circumstances.

2003 Police in Italy and Germany arrested three North Africans suspected of recruiting suicide bombers for attacks in Iraq.

2003 Three French photographers were cleared of invading Princess Diana's privacy on the night she died.

2003 With counting over in the NI election, Ian Paisley's anti-Agreement DUP overtook the UUP as the biggest party.

2003 BBC One re-launched the veteran music show "Top of the Pops" with a new look and format to boost ratings. The show drew an extra two million viewers for the live relaunch.

2003 Ricky Gervais asked the press not to ruin The Office Christmas specials by publishing the scripts.

2003 Snooker: Matthew Stevens beat Jimmy White 9-7 in York to reach the UK Championship final.

2003 Paul Gascoigne failed to convince Wolves that he was worth a contract.

2004 At least 25 miners died and 141 were trapped deep in a mine in China after a gas explosion.

2004 Swiss voters overwhelmingly approved government proposals to permit research using stem cells of human embryos.

2004 John Dunn - one of the best known voices on BBC Radio 2 - died after a battle with cancer.

2004 England beat Zimbabwe by five wickets in the opening one-day international.

2005 Barcelona forward Ronaldinho was named European Footballer of the Year.

2006 Pope Benedict XVI called for a dialogue between Muslims and Christians as he began a four-day visit to Turkey.

2006 Novelists William Boyd, Neil Griffiths, Mark Haddon and David Mitchell were nominated for the Costa Book Awards.

2006 Veteran DJ Alan "Fluff" Freeman, whose "Not 'arf" catchphrase made him

famous, died aged 79.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 28 November 2008)

John Bunyan, 380 (born 28 November 1628)
(Died 1688) Novelist.

Jean Baptiste Lully, 376 (born 28 November 1632)
French composer who worked as a scullion in an aristocratic French household and rose to be composer, violinist and dancer to King Louis XIV.

Wllliam Blake, 251 (born 28 November 1757)
English visionary poet, painter and engraver.

Friedrich Engels, 188 (born 28 November 1820)
German socialist whose books include Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 and Anti-Duhring.

Alberto Moravla, 101 (born 28 November 1907)
Italian novelist whose books include The Woman of Rome and Two Women.

Claude Levi-Strauss, 100 (born 28 November 1908)
French anthropologist whose books include Structural Anthropology and From Honey to Ashes.

Berry Gordy Jr, 79 (born 28 November 1929)
Music songwriter executive - Motown records founder.

Clem Curtis, 68 (born 28 November 1940)
Member of The Foundations.

Randy Newman, 65 (born 28 November 1943)
American singer and songwriter whose hits include "Short People" and "I Think It's Gonna Rain Today".

Joe Dante, 62 (born 28 November 1946)
Director - 'Poltergeist'.

Paul Shaffer, 59 (born 28 November 1949)
Bandleader on David Letterman's show.

Ed Harris, 58 (born 28 November 1950)
Actor 'The Abyss' 'Apollo 13'.

Fiona Armstrong, 52 (born 28 November 1956)
TV presenter and newsreader.

Kriss Akabusi MBE, 50 (born 28 November 1958)
Athlete and TV presenter.

Princess, 45 (born 28 November 1963)
Singer - biggest UK hit 'Say I'm Your Number One'.

Anna Nicole Smith, 41 (born 28 November 1967)
Model.

Dawn Robinson, 40 (born 28 November 1968)
Ex-member of En Vogue.

27th November 2008

(day 331, 35 remaining) (LY 332/35)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St James Inteccisus,
St Cungar of Somerset, Saints Barlaam and Josaphat
St Maximus of Riez,
St Fergus nf strathem,
St Virgil of Salzburg,
and St Secundinus or Sechnall.

History Test for November 27th

Today in 1965, Prince Charles was starring as Macbeth in his school play. Which school? -Gordonstoun

John Alderton was born today in 1940. Name the school-master he played in the TV comedy series 'Please Sir'. -Bernard Hedges

Ernie Wise was born today in 1925. In a classic Morecambe and Wise sketch, which singer had her shoe replaced with an army boot? -Shirley Bassey

Which American dramatist wrote an autobiographical play called `Long Journey into Night' and died today in 1953? -Eugene O'Neill

Born today in 1938, who played Bob Ferris in the TV comedy `The Likely Lads'? -Rodney Bewes

Events today...

8BC Death of Horace, Roman poet.

1095 Pope Urban began to preach the First Crusade at Clermont, France.

1582 William Shakespeare, aged 18, married Anne Hathaway.

1811 Death of Andrew Meikle, Scottish inventor of the threshing machine.

1826 The friction match was invented by John Walker (in England).

1868 Blood flowed on the Washita river in western Oklahoma when Lieutenant Colonel George Custer and his 7th Cavalry attacked and burned the village of Cheyenne chief Black Kettle. The Cheyenne had been bitterly resisting the building of the railroad in their territory, but it seemed that Black Kettle had been negotiating for peace at the time of his death. The 29-year-old Custer was a controversial figure - his daring, reckless style attracted attention at the Battle of Gettysburg and he had only recently been restored to active duty following a court-martial for unauthorized absence from his command and for mistreating deserters. Within an hour after the dawn attack, 103 warriors were dead, according to Custer's unverified estimate. The 23 US dead, among them Major Joel Elliott, were slaughtered while in hot pursuit of a group of fleeing Indians.

1875 Britain bought shares worth £4 million ($7.4 million) in the Suez Canal Company.

1893 New Zealand went to the polls, and for the first time in a national election anywhere in the world women voted too, a female suffrage bill having been passed in parliament by just two votes. The women of New Zealand owed this advance to the flamboyant Liberal leader Richard John Seddon, known as "King Dick", whose unwillingness to alienate a powerful feminist-temperance alliance helped force the measure through parliament, albeit with so narrow a margin. The women returned the favour by electing Seddon and the Liberals to power.

1895 Death of Alexandre Dumas fils (aged 71), French novelist and dramatist who wrote the novel La Dame aux Camellias and adapted it for the stage as Camille.

1910 The world's largest railway station opened in New York.

1914 The first policewomen in Britain to complete their official training and assume active duty, Misses Mary Allen and E. F. Harburn, were patrolling the streets of Grantham, Lincolnshire. Reporting to the Provost Marshal of the county, the women were unpaid. They were in Grantham in response to a request from the military authorities - there was a military camp containing 18,000 soldiers just outside town (only 2,000 fewer than the population of Grantham), and it was felt that the women's presence on the streets could help to reduce tension. Wartime demands on manpower were expected to lead to the recruitment of more women to the force.

1919 A massive meteor landed in Lake Michigan.

1924 Gary Cooper arrived in Los Angeles looking for work as a commercial artist. He became a leading actor and appeared in numerous movies.

1940 In Romania, the pro-fascist group Iron Guard murdered 64 people including former prime minister Jorga.

1942 The French fleet was scuttled by its crews six hours after German tanks arrived in the naval base of Toulon.

1944 The explosion was heard as far away as Geneva when 4000 tons of explosive stored in a cavern in Staffordshire, England, blew up, destroying a farm and killing 68.

1953 American playwright Eugene O'Neill, Nobel Prize-winner in 1936 and four-times Pulitzer Prize-winner, died. He was 65. Although at times inconsistent, his best work, such as Mourning Becomes Electra and The Iceman Cometh, was equal to any other 20th-century playwright's. Born in a hotel room on Broadway and 43rd in New York City, he came from Irish theatrical stock. His discovery that his mother had been addicted to morphine while she carried him so shattered O'Neill that it led to an erratic life of drink and family feuding, which was reflected in his work. His last years were tragic: he was estranged from his children, his eldest son Eugene Jr committed suicide at 40 and a tremor in his hands prevented him from writing. He died in a Boston hotel with the words, "Born in a goddam hotel room and dying in a goddam hotel room!"

1955 The Guinness Book of Records was published for the first time.

1955 Death of Arthur Honegger, Swiss composer.

1965 Public experiments with LSD were started in La Honda, California, by Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters. Despite its potent hallucinogenic qualities, lysergic acid diethylamide was still legal; it was being manufactured in large quantities in simple home laboratories, notably by the legendary Owsley Stanley.

1967 French President Charles de Gaulle rejected British entry into the Common Market.

1970 In Manila, capital of the Philippines, a knife-wielding man was seized as he attempted to attack Pope John Paul.

1970 George Harrison released his triple album set "All Things Must Pass".

1970 The Gay Liberation Front held its first demonstration in London.

1975 Death of Ross McWhirter, (aged 50) Publisher of Guinness Book of Records fame

1981 Death of Lottie Lenya, (aged 83) Actress Kurt Weill's wife

1985 Steven Spielberg married actress Amy Irving. They divorced later.

1988 Death of John Carradine, (aged 82) Actor

1990 The Conservative Party chose John Major as their new leader and therefore the New Prime Minister.

1991 Hulk Hogan was defeated by The Undertaker who became the new WWF champion.

1991 A 15th-century Bible was sold at Christie's in London to a New York antiquarian bookseller for £1.1 million ($2 million).

2003 At least 163 bodies were recovered and 100 were missing after a boat capsized in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

2003 Cigarette sellers across France won a partial victory in their battle against a rise in tobacco taxes.

2003 Lithuania's President Rolandas Paksas faced possible impeachment over alleged links to Russian mafia.

2003 David Beckham got letters after his name after receiving the OBE at Buckingham Palace. But Poet Benjamin Zephaniah rejected his New Year honour because he said it represented British colonialism.

2003 EastEnders' star Jessie Wallace was banned from driving for three years are pleading guilty to drink driving.

2003 England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson criticised the FA for making public its offer of a contract extension.

2003 Newcastle won by an own goal against Basle to reach the third round of the UEFA Cup. And Manchester City crashed out on away goals after a 0-0 draw at Groclin Dyskobolia.

2004 The Pope reached out to Orthodox Christians as he returned bones looted during the Crusades.

2004 Former children who sang on Pink Floyd's Another Brick in The Wall began action over unpaid royalties.

2006 It was revealed that the BBC chairman Michael Grade was to leave the public service broadcaster and move to its biggest terrestrial rival ITV.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 27 November 2008)

Anders Celsius, 307 (born 27 November 1701)
Swedish astronomer who invented the Celsius temperature scale.

David Merrick, 96 (born 27 November 1912)
Stage producer 'Hello Dolly' 'Oliver' '42nd Street'

"Buffalo" Bob Smith, 91 (born 27 November 1917)
children's entertainer.

Alexander Dubcek, 87 (born 27 November 1921)
Czechoslovakian politician who, as secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party in 27/11/1968, instigated the liberal reforms that led to the `Prague Spring' which was crushed by the Soviet Union in August of that year.

Ernie Wise OBE, 83 (born 27 November 1925)
Comedian of Morecambe and Wise fame

Marshall Thompson, 83 (born 27 November 1925)
(Died 1992) Actor - 'Daktari'

Alan Simpson, 79 (born 27 November 1929)
Comedy writer of Galton and Simpson fame

Rodney Bewes, 70 (born 27 November 1938)
Actor - 'The Likely Lads'

John Alderton, 68 (born 27 November 1940)
Actor - 'Please Sir'

Bruce Lee, 68 (born 27 November 1940)
(Died 1973) Martial Arts expert - 'Enter the Dragon'

Eddie Rabbitt, 67 (born 27 November 1941)
(Died 1998) Singer - 'I Love a Rainy Night'

Jimi Hendrix, 66 (born 27 November 1942)
Died 1970. American singer and ace guitarist who, with the group the Jimi Hendrix Experience, had massive hits with songs such as `Purple Haze' and Bob Dylan's `All Along the Watchtower'.

Dozy, 64 (born 27 November 1944)
Member of Dave Dee Dozy Beaky Mick and Tich fame (real name Trevor Leonard Davies)

Randy Brecker, 63 (born 27 November 1945)
Musician of Brecker Brothers fame

Charlie Burchill, 49 (born 27 November 1959)
Member of Simple Minds

Robin Givens, 44 (born 27 November 1964)
Actress 'A Rage in Harlem'

26th November 2008

26th November 2008
(day 330, 36 remaining) (LY 331/36)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Conrad of Constance,
St Peter of Alexandria,
St John Berchmans,
St Basolus or Basle,

St Siricius,
St Leonard of Porto Maurizio,
and St Silvester Gozzolini.

History Test for November 26th

Born today in 1905, who is the Welsh author of the play 'The Corn is Green'? -Emlyn Williams

Today in 1981, which by-election did Shirley Williams win to become the first SDP MP? -Crosby

Which singer was born Annie Mae Bullock today in 1938? -Tina Turner

Which bandleader and trombonist of the swing era formed an orchestra with his brother Jimmy and died today in 1956? -Tommy Dorsey

Born today in 1923 who played Elsie Tanner in `Coronation Street'? -Pat Phoenix

QUOTE “Venice is like eating an entire box of chocolate liqueurs at one go.” - Truman Capote, US novelist, 1961.

Events today...

1504 Death of lsabella I, Queen of Castile and Aragon.

1688 King Louis XIV declared war on the Netherlands.

1703 England was hit by severe gales, known as the Great storm in which 8,000 people died.

1789 The American holiday of Thanksgiving was celebrated nationally for the first time.

1832 New York's public transport system was inaugurated when Mr John Mason's horse-drawn streetcars, the city's first, went into operation between Spring and 14th streets.

1836 John McAdam, Scottish inventor of the macadam road surface which has done so much to improve the comfort of travel on Britain's roads, died at the age of 80. McAdam was prompted to find a way of improving the appalling standard of road surfaces in Britain after a trip to America opened his eyes as to how good these could be. He started work on the problem in 1783, and by the time he came up with his system had expended a considerable amount of his own fortune on experiments. The McAdam system made use of crushed rock and gravel on a raised surface for good drainage. McAdam was appointed Surveyor General of Metropolitan Roads in 1827. He loved Scotland and in retirement would frequently revisit the scenes of his boyhood. It was while returning from one of these expeditions that he died.

1851 Death of Nicolas Soult, French general.

1885 The first meteor was photographed.

1901 Britain and Italy agreed a frontier between Eritrea and the Sudan.

1902 New Zealand's Progressive Party won the general election for the fifth consecutive time.

1906 President Theodore Roosevelt returned to Washington from Central America, having made history by being the first US President to travel abroad while in office. His 17-day trip aboard the battleship Louisiana took him to Puerto Rico and then on to Panama to see for himself the building work on the canal he did so much to promote - or "to see how the ditch is getting on", as he put it.

1917 Death of Leander Jameson, British colonial administrator.

1922 Archaeologist Howard Carter and his sponsor the Earl of Caernavon made a hole in the door of Tutankhamun's tomb and were able to distinguish the contents by candlelight.

1928 The first twins to be born in Britain by Caesarean section were delivered in Manchester.

1942 The movie "Casablanca" starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman received its world premiere.

1942 The Soviet forces counter-attacked at Stalingrad, ending the siege and forcing General von Paulus's Sixth Army to retreat.

1949 India became a federal republic within the Commonwealth.

1956 American trombonist and bandleader Tommy Dorsey choked to death in his sleep at the age of 51.

1966 "I'm a Believer" by The Monkees went gold.

1966 The world's first tidal power station was opened by General de Gaulle on the Rance Estuary near St Malo in Brittany. Its developer, Albert Caquot, first drew up plans to harness the power of the tides in 1955, but his scheme was rejected as too ambitious. The present station cost FF420 million (£42 million ). The 2640 ft (850 m) barrage contained 24 turbo alternators which produce 544 million kW.

1968 Death of Arnold Zweig, German novelist.

1968 Hippie heroes Cream, the world's loudest, fastest, most overpowering rock band, played their last concert at London's Albert Hall in front of 10,000 fans torn between ecstasy and sorrow. The group- Eric Clapton on lead guitar, Jack Bruce on bass and Ginger Baker on drums- spent the past two years blowing minds with their own compositions, such as "Strange Brew", "I Feel Free" and "Sunshine of Your Love", and original renditions of blues classics like "Crossroads" and "Spoonful". Clapton's playing inspired "Clapton is God" graffiti on both sides of the Atlantic, and the group's Wheels of Fire double album topped the US charts for four weeks. Fans suffering withdrawal symptoms were be able to comfort themselves with Tony Palmer's film of the concert.

1972 The Race Relations Act was introduced in the UK.

1973 The Boston Strangler was murdered in his cell in Massachusetts.

1974 The "Miss World" contest saw the newly crowned Helen Morgan resign after it was revealed she was an unmarried mother and had been cited in a divorce case.

1977 The Sex Pistols released their first single "Anarchy in the UK".

1983 A daring and efficient gang of thieves pulled off Britain's biggest-ever robbery. £25 millions' ($4.6 million) worth of gold bullion. They coolly broke into the Brinks-Mat security warehouse at Heathrow Airport, neutralised the alarm system and tied up six guards. They then spent an hour loading the gold, which weighed 25 tons, into a truck before making their getaway.

1990 Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore's Prime Minister for 31 years, announced that he was stepping down.

1996 Death of Michael Bentine, (aged 74) Comedian 'The Goon Show' 'Potty Time' 'Square World'

1998 Miss Israel won the re-launched “Miss World” Pageant. Miss France and Miss Malaysia were runners up.

2003 A German court jailed an al-Qaeda suspect for four years for helping plot terror attacks against Jewish targets.

2003 Tony Blair faced rebellion on two fronts over plans for university fees and asylum seekers set out in the Queen's Speech.

2003 Diego Forlan gave Man Utd a 1-0 win over Panathinaikos to seal their qualification from Champions League Group E.

2004 England's cricketers arrived in Harare for a four-match series against Zimbabwe.

2004 Everton were told they would not be invited to share Liverpool's new ground - despite reports of a fresh meeting.

2004 Former Liverpool boss Roy Evans was appointed as assistant to new Wales manager John Toshack.

2005 Nine people suffered minor injuries when a landslide caused a train to derail near Inverness.

2005 A statue of martial arts hero Bruce Lee was erected in Bosnia - a day before another was unveiled in Hong Kong.

2006 A police plan to use high-powered microphones to help the Olympics 2012 security was opposed by David Blunkett.

2006 Reformed boy band "Take That" scored their first UK chart-topper for a decade.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 26 November 2008)

Willlam Cowper, 277 (born 26 November 1731)
English poet who, with evangelical curate John Newton, published Olney Hymns; in spite of mental instability and frequent suicide attempts he found great popularity with the comic ballad `John Gilpin's Ride'.

Baron Charles Forte, 99 (born 26 November 1909)
Founder of Trusthouse Forte

Cyril Cusack, 98 (born 26 November 1910)
Irish actor who made his film debut at the age of seven and went on to appear at the Abbey Theatre over 14 years and make many films.

Eugene Ionesco, 96 (born 26 November 1912)
French dramatist who initiated the Theatre of the Absurd and, in his later plays, used surrealistic techniques to express his nihilistic view of society.

Charles Schultz, 86 (born 26 November 1922)
American cartoonist who created the highly successful `Peanuts' strip.

Pat Phoenix, 84 (born 26 November 1924)
(Died 1986) Actress of 'Coronation Street' fame

Richard Caruthers (Rich) Little, 70 (born 26 November 1938)
American impressionist

Tina Turner, 69 (born 26 November 1939)
American singer who had hits such as `River Deep, Mountain High' with her husband Ike before gaining massive success as a solo artist.

John McVie, 63 (born 26 November 1945)
Bass player with Fleetwood Mac

Jamie Jones, 34 (born 26 November 1974)
Member of All 4 One

25th November 2008

(day 329, 37 remaining) (LY 330/37)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Moses the Martyr,
and St Mercurius of Caesarea.

History Test for November 25th

Name the world's longest-running stage play, which opened today in 1952. -`The Mousetrap'

Today in 1965, which group reached Number One in the UK pop charts with `The Carnival is Over'? -The Seekers

Born today in 1914, which famous American baseball player was known as 'The Yankee Clipper'? -Joe diMaggio - briefly married to Marilyn Monroe

The funeral of John F. Kennedy took place today in 1963. Where exactly is he buried? -The Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia

The American tap dancer and entertainer, Bill Robinson, died today in 1949. What was his nickname? -'Bojangles'

Events today...

1748 Death of Isaac Watts English hymn writer.

1867 Dynamite was patented by Alfred Nobel

1882 Gilbert and Sullivan's "Iolanthe" was premiered in both London and New York.

1884 John Mayenberg of Saint Louis, Missouri, patented evaporated milk.

1913 In Natal, police opened fire on demonstrators protesting against the imprisonment of Mahatma Gandhi, killing two and wounding another 20.

1915 The Ku Klux Klan, which was originally formed in 1886, was revived on this day at Stone Mountain, Georgia, by Colonel William Simmons.

1935 The monarchy was restored in Greece.

1937 An inter-regional spelling competition became the first British quiz programme to be broadcast.

1940 "Woody Woodpecker" debuted in the cartoon "Knock Knock".

1941 HMS Barham was sunk, with the loss of 868 lives.

1949 Death of Bill Robinson, the American tap dancer and entertainer known as "Bojangles".

1952 Agatha Christie's play "The Mousetrap" opened at the Ambassador’s Theatre in London with Richard Attenborough and Sheila Sims in the leading roles.

1963 John F Kennedy received a state funeral, following his assassination.

1965 Death of Myra Hess, British pianist.

1968 Death of Upton Sinclair, US novelist.

1969 In protest against Britain's involvement in Biafra and support of US involvement in Vietnam, John Lennon returned his MBE.

1970 Death of Yukio Mishima, Japanese novelist.

1973 Death of Laurence Harvey, (aged 45) Actor

1973 Greek President George Papadapoulos was ousted in a military coup.

1975 Surinam, formerly called Dutch Guiana, became a fully independent republic.

1976 The Band played their last gig. The gig was called "The Last Waltz" and featured many stars.

1980 Death of George Raft, (aged 85) Actor

1983 Death of Anton Dolin, British dancer and choreographer.

1984 An extraordinary gathering of British rock stars, including Phil Collins, Sting, George Michael, Bono and Boy George took place at Sarm Studios in London to record "Do They Know It's Christmas?". The song was written by Boomtown Rat Bob Geldof and Midge Ure of Ultravox. All proceeds from the single were to go directly towards famine relief.

1986 The Iran-Contra affair erupted after President Reagan and his Attorney General Ed Meese revealed that profits from secret arms sales to Iran had been diverted to Nicaraguan rebels.

1988 An earthquake measuring 5.7 on the Richter scale was felt across Canada.

1989 Vietnamese boat people rioted in Hong Kong's detention camps at news of enforced repatriation.

1991 Winston Silcott became the first of the 'Tottenham Three', convicted for the 1985 killing of a policeman in Tottenham, North London, to have his conviction overturned.

1994 Paul Merson (Arsenal and England) admitted his use of cocaine.

1999 Following the £500 million re-development of the City Centre after the bombing three years earlier, the world’s largest Marks and Spencer store opened in Manchester.

2003 The European Commission criticised the Eurozone finance ministers' decision to be lenient with France and Germany over budget deficits.

2003 West Bromwich Albion footballer Lee Hughes was charged with causing death by dangerous driving.

2003 "Love Actually" scored the highest UK opening weekend takings of any British romantic comedy.

2003 Some of the UK's best-loved and most influential films and TV shows were put on the Internet.

2003 Thierry Henry inspired Arsenal to a crushing 5-1 defeat of Inter Milan at the San Siro. And Celtic's Champions League hopes hung in the balance after a 0-0 draw with Bayern Munich in Glasgow.

2004 Ukraine's top court stopped publication of the election result until it considered an opposition appeal.

2004 British-born writer Arthur Hailey, author of 11 best-sellers, died at his home in the Bahamas.

2004 It was announced that Chat show hosts Des O'Connor and Melanie Sykes were moving to ITV1's early evening slot in the New Year.

2004 The Football Association named Brian Barwick as its new chief executive.

2005 Former Manchester United and Northern Ireland star George Best died in hospital aged 59, after multiple organ failure.

2005 Boy band Take That announced they were to reform for an 11-date tour the following April - 10 years after they split.

2005 Actor Pat Morita, nominated for an Oscar for playing Mr Miyagi in The Karate Kid, died aged 73.

2006 The Rolling Stones' "A Bigger Bang" tour was the 'top-grossing tour in history' according to Billboard magazine.

2006 Pop star Jamelia was recovering in hospital following a hernia operation

after she collapsed during filming in Spain.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 25 November 2008)

Andrew Carnegie, 173 (born 25 November 1835)
Scottish-born American industrialist and philanthropist who donated over £70 million to charitable causes.

Karl Friedrich Benz, 164 (born 25 November 1844)
German engineer and car manufacturer who built the first car to be driven by an internal combustion engine.

Joe Di Maggio, 94 (born 25 November 1914)
American baseball star who married Marilyn Monroe.

Ricardo Montalban, 88 (born 25 November 1920)
Actor 'Fantasy Island'

Jeffrey Hunter, 83 (born 25 November 1925)
(Died 1969) Actor

Nat Adderley, 77 (born 25 November 1931)
Jazz trumpeter

Percy Sledge, 68 (born 25 November 1940)
Singer 'When a Man Loves a Woman'

Imran Khan, 56 (born 25 November 1952)
Cricketer

Amy Grant, 48 (born 25 November 1960)
Singer - biggest UK hit 'Baby Baby'

Steve Rothery, 47 (born 25 November 1961)
Member of Marillion

Stacy Lattisaw, 42 (born 25 November 1966)
Singer - 'Jump to the Beat'

Christina Applegate, 36 (born 25 November 1972)
Actress - Kelly Bundy in 'Married with Children'

Fido

Forget about the National Television Awards. Be gone, the Baftas. Omit
even the Oscars from your thoughts. The only awards worth winning
are, of course, the Fido cinema awards, which reward the best big
screen performances by ... dogs. The second international Fido awards
- "for incredible dogs on screen" - are the brainchild of journalist
Toby Rose, who also organises the Palm Dog Awards. Last year's top
gong was awarded to the ensemble performance by the corgis in Stephen
Frears' The Queen.

22.11.08

24th November 2008

(day 328, 38 remaining) (LY 329/38)

Religious events today...

Feast day of Saints Flora and Mary,
St Chrysogonus,
and St Colman of Cloyne.

History Test for November 24th

Born today in 1942, which Scottish comedian is known as the Big Yin? -Billy Connolly

Today in 1962, the satirical TV show `That Was The Week That Was' began its first series. Who sang the topical calypsos? -Lance Percival

Ian Botham was born today in 1955. Which county cricket team did he join in 1987? -Worcestershire

Based on stories by Damon Runyon, which musical opened in New York today in 1950? -`Guys and Dolls'

Freddie Mercury died today in 1991. Who was his singing partner for the chart hit `Barcelona'? -Montserrat Caballe

QUOTE “A piece of each of us died at that moment.” - Michael J. Mansfield, US senator, on the assassination two days ago of John F. Kennedy, 1963.

QUOTE “My wife is French. That means she is both logical and badly organised, as we shall shortly discover in Europe.” - Peter Ustinov, British actor, 1991.

Events today...

1572 Death of John Knox, Scottish Protestant reformer whose Confession of Faith was adopted by the Scottish church in 1560.

1642 Don Francisco Vazquez de Coronado, Governor of Nueva Galicia, arrived back in Mexico City a broken and disappointed man . Two years earlier he set off with a party of 336 Spaniards and hundreds of Indians in search of the legendary seven Golden Cities of Cibola. A certain Friar Marcos de Niza had earlier returned from an expedition to New Mexico talking of glittering cities. As a result, the Viceroy, Antonio de Mendoza, commissioned Coronado to lead an expedition. The glittering cities turned out to be simple adobe settlements, so the party struggled on to the north-east, looking for more fabled riches in "the land of Quivira". The exhausted Spaniards found nothing but squalid villages in the vast prairie of the Wichita Indians, and found small consolation in being the first white men to do so. The Viceroy was uninterested in their reports of "shaggy cows", or buffalo.

1642 Dutch navigator Abel Tasman discovered Van Dieman's Land which he named after his captain, but it was later renamed Tasmania.

1859 "The Origin of Species" by Charles Darwin was published.

1899 The US Expeditionary Force made a major advance in its long-running struggle against insurrectionist leader Emilio Aguinaldo when it gained control of the Philippines' largest island, Luzon. The roots of the struggle went back to the Spanish-American War, when Aguinaldo and his forces threw in their lot with the Americans against their hated Spanish oppressors. Bitterly disappointed by the transfer of control of the country to the US as part of Spain's war reparations, Aguinaldo declared the Malolos Republic in 1888 and took to the mountains, from where he had been waging an effective guerrilla campaign. Though this defeat was a considerable setback for him, he vowed to continue the struggle.

1902 The world's first conference for professional photographers opened in Paris.

1922 Death of Erskine Childers, Irish nationalist and novelist.

1924 Egyptian prime minister Zaghlol Pasha resigned after refusing to apologise to Britain for the assassination in Cairo of Major-General Lee Stack, Governor-General of the Sudan.

1929 Death of Georges Clemenceau, French statesman.

1934 Swedish tenor Jussi Bjorling made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York singing the role of Rudolfo in La Boheme.

1963 Lee Harvey Oswald, the man arrested and charged with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas two days earlier, was himself shot and killed. He was 24. While being transferred under police custody to the County Jail he was approached in the underground carpark of the Dallas Police Headquarters by Jack Ruby, a Dallas strip-club owner, who produced a revolver and shot him from point-blank range. Ruby was immediately overpowered and arrested in his turn.

1966 The Beatles started recording the "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Heart Club Band" recording "Strawberry Fields Forever" which never made it onto the album.

1971 A hijacker parachuted with £200,000 ransom from a Northwest Airlines 727 aircraft.

1972 John Lennon released "Happy Xmas (War is Over)".

1979 Saudi Arabian troops stormed the Great Mosque in Mecca to oust Iranian religious fanatics.

1980 Death of George Raft, US film actor.

1983 The Palestine Liberation Organisation (P.L.O) released six Israeli prisoners in exchange for 4500 Palestinians and Lebanese prisoners held by the Israelis.

1985 Egyptian commandos stormed a hijacked aircraft which was parked on the ground in Malta. 58 people died.

1989 The extraordinary events in Eastern Europe continued as Alexander Dubcek, secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party during the short-lived "Prague Spring" of 1968, made his first public appearance in Prague for over 20 years. Appearing alongside dissident playwright Vaclav Havel in Wenceslas Square, he told a crowd of 200,000 cheering Czechs, "We have been too long in darkness. Once already we have been in the light, and we want it again."

1990 White extremists attacked 300 black children in a park in Louis Trichardt.

1991 Freddie Mercury, one of rock's most flamboyant characters, died of AIDS at the age of 45. 24hours earlier, Mercury issued a statement confirming rumours that he had the disease. Mercury and his group, Queen, hit the music world in the 1970s with a teasing mixture of transvestism and original rock. In the early days the music press wondered at Mercury's outrageous persona with headlines like "Is This Man a Prat?" Meanwhile, the fans were flocking to buy the group's records. Throughout the '70s and '80s the effervescent Mercury kept them royally entertained with "Bohemian Rhapsody", "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", "We Are the Champions" and many more. The fans loved him, his songs and the way he sang them. He was a mesmerising performer, uninhibited and totally involved. Unashamedly homosexual, Freddie Mercury the man was both kind and gentle.

1993 Death of Albert Collins, (aged 61) Blues singer

1993 The movie "Mrs Doubtfire" received its premiere.

1993 The young murderers of James Bulger were sentence to be detained at Her Majesty's pleasure. There was a recommendation that they should be detained for many years.

1993 Death of Anthony Burgess, British novelist and critic.

1993 The last 14 bottles of Scotch whisky salvaged from the SS Politician, wrecked in 1941 and the inspiration of the book and film, Whisky Galore, were sold at auction for £11,462 at Christie's.

1996 Fans around the world were saddened by the demise of the group Crowded House. They played their final gig in Australia at the Sydney Opera House.

1998 AOL (America On-Line) announced that it was to buy up Netscape.

1999 The rebuilt City Centre of Manchester was officially opened to the public. It cost £500million to rebuild following the IRA bombing three years earlier.

2003 At the Anglo-French summit, Tony Blair and Jacques Chirac backed plans for Europe to have its own military capability.

2003 Singer Michael Jackson launched a website to protest his innocence on child abuse charges.

2003 "Comedy terrorist" Aaron Barschak was jailed for 28 days for throwing paint over Turner Prize nominee Jake Chapman.

2003 The music arm of media giant Time Warner - home of artists such as REM and Madonna - was sold for $2.6bn to a group led by Edgar Bronfman.

2003 West Brom footballer Lee Hughes was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving.

2004 Both sides in Ukraine's disputed presidential vote warned of civil conflict, as the official result was rejected.

2004 A new agency, dubbed the British version of the FBI, was the central plank of plans to take on criminal gangs.

2004 England's cricketers cancelled their flight to Zimbabwe pending discussions about their controversial tour.

2004 Harry Redknapp resigned as manager of Portsmouth.

2005 King Abdullah of Jordan urged his new prime minister to wage a relentless war against Muslim extremists.

2005 Family and friends visited ex-footballer George Best after doctors said his hours were "numbered".

2005 An Algerian with suspected al-Qaeda links was found guilty of downloading information on how to blow-up a jet.

2005 Manchester radio station Key 103 was fined a record £125,000 after offensive comments made James Stannage. The presnter was fired by the station earlier in the year.

2005 Singer Sir Elton John said he would wed his long-term partner David Furnish in a low-key civil ceremony.

2006 British Airways said it was to review its uniform policy following criticism over a ban on a staff member wearing a cross.

2006 It was announced that the reality show "Love Island" would not return to ITV1, following poor ratings.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 24 November 2008)

Laurence Sterne, 295 (born 24 November 1713)
Irish novelist and clergyman best-known for Tristram Shandy.

Grace Darling, 193 (born 24 November 1815)
English lighthouse-keeper's daughter who became a heroine when she rowed out to rescue survivors from the wreck Forfarshire.

Frances Hodgson Burnett, 159 (born 24 November 1849)
Died 1924. English novelist famous for Little Lord Fauntleroy, The Little Princess and The Secret Garden.

William `Bat' Masterson, 155 (born 24 November 1853)
gambler, frontier lawman, and sportswriter.

Henri de Toulous-Lautrec, 144 (born 24 November 1864)
Died 1901. French artist who was stunted by a childhood accident and turned his back on his aristocratic background to live among the music halls and cafes of Montmartre and paint their inhabitants.

Scott Joplin, 140 (born 24 November 1868)
Died 1917. American ragtime pianist and composer.

Dale Carnegie, 120 (born 24 November 1888)
(Died 1955) Author of 'How to Win Friends'

Howard Duff, 91 (born 24 November 1917)
(Died 1990) Actor

Pete Best, 67 (born 24 November 1941)
Early member of The Beatles

Billy Connolly, 66 (born 24 November 1942)
Scottish comedian.

Bev Bevan, 62 (born 24 November 1946)
Member of ELO and The Move

Ted Bundy, 62 (born 24 November 1946)
(Died 1989) Outlaw

Clement "Clem" Burke, 53 (born 24 November 1955)
Drummer with Blondie

Ian Botham OBE, 53 (born 24 November 1955)
Cricketer

Terry Lewis, 52 (born 24 November 1956)
Music producer of Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis fame

Denise Crosby, 51 (born 24 November 1957)
Actress - Star Trek Next Generation's Lt Tasha Yar

Edward Stourton, 51 (born 24 November 1957)
TV presenter

Carmel, 49 (born 24 November 1959)
Singer of Carmel - biggest UK hit 'Bad Day'

Joe 'Run' Simmons, 41 (born 24 November 1967)
Member of Run DMC

Dawn Robinson, 40 (born 24 November 1968)
Member of En Vogue

________________________________________

GUESS THE YEAR 1984

Rajiv Gandhi was sworn in as India's premier.

Joseph Stalin’s daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva went home to Moscow 17 years after she went into exile and was stripped of her Soviet citizenship.

The Indian prime minister Mrs Indira Gandhi was cremated.

Marvin Gaye Senior was sentenced to 6 years (suspended) imprisonment for the manslaughter of his son. The world of Soul music lost one of its most gifted singer.

A Dublin High Courtjudge froze striking British mineworkers' money following May's High Court decision that the strike, by now in its 35th week, was illegal and that the union had to pay a fine of £200,000 ($109,000) within 14 days or have its assets seized.

A huge explosion rocked Mexico City as ten tanks of liquid gas blew up at a chemical factory. Flames shot 300ft (100m) into the air, and surrounding slum areas were showered with burning debris and a cloud of poisonous gas. More than 500 people lost their lives and some 10,000 homes were destroyed. Around a quarter of a million citizens had to be evacuated. Firemen fought for 18 hours to bring the fire under control.

Michael Jackson received his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and huge crowds turned out to see the superstar.

An extraordinary gathering of British rock stars, including Phil Collins, Sting, George Michael, Bono and Boy George took place at Sarm Studios in London to record "Do They Know It's Christmas?". The song was written by Boomtown Rat Bob Geldof and Midge Ure of Ultravox. All proceeds from the single were to go directly towards famine relief.

More than 3000 people are feared killed and hundreds of thousands injured in the world's worst-ever industrial accident following a chemical spill at a pesticide factory in India. A storage tank at the Union Carbide (India) plant in Bhopal, central India, began leaking just after midnight, sending a deadly gas spreading silently through the sleeping city. In three hours the tank leaked more than 30 tons of the chemical, methyl isocyanate (MIC). Most of those killed suffocated or choked to death. Many survivors suffered severe lung damage, while others were blinded or had heart, kidney or liver damage. The plant was shut down as soon as the spill was discovered, and five Union Carbide officials were arrested. The government declared the city a disaster area and asked for assistance. Union Carbide pledged to compensate victims as if the accident had happened in the US.

In Oslo, Desmond Tutu, Anglican Bishop of Johannesburg, had to wait an extra 20 minutes to receive his Nobel Peace Prize when the ceremony is interrupted by a bomb threat.

Britain and China signed an agreement in Beijing, in which Britain agreed to transfer full sovereignty of Hong Kong to China in 1997.

Ted Hughes was appointed Poet Laureate.

....and we ask you to ....GUESS THE YEAR ....1984

23rd November 2008

(day 327, 39 remaining) (LY 328/39)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Clement I, pope
St Alexander, prince,
St Columbanus,
St Amphilochius,
St Trudo or Trond,
St Gregory of Girgenti,
and St Felicitas.

History Test for November 23rd

Who resigned as the manager of the England football team today in 1993? -Graham Taylor

Who was the Flemish impostor and pretender to the English throne, hanged today in 1499? -Perkin Warbeck

Which horror film star was born William Henry Pratt today in 1887? -Boris Karloff

Children's author Roald Dahl died today in 1990. 'The B.F.G.' is the title of one of his stories. What do the initials stand for? -`Big Friendly Giant'

Born today in 1934, Australian Lew Hoad was a champion in which sport? -Tennis

Events today...

1499 Perkin Warbeck, a Flemish-born imposter who claimed to be the Duke of York, presumed killed with his brother Edward V in 1483, was hanged after two unsuccessful attempts to escape from the Tower of London.

1670 Molière’s satirical play Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme was premiered in Paris.

1852 Britain’s first pillarboxes were intruduced today at points in St. Helier on Jersey. They were green.

1889 The world’s first jukebox was unveiled in the Palais Royal Saloon in San Francisco by Mr. Louis Glass, General Manager of the Pacific Phonograph Company.

1897 The pencil sharpener was patented by J. L. Love

1906 Italian operatic tenor Enrico Caruso was fined $10 for sexual harassment.

1910 Death of Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen, US murderer, executed.

1921 US President Warren Harding banned doctors from prescribing beer, eliminating a loophole in the prohibition law.

1934 Death of Arthur Pinero, British dramatist.

1941 Death of P. C. Wren, British novelist.

1943 "BFBS" (British Forces Broadcasting Service) began broadcasting.

1956 Petrol was rationed in Britain and driving tests were suspended as a response the Suez crisis which threatened oil supplies.

1960 "The Magnificent Seven" received its premiere.

1963 The BBC premiered a new sci-fi TV show called Dr. Who, telling of the adventures of the eponymous Doctor, one of the Time Lords, and his struggle against implacable enemies, gravel-voiced robots called Daleks. The first episode starred William Hartnell as Dr Who and Anna Ford as his female companion.

1964 The Rolling Stones were banned by the BBC from recording sessions after they turned up late for two different shows.

1968 Singer Tammy Wynette topped the country music charts with her song "Stand by Your Man".

1973 Death of Sessue Hayakawa, (aged 83) Japanese actor 'Bridge over River Kwai'

1976 Death of André Malraux, French novelist.

1979 IRA bomber Thomas McMahon received a life sentence for the murder of Lord Mountbatten.

1979 Death of Merle Oberon, Anglo-Indian actress whose films included The Scarlet Pimpernel, A Song to Remember and Wuthering Heights.

1980 A violent earthquake struck Southern Italy, killing over 4,000 people.

1988 Sumo champion Chionofuji became the fifth sumo wrestler ever to win 50 consecutive matches.

1990 Death of Roald Dahl, (aged 74) Author 'James and the Giant Peach' 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory'

1991 Death of Klaus Kinski, (aged 65) Actor

1992 Death of Roy Acuff, (aged 89) Country singer

1993 England's football manager, Graham Taylor, resigned his post.

1995 Death of Junior Walker, (aged 53) Jazz performer 'Walk in the Night'

1995 Death of Louis Malle, (aged 63) Director 'Atlantic City'

1995 Michael Jackson and Bjork won the "Best Male" and "Best Female" artists awards at the MTV European Awards show in Paris.

2003 Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze resigned amid massive protests over disputed election results.

2003 Police wanted to speak to West Bromwich Albion striker Lee Hughes in connection with a fatal road crash in Coventry.

2004 Thousands of Ukrainians surrounded the presidential offices in a second night of protests over the election.

2004 A Fathers 4 Justice activist was arrested after dressing as Santa and chaining himself to lamps at Buckingham Palace.

2004 A £100,000 reward was offered as police hailed Ozzy Osbourne for "very courageously" tackling a jewellery thief in his home.

2004 Man Utd qualifed for the Champions League knockout phase in Sir Alex Ferguson's 1,000th game in charge.

2004 Zimbabwe denies British journalists entry, putting England's cricket tour in doubt.

2006 The presenter of BBC Radio 4's "The World at" One programme, Nick Clarke, died of cancer, aged 58.

2006 Pink Floyd star David Gilmour announced he was to release a single featuring songs by former band member Syd Barrett.

2006 The BBC confirmed that the adventure drama "Robin Hood" was to return for a second series in 2007.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 23 November 2008)

William H. "Billy The Kid" Bonney (born Henry McCarty), 149 (born 23 November 1859)
Died 1881. American outlaw who finally met his death at the gun of Sheriff Pat Garrett.

Valdemar Poulson, 139 (born 23 November 1869)
Danish inventor of the tape recorder.

Manual de Falla, 132 (born 23 November 1876)
Spanish composer best-known for Nights in the Gardens of Spain and the ballets El Amor Brujo and The Three-cornered Hat.

Boris Karloff, 121 (born 23 November 1887)
Died 1969. English actor who specialised in horror roles - most notably as Frankenstein’s monster - and starred in The Mask of Fu Manchu, The Mummy and The Body Snatcher.

Sir Peter Saunders, 97 (born 23 November 1911)
British impressario who staged Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap, which broke the world record for the longest-running play.

Michael Gough, 92 (born 23 November 1916)
Actor - Alfred in 'Batman'

Perez Prado, 92 (born 23 November 1916)
(Died 1983) Bandleader

Michael Gough, 91 (born 23 November 1917)
British actor whose films include The Boys from Brazil and The Go-Between.

Lew Hoad, 74 (born 23 November 1934)
Australian tennis player who won the men’s singles title at Wimbledon Two years running.

Betty Everett, 69 (born 23 November 1939)
Singer - 'It's In His Kiss'

Susan Anspach, 69 (born 23 November 1939)
Actress

Sue Nichols, 65 (born 23 November 1943)
Actress - Audrey Roberts in 'Coronation Street'

David Rappaport, 57 (born 23 November 1951)
(Died 1990) Actor - 'Timebandits' 'L A Law'

Bruce Hornsby, 54 (born 23 November 1954)
Singer - biggest UK hit 'The Way It Is'

Merv Hughes, 47 (born 23 November 1961)
The cricketer with the mammoth moustache

Zoe Ball, 38 (born 23 November 1970)
Children's TV presenter; daughter of Johnny

22nd November 2008

National Day of Lebanon.

(day 326, 40 remaining) (LY 327/40)

Religious events today...

Feast day of St Cecilia or Cecily,
and Saints Philemon and Apphia.

History Test for November 22nd

Name the American author of the novels `The Call of the Wild', and `White Fang', who died today in 1916. -Jack London

President Kennedy was assassinated today in 1963. 11 years earlier, he was elected senator of which state? -Massachusetts

Born today in 1913, which composer wrote 'The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra'? -Benjamin Britten

Pirate Edward Teach died today in 1718. By what name was he better known? -'Blackbeard'

Born today in 1967, who became the youngest ever winner of the Men's Singles Championships at Wimbledon? -Boris Becker

QUOTE “Let no one expect us to disarm unilaterally. We are not a naive people.” - Yuri Andropov, Soviet statesman and president, 1982.

QUOTE “O for a life of sensations rather than of thoughts!” - John Keats, British poet, in a letter to Benjamin Bailey, 1817.

Events today...

1428 Richard Nevill, Earl of Warwick, so-called Kingmaker who was the power behind the throne during the Wars Of The Roses, was born. He died at the Battle of Barnet in 1471

1497 Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope in his search for a route to India.

1718 The notorious English pirate Edward "Blackbeard" Teach met his death in hand-to-hand combat with Lieutenant Robert Maynard of HMS Pearl. For five years Teach had been the scourge of shipping in the Caribbean and off the coast of Virginia and the Carolinas. North Carolina planters, despairing of help from their corrupt governor Charles Eden (who was in fact in league with "Blackbeard"), turned to Virginia governor Alexander Spotswood. He in turn sent two British frigates, the Pearl and the Lyme, to bring to an end Teach's long reign of terror.

1774 Baron Clive of Plassey, the English soldier and colonial administrator known as Clive of India, died of an overdose of opium shortly after being vindicated of improper behaviour in the affairs of the East India Company.

1808 Thomas Cook, who pioneered the holiday package tour, was born in Derbyshire.

1819 Mary Ann Evans, who took the pseudonym George Eliot and wrote The Mill On The Floss, was born in Arbury, Warwickshire.

1900 Death of Sir Arthur Sullivan, aged 58, composer of the Savoy Operas with librettist W. S. Gilbert.

1901 Richard Strauss's opera Feuersnot received its premiere in Dresden.

1902 Death of Germany's wealthiest man, steel magnate Friedrich Krupp.

1902 Fire destroyed the Williamsburg Bridge over the East River in New York.

1904 The electric motor was patented by M. Pfatischer

1907 The Cunard liner Mauretania arrived in New York, completing her maiden voyage.

1916 Death of American novelist Jack London, author of Call of the Wild and White Fang.

1916 Death of Jack London, US novelist.

1918 One hundred women police officers went on patrol in the streets of London.

1934 The song "Santa Claus is Coming To Town" was heard for the first time. It was on the Eddie Cantor radio show in the U.S.

1938 The first coelacanth, a prehistoric fish believed to be extinct, was caught off the South African coast.

1943 The R.A.F. started to bomb Berlin.

1946 A revolutionary new pen which would write 200,000 words with out refilling, blotting or smudging went on sale in Britain at £2.75. It was the invention of Hungarian journalist Ladislaw Biro, inspired by the quick-drying printer's ink he saw in Budapest before the Second World War. The business end was a rotating ball point, connected to a capillary tuhe which holds the ink. In the last year of the war 30,000 biros were produced for RAF flyers, who found them invaluable in the air.

1955 New rock 'n' roll sensation Elvis Presley, whose wild stage act had been causing audience riots all over the South, signed for the giant RCA Corporation. His first five records were released on Memphis's Sun label, whose owner Sam Phillips was to receive $35,000 (£19,000) for Elvis's contract and song-publishing rights. Elvis himself got $5,000 (£2,700), part of which he intended to spend on a new Cadillac. "No singer is worth that much," said Columbia's Mitch Miller, one of the disappointed bidders for the man known as the "Hillbilly Cat".

1956 The 16th Olympic Games opened in Melbourne.

1957 Singers Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel appeared on the show "American Bandstand" billed as "Tom and Jerry".

1963 Death of C S Lewis, (aged 64) Author

1963 The world was in mourning at the news that President John F. Kennedy had been shot and killed in Dallas, Texas. The 46-year-old President and Mrs Kennedy were in Texas, on the latest leg of a tour of the southern states to gather support for the Democratic Party. The fatal shooting occurred in the morning as the presidential motorcade swept through Dealey Plaza in downtown Dallas. The president died in his wife's arms during the dash to the nearest hospital. Accounts of the event were confused, with witnesses claiming to have heard one or more shots from several directions, but a high-powered rifle was found in an upstairs room of the Texas School Book Depository, the window of which overlooked Dealey Plaza. Later Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested and charged with the murder. Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as President on the flight back to Washington.

1968 The Beatles released what is now regarded as one of their best albums. It was called "The White Album".

1975 Following the death of General Franco, the new King of Spain was proclaimed (Juan Carlos).

1977 The Anglo-French Concorde, the world's first supersonic airliner. finally entered service on the New York run, eight years after her first flight, and more than a year after the inaugural Washington service. The British Airways Concorde, piloted by captains Walpole and Oudal, arrived in New York at the same time as the Air France Concorde flight from Paris. There had been an acrimonious campaign against the plane by anti-noise protesters, who had pressured the New York Port Authority into taking the issue all the way to the Supreme Court. Among the charges levelled at Concorde was that it had been responsible for the severe winter of 1976-77. Planned demonstrations turned out to be a non-event, with TV crews reduced to pressing a passing cab-driver into service as a protester.

1980 Death of Mae West, (aged 88) Actress "come up and see me some time" and "I used to be Snow White, but I drifted"

1980 The menacing "Stealth Bomber" aircraft was put on public display for the first time.

1983 Death of Michael Conrad, (aged 62) Actor Sgt Phil Esterhaus of 'Hill Street Blues'

1986 Death of Scatman Crothers, (aged 76) Jazz singer

1986 The awesome punching power of Mike Tyson made him the youngest-ever heavyweight boxing champion in Las Vegas today at the age of 20. He took the World Boxing Council heavyweight crown of Trevor Berbick in under two rounds.

1989 A 550-pound (250 kg) remote-control bomb killed Lebanon's president Rene Moawad and 23 others.

1990 Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who had led Britain since 1979, announced her resignation.

1990 Twenty thousand protesters marched in Bulgaria to demand the resignation of the communist government.

1990 Margaret Thatcher, then Prime Minister announced her resignation. She had been elected into the post in 1979.

1992 Death of Sterling Holloway, (aged 87) Actor and the voice of Disney's Winnie the Pooh

1996 Princess Diana's mother Frances Shand-Kydd was banned from driving for a year after admitting drink-driving.

2003 Georgia's President Shevardnadze declared a state of emergency after the opposition partyseized key buildings.

2003 Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan said he was ashamed that the Istanbul suicide bombers were Turkish nationals.

2003 An ally of Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi was cleared of bribing judges in a case which saw the leader as a defendant.

2003 England's won the Rugby World Cup final with a 20-17 victory over Australia. Jonny Wilkinson scored the winning goal only seconds from the end of extra time.

2003 Fans of Michael Jackson - facing charges of child molestation - arranged vigils in support of the singer.

2003 A charge of malicious damage against Coldplay singer Chris Martin was dropped by Australian police.

2003 Australia won the third Ashes Test to seal a 3-0 series win over Great Britain.

2004 A Ministry of Defence investigation was underway after Black Watch soldiers killed a suspected suicide bomber.

2004 Oasis singer Liam Gallagher was fined 50,000 euros (£35,000) after a fight in a Munich hotel two years earlier.

2004 A Ukrainian man was jailed for murdering a Wolverhampton football fan at the Euro 2004 tournament in Portugal.

2005 Angela Merkel was sworn in as Germany's first woman chancellor at a ceremony in parliament in Berlin.

2006 Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt was questioned as a witness by police in the cash-for-honours inquiry.

________________________________________

BIRTHDAYS (for 22 November 2008)

Thomas Cook, 200 (born 22 November 1808)
Died 1892. English travel agent who pioneered the concept of the package tour.

George Eliot, 189 (born 22 November 1819)
(Died 1880) Novelist

Charles de Gaulle, 118 (born 22 November 1890)
(Died 1970) French president 1958-1969

Wiley Post, 110 (born 22 November 1898)
1st pilot to fly solo around the world.

Hoagy Carmichael, 109 (born 22 November 1899)
(Died 1981) Actor, composer - 'Star Dust'

Benjamin Britten, 95 (born 22 November 1913)
British composer whose works include the operas Peter Grimes and Billy Budd.

Rodney Dangerfield, 87 (born 22 November 1921)
Comedian actor

Arthur Hiller, 85 (born 22 November 1923)
Director 'Love Story'

Geraldine Page, 84 (born 22 November 1924)
(Died 1987) Actress

Robert Vaughn, 76 (born 22 November 1932)
Actor 'Man from Uncle'

John Bird, 72 (born 22 November 1936)
Actor and wit - 'Rory Bremner'

Allen Garfield, 69 (born 22 November 1939)
Actor

Terry Gilliam, 68 (born 22 November 1940)
Python man and director 'Brazil' 'Fisher King'

Tom Conti, 67 (born 22 November 1941)
Actor

Billie Jean King, 65 (born 22 November 1943)
American tennis player who won 20 Wimbledon titles.

Mushtaq Mohammad, 65 (born 22 November 1943)
cricket - Northants and Pakistan batsman

Tina Weymouth, 58 (born 22 November 1950)
Member of Talking Heads

Wayne Larkins, 55 (born 22 November 1953)
cricket - Northants Durham and England opener

Jamie Lee Curtis, 50 (born 22 November 1958)
Actress - 'Halloween' 'True Lies' 'Fish Called Wanda'

Mariel Hemingway, 47 (born 22 November 1961)
Actress

Stuart Barnes, 46 (born 22 November 1962)
rugby union - Bath and England stand off

Boris Becker, 41 (born 22 November 1967)
German tennis star who won the men's singles title at Wimbledon at the age of only 17.

Kyran Bracken, 37 (born 22 November 1971)
rugby union - Saracens and England scrum half

Scott Robinson, 29 (born 22 November 1979)
Member of Five

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What is the point of Woolworths?

Woolworths in Glasgow

By Tom Geoghegan
BBC News Magazine

A year away from its centenary, Woolworths is reportedly on sale for the price of a modest bag of pick 'n' mix. But it's still much loved and millions of shoppers go through its doors every week. To buy what?

Few American imports have been taken so fondly to British hearts as Woolworths.

Even its nickname suggests as much. While "Smiths" and "Marks" could claim to be High Street equivalents, they're just abbreviations of convenience. "Woolies" resonates with real affection.

It's a love borne out of childhood visits to the pick 'n' mix, or a few years later for the seven-inch single storming the charts. Or to the only photo booth in town, found in the corner next to the ironing boards and bean bags.

Or that frantic, last-minute Christmas Eve shopping dash to bag a Daniel O'Donnell calendar, a car scratch remover and a Ronco CD player that resembles a football.

Unknown Woolworths store, 1955
Christmas rush, 1950s-style

But while memories remain as strong as ever, the reality of 2008 is that Woolworths is facing bankruptcy. Talks are under way to sell its 815 stores for as little as £1 as the chain grapples with falling sales and mounting debt.

A visit to its branch in Elephant and Castle in south London might offer some clues to its present plight. There are a couple of dozen shoppers - mostly mothers with buggies - but few are walking out with Woolworths bags.

Confectionery and half-price toys fill the aisles while music, an area in which it led the market until the 1990s, now occupies a small corner, where a newly-released compilation CD will set you back a whopping £13.71. There's a healthy selection of cheap DVDs - the sight of an obscure Danny DeVito film The Oh in Ohio going for £2 means you can only be in Woolies - and computer games.

But it's the Aladdin's Cave that sets Woolies apart. Where under the same roof could you buy a magnifying LED headlight (£10) and a cheese grater (£3.50)?

Fouad Mohammed
I go there about three times a week, usually for kids clothes like a Spiderman outfit and there's a good selection of toys
Fouad Mohammed

Yes, there's incoherence in the layout - the sun lotion is next to the cookie jars next to the school bags next to the calendars. But maybe that's part of its charm, making surprises like a wooden vintage edition of Monopoly more unexpected and satisfying.

So what are shoppers buying? Judging by the odd empty shelf, the wine glasses, pillows and cordless kettles, all carrying Woolies' own Worth-It brand (a successor to the late, lamented Winfield), are big draws. But it's the toys and children's clothes that people are walking out with.

Rubber gloves

For nearly 60 years, Maureen Dulieu has been shopping at Woolworths. On this occasion, she went in looking for a Barbie pencil case and ended up with three pairs of rubber gloves and a diary.

"It used to cater for everyone. Anything to do with sewing and embroidery. You could go in and get elastic and cotton reels but now there's not enough stuff, not enough stocking-fillers, not enough household goods like floor mops and sponges. It's lost its way, like M&S, but that got better."

Fouad Mohammed, 37, emerges with a Power Rangers toy set and a DVD, both for his son Eamon, four.

"I go there about three times a week, usually for kids clothes like a Spiderman outfit and there's a good selection of toys. Sometimes they sell three- for-two or half-price. It's always stuff for the children, never for me."

William and Kate wedding souvenir
William and Kate 'engagement' souvenirs were scrapped

Other shoppers made surprise purchases. "I only go there for stationery for university, it's cheap," says Melissa Felix, 30, who's clutching a pick 'n' mix bag. "But today I didn't get any, then I saw the sweets. I used to get them when I was little."

Although she'd be sad to see it close, she says, Tesco and Asda offer a similar selection of goods you can pick up while you're buying your food.

The Woolworths story began stateside on 21 June, 1879, in Pennsylvania. Frank Woolworth opened his first store with the revolutionary idea of setting a fixed price for his goods, either five or 10 cents - not unlike the Poundstretchers and Poundlands of today.

They soon spread across the US and in 1909 he opened the first branch in the UK in Liverpool, after noting that "a good penny and sixpence store, run by a live Yankee, would be a sensation here". Sure enough, 350 stores opened between the wars.

THE WOOLWORTHS STORY
Frank Woolworth
1873: Frank W Woolworths becomes a sales assistant in New York
1879: Opens first store in Pennsylvania
1909: Opens first British general store in Liverpool and more follow across north of England
1970s: Boomtime. Drops the "FW" from its store names
1982: UK business is sold to Paternoster. Now British owned
2001: Becomes a plc

It was the first chain to make its own brand items, so minimising its dependence on suppliers. The template even extended to music, with Embassy Records making cover versions of hits in the 1960s, when the chain was at its peak with more than 1,000 shops across the UK.

Decline began during the 1970s. New owners took over in 1982 and its demise has been mirrored by the ascent of the large supermarkets.

Ironically, the reason why it was so successful nearly 100 years ago is the same reason why it's now in trouble, says Greg Hodge of Planet Retail.

"They brought everything under one roof and you could go to a place that sold everything. Now that charm has worn off."

If you were starting now and you wanted to invent a retailer, you wouldn't invent Woolworths, he says. "As a shopping composition, it's not clear what it is. You could say it has an identity crisis.

"You tend to go there only ever as a last resort when everyone else has run out of what you want. The British have an empathy and an emotional attachment to it but if you talk to consumers they don't know when they last bought anything of any value there."

It has suffered for two reasons, he says. First the large supermarkets started selling non-foods and then like all music retailers it was hugely undermined by websites like Amazon.

"These two problems really hit it but it's stood still a bit. It tried to offer cheaper CDs and improved its private label range Worth-It, which did well for school uniform. It branched out into very cheap toys, which had relative success.

"The sad thing is that people I speak to still have a place in their hearts for it but it tends to be elderly or people with children. But even they can look at the toys and see they can get them cheaper at Tesco."

'No tears'

When asked what are its strengths, a spokesman for Woolworths says the answer lies in its annual report, which says the chain focuses on "the home, family and entertainment", although the chairman notes in his statement that it is now less dependent on CDs and has moved more towards books and computer games.

Jeremy Baker, a retail lecturer from London Metropolitan University, says the downturn is forcing through some changes which were already inevitable.

Unknown Woolworths store in the US
Where it all began, in the US

"The demise of Woolworths is one of those. People have been talking about it for years and it was going to come at some point and the crisis just speeds up change.

"It's not that sad, because it shows the British consumer has got used to a higher and higher standard every year and Woolworths was left behind."

The in-store environment isn't that good and you're not sure what they're good at, he says. If you want a cheap suit you think of Primark and if you want expensive food you think of Waitrose, but there are no items to associate with Woolworths. It has no unique qualities.

"Going into Primark, the whole atmosphere says 'It's fine, this is cheap' but you feel good about yourself," he says. "But you feel a loser going into Woolworths."

There is still hope of an M&S-style reinvention. But should Woolies go under, Britain won't just have lost a chainstore, it will have lost an institution.

Sea eagles could be reintroduced

Sea eagle
The sea eagle is the UK's largest bird of prey

Conservationists are planning to bring the sea eagle, the UK's largest bird of prey, back to the skies above England.

The bird, known as "flying barn doors" because of its size, could be reintroduced into Norfolk next summer if the scheme gets the go-ahead.

The government's conservation agency Natural England, the RSPB and Anglian Water hope to bring back the species.

It was driven out of England more than 200 years ago and had disappeared from the UK by 1918.

The plans come after the sea eagle, also known as the white-tailed eagle, was brought back to west Scotland in a project that began in 1975.

There are now more than 40 breeding pairs in the area, with 34 chicks produced last year, and another scheme has begun in east Scotland.

Without them our ecosystem is disfigured, our natural and cultural heritage diminished and we are all the poorer
Rob Lucking, RSPB

Natural England's chief scientist, Tom Tew, said returning the sea eagle to East Anglia would boost the local economy, put a top predator back in its natural place in the ecosystem and be "inspirational" for people.

On the Isle of Mull it has been estimated that the reintroduction of the birds bring in an extra £1.5m a year to the local economy.

Dr Tew said: "They are a magnificent bird and the UK's rarest bird.

"Bringing them back would be inspirational to people and a boost for the local economy brought by eco-tourism.

"They are also the missing piece in the jigsaw, the top predator which should be in a wetland ecosystem."

Scottish problems

He said Norfolk had been assessed as the best place in England for releasing sea eagles, because it contained large areas of wetland habitat.

And with only about 7,000 pairs of the eagle in the world, establishing a population in England could also help global efforts to conserve the species, Dr Tew added.

Rob Lucking, RSPB area manager for The Wash and North Norfolk, said: "The sight of birds of prey like the white-tailed eagle is a sure sign of a strong and healthy environment.

"Without them our ecosystem is disfigured, our natural and cultural heritage diminished and we are all the poorer.

"A re-introduction must be done properly and with due regard to the people and wildlife nearby but, if it can be done, then the sight of eagles soaring over Norfolk would give a huge lift to people's spirits and to the local economy."

The reintroduction of the birds in Scotland has produced problems, including poisoning incidents and claims that the birds have been taking lambs.

Natural England and the RSPB are now keen to consult local people and landowners before deciding whether to attempt to reintroduce them elsewhere.

10 things we didn't know last week

Snippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. The Queen wore flares.
More details

2. The Mary Rose might have been sunk by a French cannon.
More details

3. Parents pushing children in away-facing buggies talk to them less, and their offspring appear to be more stressed.
More details

4. Business Secretary Peter Mandelson is a practised and "flamboyant" dancer.
More details (the Guardian)

5. There was rumoured to be a 14-minute-long Beatles track called Carnival of Life, although many fans thought its existence was a myth.
More details

6. They were wrong - it exists.
Ibid

7. On the Buses star Reg Varney opened the UK's first cash dispenser.
More details

8. Britain's not in record debt - if you account for inflation and economic growth.
More details

9. Some Albanians settle family feuds through an ancient code called "Kanun" which allows revenge to be exacted on any male adult member of a family, but precludes entry to that person's property.
More details

10. Camel urine is sought after for its medicinal effects in India's Bihar state, and sells for £1.34 a litre..
More details

Secret art postcards go on sale

The Secret Postcard sale features a diverse range of designs

Postcards designed by some of the world's best known artists and designers are to go on sale later at London's Royal College of Art.

In total 2,700 postcards - some by established artists, others by students - will go on sale, each for £40, at the annual Secret Postcard Sale.

But the identity of the artist is only revealed once the artwork is bought.

Artists Tracey Emin and Grayson Perry, as well as shoe designer Manolo Blahnik have all made contributions this year.

Others to contribute include photographer David Bailey, former Clash member Paul Simonon, Wallace & Gromit creator Nick Park and artist Yoko Ono.

It's one of the most democratic art sales in the world - everyone has an equal chance of getting a big name
Professor Glynn Williams

The event raises money for the RCA's Fine Art Student Award Fund.

Professor Glynn Williams, head of fine art at the RCA, said: "We are incredibly pleased with this year's postcards donated by some of the world's leading artists and designers.

"RCA Secret is about securing the future of the next generation of artists and when the public buy postcards at the event they are helping to make this possible.

"It's one of the most democratic art sales in the world - everyone has an equal chance of getting a big name."

The postcards have been exhibited in the RCA galleries and online over the past week.

The exhibition was the brainchild of a student of the London university in 1994.

To date, sales of postcards have topped £1m for the fund, helping hundreds of emerging artists.

21.11.08

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Download Junkie

The key highlight this week is Foxit PDF Reader 3 which will enable you to open and browse PDF files, as well as make basic notes, annotations and then send on to other users. You can do this with Adobe PDF Reader, but Foxit is lightweight in both size and its use of resources. Other highlights include Microsoft Small basic, SuMo which will enable you to check for updates to installed software, Floola 4 which is an alternative iPod manager, a new version of Google SketchUp 7 Free and a final release of PC Tools Disk Suite 2009. If you want to partition your drive, take a look at the free Partition Manager Express 9 that contains basic tools to copy, resize or delete a partition.


Highlights This Week Include:

Mozilla Thunderbird 2.0.0.18
Freeware
Minor refresh for the email client
20 November 2008

Foxit PDF Reader 3
Freeware
Portable & quick PDF reader
20 November 2008
SUMo 2.3.8.64
Freeware
Keep your installed software up-to-date
19 November 2008
Microsoft Small Basic
Freeware
A simple programming language for beginners
18 November 2008
Floola 4
Freeware
Alternative & popular iPod manager
18 November 2008
Google SketchUp Free 7
Freeware
Design your own home extension
18 November 2008
Adobe AIR 1.5
Freeware
Run various web-based applications
17 November 2008
PC Tools Disk Suite 2009 v1.0.0.57
Trial Software
Complete disk maintenance & optimisation suite
17 November 2008
FlashGot 1.1.4
Freeware
Download manager for Firefox
17 November 2008
Paragon Partition Manager 9 Express
Freeware
Manage your basic partitioning tasks with this free tool
14 November 2008

Recommended Downloads
  1. Paragon Hard Disk Manager 8.5 SE
  2. iolo Search and Recover 5
  3. PC Tools Desktop Maestro 2
  4. Iolo System Mechanic 8
  5. Spyware Doctor 6 Starter Edition
  6. Paragon Drive Backup 9 Express
  7. Avanquest Connection Manager
  8. Wise-FTP 3
  9. Ashampoo WinOptimizer 4
  10. Mozilla Firefox 3.01
See more recommended downloads..

Hope for cut in music fees after landmark legal win

BBPA says "victory for common sense" could be worth millions of pounds to sector

Pubs could enjoy a major cut in the fees they have to pay for playing background music after a landmark legal victory in the High Court today.

The British Beer & Pub Association (BBPA) and the British Hospitality Association (BHA) were appealing against the decision of the government’s Copyright Tribunal on the value of the fees that venues have to pay for recorded music.

Due to a fees hike in January 2005, some pubs' fees rose by around 400 per cent. And the BBPA and BHA estimates the average pub and and restaurant has paid an extra £500 - £600 over the last four years, a total of at least £12 million.

Royalty collection firm Phongraphic Performance Limited (PPL), which sets and collects the fees, wanted to limit the Copyright Tribunal’s ability to set a tariff on "broadcast music" only - coming from a radio or television.

And it wanted a separate tribunal for "non-broadcast music" - coming from a jukebox, stereo or MP3 player.

But the judge, Mr Justice Kitchen said this was "inconvenient, cumbersome, expensive, and would involve a waste of judicial and public resources".

This means after today's ruling that the Copyright Tribunal will be able to set one combined fee based on a pub that uses "broadcast" and "non-broadcast" music.

Rob Hayward, the BBPA’s chief executive, said: “This is a victory for common sense in an extremely complex area of law.

“We now look forward to going back to the Copyright Tribunal, where we will do our utmost to secure a reduction in the fees which will give much needed financial relief to those licensees who are currently paying PPL well over the odds for music in their pubs.”

BHA chief executive, Bob Cotton, added: “We are more than pleased to have been able to deliver this result for our members, which raises the real prospect of reverting the charges for the playing of background music to a much more sensible and sustainable level.”

Shipwreck to escape sibling's shadow

HMHS Britannic
The Britannic was commandeered as a hospital ship

Forgotten by many and unheard of by most. Yet the sister-ship of Titanic is starting to escape from the shadow of the world's iconic shipwreck.

HMHS Britannic was completed at Belfast's Harland and Wolff shipyard two years after Titanic was lost in 1912. But she in turn went to the bottom, the victim of enemy action in the First World War.

BBC News correspondent, Mike McKimm, joined a Greek scientific expedition and dived to the Britannic to bring back dramatic footage of one of the world's biggest wrecks.

And the expedition also set out to find the answer to what sank her. Was it a torpedo or a mine?

The Britannic she was bigger, better and safer than her ill-fated Titanic sister. But before she could carry a single fare-paying passenger across the Atlantic she was commandeered as a hospital ship.

And so, in her white livery with huge red crosses, His Majesty's Hospital Ship Britannic plied to and forth from Southampton to the eastern Mediterranean, bringing home thousands of wounded service men.

The propeller of the Britannic
Thirty people lost their lives onboard the Britannic

Just after breakfast, on 21st November, 1916, off Greece, there was an explosion near her bow and within 55 minutes the ship had sunk.

Thirty lives were lost when two lifeboats were smashed by a still-rotating propeller. It was wartime and the loss of the ship was soon forgotten - until Frenchman Jacques Cousteau found her in 1975. She lay just over two miles off the island of Kea in just over 100 metres of water.

Using a mini sub belonging to the Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Mike McKimm was able to dive and film much of the ship for a BBC documentary. The pictures will also form part of a special website which already offers considerable underwater footage of the Titanic, also filmed by Mike.

"The Britannic is an important ship for historians," said Mike.

"It's one way to understand the technical changes made to large ships after Titanic. It's also the only easily accessed example of the giant Edwardian leviathans that were being built at the time.

"We were able to film the three huge propellers on the ship and understand the sheer scale of these things. On Titanic they are all but inaccessible and are in a very dangerous part of the wreck. But on Britannic they are very visible."

Mike McKimm beside the Thompson Dry Dock in Belfast
The Britannic like the Titanic was built in Belfast

Britannic lies on her starboard side, the side which took the impact of the explosion. So it's impossible to discover if it was a mine or torpedo from this evidence. At the time eyewitnesses claimed they saw two torpedo tracks heading towards the ship.

But after the war, the log of the German U boat, U 73 was examined and revealed that she had laid 12 mines in the Kea Channel, just two miles from where the Britannic lies. Mike's documentary shows the seabed at the location where the mines were supposed to be and reveals what they found there.

Unlike her famous sister, Britannic made few headlines. Sadly, the 30 deaths were negligible compared to the huge death toll of the First World War. She has just been forgotten. But modern technology and the renewed interest in Titanic and Belfast shipbuilding has also renewed interest in the Britannic.

Built with a double skin, taller internal bulkheads to prevent flooding and lots more lifeboats than Titanic, Britannic should have remained afloat and been a lot safer. But in fact she sank three times quicker than Titanic. The probable reason is that special watertight doors were left open in the panic to abandon her.

Finding out more about the ship and what led to her downfall has become the passion of her owner, Simon Mills. He bought the wreck in 1996 and has set about protecting her while still allowing divers access to the ship.

The hull of the Britannic
The Britannic lies off the coast of Greece

"My interest was more the historical conservation" explained Simon. "Diving has become a part of it. I have to work with divers to get what I require as much as they have to work with me to get what they require.

"I bought the ship for marine conservation. It's also the conserving of the artefacts. We want to create some sort of unique attraction around the world. It will combine science, history archaeology.

"I want to see Britannic conserved for future generations and if I can start the process rolling, that's brilliant."

Plans are already well advanced to start regular submarine visits to the ship for tourists. And for many, it is as close as they will ever get to one of the Titanic family. It takes just 10 minutes to reach Britannic by mini-sub.

"That's much quicker than the two and a half hours required to dive to Titanic", said Mike who has made both dives. "After being lost for more than half a century, the Britannic could soon be the biggest must-see attraction in the Mediterranean. It's a very spectacular wreck and a very special one."

Already Greek biologists are fascinated by the wreck. It has become a 'living' artificial reef in what is a very empty part of the Aegean Sea. Taken over by a wide variety of marine life, its turning into a natural laboratory for scientists who want to learn more about how such reefs might benefit the marine biodiversity of the seabed.

"In the Shadow of Titanic" can be seen on BBC One Northern Ireland, Sunday 23 November at 1625 GMT.

Doctor Who (before the Tardis)

William Hartnell as Doctor Who
Pictures from rehearsals have been published for the first time

DUSTED OFF
The Magazine delves into the archives

Newly released documents, which reveal the 1960s conception of Doctor Who, show how nervous the BBC was about producing a sci-fi show, writes Tom Geoghegan.

The Doctor without his time-travelling police box is difficult to imagine, but its creators initially proposed he journey through space in an invisible machine covered in light-resistant paint.

When BBC producers were devising the show in the early 1960s, they thought viewers should see no machine at all, only "a shape of nothingness".

The original Doctor Who

The BBC's head of drama Sydney Newman, who commissioned the first series, insisted an invisible machine would not work and the doctor's vehicle should be a strong visual symbol.

Wisely, writers also said a transparent, plastic bubble would be "lowgrade". But a seed of the Tardis idea is sown when they suggest using "some common object in the street" like a night-watchman's shelter.

These discussions are revealed in six previously unpublished documents, now digitised on the BBC Archive website. These include handwritten notes by Mr Newman, regarded by fans as the genius behind the original concept.

The papers, accompanied by previously unseen images at rehearsals, show deep concerns about bringing a science fiction drama to a mainstream audience - "not an automatic winner", says a researcher.

Creating the voice of the Daleks

It was regarded as a rather obscure subject, says BBC archivist Jim Sangster, and given the space limitations at Lime Grove studios that ruled out an ambitious set, this added up to a huge gamble.

"Even having done something as massive as Quatermass, they didn't have confidence in sci-fi. It was seen as niche and American.

"After Star Wars, we have a different view of course, and we see it as hugely entertaining and successful. But they were nervous - it wasn't a Western or a period drama. It was something really obscure and they had to do research into it."

Dead ringer

There was no fanfare when the first episode was discreetly advertised in the Radio Times on Saturday 23 November 1963, at 5.15pm, sandwiched between Grandstand and Juke Box Jury.

Doctor Who in 1963
In the first episodes, there were four main characters

That was typical of the times, says Mr Sangster. "They never said 'This is a TV event' because TV itself was an event. We only had two channels. ITV was all about spectacle and the BBC was a lot more dignified. So the Radio Times just says 'Here's something you might like to see.'"

At the start of that year, the BBC children's writer Cecil Webber had devised three "main characters", schoolgirl Biddy (later named Susan Foreman) and two teachers, Lola (later Barbara Wright) and Cliff (renamed Ian Chesterton). They were to be the audience's eyes and ears, through which viewers would learn about the mysterious father figure, the Doctor.

In Mr Cecil's illuminating background notes, he describes the Doctor as follows:

"A frail old man lost in space and time. They give him this name because they don't know who he is. He seems not to remember where he has come from: he is suspicious and capable of sudden malignance; he seems to have some undefined enemy; he is searching for something as well as fleeing from something. He has a 'machine' which enables them to travel together through time, through space and through matter."

It's hardly heroic but that description, apart from being frail, fits David Tennant perfectly, says Mr Sangster. He's quite unforgiving and it's up to humans to remind him of his moral duty. And the characteristics of the three humans have been amalgamated into female companions such as Billie Piper's Rose, he says.

Alternatives to the Tardis

That first description of the Doctor, played initially by an old-looking William Hartnell, still holds true today, says Doctor Who Online editor, Sebastian Brook, and his mystique is one of the show's guiding principles.

"The suspiciousness is something that's passed on through the years and the undefined enemy is things going wrong with the universe.

"And the mystery as well. It's not just a question mark, but the character itself - who is he? If that's ever resolved in the series, then that's the day it fails."

He believes Russell T Davies has seen these original ideas and gone back to basics to replicate its early success.

"He could have picked anything in 45 years to go back on. But as the show lost its way a bit during the 80s, it's interesting that he's picked that point at the beginning."

'Silly and condescending'

But what about the ideas that didn't make it?

Mr Newman scribbled "Nuts!" next to the suggestion that the Doctor's secret mission was to meddle with time and destroy the future. But six years later, an element of that was worked into the plot when the Time Lords arrived.

Sydney Newman
Sydney Newman is worshipped by fans as the man behind the show

In his background notes, Mr Webber had a brainstorm about ways the Doctor's identity could develop. He stopped short of making him appear as Santa Claus but he suggested Bethlehem as a location and the Doctor as Merlin, as Jacob Marley, and even the Doctor's wife as Cinderella's godmother.

But Mr Newman wrote in the margin: "I don't like this much - it reads silly and condescending. It doesn't get across the basis of teaching of educational experience - drama based upon and stemming from factual material and scientific phenomena and actual social history of past and future."

Mr Newman insisted that the show educate and inform, as well as entertain. Hence scenes where science teacher Ian discussed the property of acid on a planet, or history teacher Barbara enlightened viewers about the Aztecs.

A TOUCH OF TORCHWOOD
Doctor Who spin-off began in 2006 but some of its elements can be traced back to 1963
A plot written for the original Doctor but rejected, called Troubleshooters, can be seen in Torchwood
Not many dashing male leads but Captain Jack Harkness continues what began with Ian Chesterton and continued later with Harry Sullivan

But even Mr Newman's foresight failed him on occasion.

One of the cardinal rules for the new show, spelled out in one of the newly-released documents, is "No Bug-Eyed Monsters" - which Newman abbreviated to "No BEMs" - and no tin robots.

He was therefore angry to find that rule had been broken to accommodate tin-can baddies armed with plungers, called Daleks.

Producer Verity Lambert had commissioned Terry Nation to devise an alien and he had come up with one that would glide across the floor like a Russian dancer.

But Mr Newman's fury turned to delight when episode six of the first series, in which the Daleks made their debut, added six million viewers.

Even geniuses can get some things wrong.

Four philosophical questions to make your brain hurt

Jean-Paul Sartre (right)
Gauloise. Check. Expansive hand gestures. Check. Get that philosopher look

David Bain
It's World Philosophy Day - an opportunity to contemplate one's very existence and whether computer monitors really exist, says David Bain.

People expect different things of philosophers. Some expect us to be sages. When these people meet me, my heart sinks, since I know theirs is about to. Others expect us to have a steady supply of aphorisms up our sleeves, such as that love is never having to say you're sorry (something no partner of mine has ever been persuaded of).

They too are disappointed when they meet me, especially when I say that the glass so beloved by optimists and pessimists is both half full and half empty.

Others expect of us not sagacity, but madness, or at least outlandish beliefs. And here, it must be said, some philosophers really have delivered. Thales believed that everything is made of water, for example, while Pythagoras avoided eating beans because he believed they have souls.

Andre Glucksmann, Bernard-Henri Levy
Eccentric hair: The mark of a modern-day French philosopher

As Princeton philosopher David Lewis once said: "When philosophers follow where argument leads, too often they are led to doctrines indistinguishable from sheer lunacy."

But beware. this is the same David Lewis who believed that, for each of the ways things might have been but are not, there is a world at which they are that way, eg a world at which your counterpart is spending today with the world's greatest sex god or goddess.

And, reassuring though it can be to think that at least that counterpart is having fun, even those impressed with Lewis's towering intellect have often found these other worlds of his hard to swallow.

Not all philosophers pin such striking colours to the mast, but there is a good reason why people associate the subject with surprising views. Philosophy involves standing back and thinking - intensely and rigorously - about aspects of our lives that are at once ordinary and fundamental.

And when the surface is scratched, what you find below is extraordinary - or, rather, extraordinarily difficult to make good, clear sense of. Lying in wait are arguments that lead to, if not sheer lunacy, then bullets we're loathe to bite.

So, with World Philosophy Day upon us, here are some pesky arguments to apply your minds to:

1. SHOULD WE KILL HEALTHY PEOPLE FOR THEIR ORGANS?

Suppose Bill is a healthy man without family or loved ones. Would it be ok painlessly to kill him if his organs would save five people, one of whom needs a heart, another a kidney, and so on? If not, why not?

Consider another case: you and six others are kidnapped, and the kidnapper somehow persuades you that if you shoot dead one of the other hostages, he will set the remaining five free, whereas if you do not, he will shoot all six. (Either way, he'll release you.)

If in this case you should kill one to save five, why not in the previous, organs case? If in this case too you have qualms, consider yet another: you're in the cab of a runaway tram and see five people tied to the track ahead. You have the option of sending the tram on to the track forking off to the left, on which only one person is tied. Surely you should send the tram left, killing one to save five.

But then why not kill Bill?

2. ARE YOU THE SAME PERSON WHO STARTED READING THIS ARTICLE?

Consider a photo of someone you think is you eight years ago. What makes that person you? You might say he she was composed of the same cells as you now. But most of your cells are replaced every seven years. You might instead say you're an organism, a particular human being, and that organisms can survive cell replacement - this oak being the same tree as the sapling I planted last year.

But are you really an entire human being? If surgeons swapped George Bush's brain for yours, surely the Bush look-alike, recovering from the operation in the White House, would be you. Hence it is tempting to say that you are a human brain, not a human being.

But why the brain and not the spleen? Presumably because the brain supports your mental states, eg your hopes, fears, beliefs, values, and memories. But then it looks like it's actually those mental states that count, not the brain supporting them. So the view is that even if the surgeons didn't implant your brain in Bush's skull, but merely scanned it, wiped it, and then imprinted its states on to Bush's pre-wiped brain, the Bush look-alike recovering in the White House would again be you.

But the view faces a problem: what if surgeons imprinted your mental states on two pre-wiped brains: George Bush's and Gordon Brown's? Would you be in the White House or in Downing Street? There's nothing on which to base a sensible choice. Yet one person cannot be in two places at once.

In the end, then, no attempt to make sense of your continued existence over time works. You are not the person who started reading this article.

3. IS THAT REALLY A COMPUTER SCREEN IN FRONT OF YOU?

What reason do you have to believe there's a computer screen in front of you? Presumably that you see it, or seem to. But our senses occasionally mislead us. A straight stick half-submerged in water sometimes look bent; two equally long lines sometimes look different lengths.

Muller-Lyer illusion
Are things always as they seem? The Muller-Lyer illusion indicates not

But this, you might reply, doesn't show that the senses cannot provide good reasons for beliefs about the world. By analogy, even an imperfect barometer can give you good reason to believe it's about to rain.

Before relying on the barometer, after all, you might independently check it by going outside to see whether it tends to rain when the barometer indicates that it will. You establish that the barometer is right 99% of the time. After that, surely, its readings can be good reasons to believe it will rain.

Perhaps so, but the analogy fails. For you cannot independently check your senses. You cannot jump outside of the experiences they provide to check they're generally reliable. So your senses give you no reason at all to believe that there is a computer screen in front of you."

4. DID YOU REALLY CHOOSE TO READ THIS ARTICLE?

Suppose that Fred existed shortly after the Big Bang. He had unlimited intelligence and memory, and knew all the scientific laws governing the universe and all the properties of every particle that then existed. Thus equipped, billions of years ago, he could have worked out that, eventually, planet Earth would come to exist, that you would too, and that right now you would be reading this article.

After all, even back then he could have worked out all the facts about the location and state of every particle that now exists.

And once those facts are fixed, so is the fact that you are now reading this article. No one's denying you chose to read this. But your choice had causes (certain events in your brain, for example), which in turn had causes, and so on right back to the Big Bang. So your reading this was predictable by Fred long before you existed. Once you came along, it was already far too late for you to do anything about it.

Now, of course, Fred didn't really exist, so he didn't really predict your every move. But the point is: he could have. You might object that modern physics tells us that there is a certain amount of fundamental randomness in the universe, and that this would have upset Fred's predictions. But is this reassuring? Notice that, in ordinary life, it is precisely when people act unpredictably that we sometimes question whether they have acted freely and responsibly. So freewill begins to look incompatible both with causal determination and with randomness. None of us, then, ever do anything freely and responsibly."

IN CONCLUSION

Let me be clear: the point is absolutely not that you or I must bite these bullets. Some philosophers have a taste for bullets; but few would accept all the conclusions above and many would accept none. But the point, when you reject a conclusion, is to diagnose where the argument for it goes wrong.

Doing this in philosophy goes hand-in-hand with the constructive side of our subject, with providing sane, rigorous, and illuminating accounts of central aspects of our existence: freewill, morality, justice, beauty, consciousness, knowledge, truth, meaning, and so on.

Rarely does this allow us to put everything back where we found it. There are some surprises, some bullets that have to be bitten; sometimes it's a matter simply of deciding which. But even when our commonsense conceptions survive more or less intact, understanding is deepened. As TS Eliot once wrote:

"…the end of our exploring,

Will be to arrive where we started,

And know the place for the first time."

David Bain is a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Glasgow

Stars get behind UK music museum

Amy Winehouse
Amy Winehouse's vintage dress will go alongside video of her on stage

The Rolling Stones, David Bowie and Amy Winehouse are among the stars who have loaned memorabilia to a new exhibition charting the history of British pop.

The British Music Experience will open at the O2 in London in March, and is intended to be a major new attraction.

It will mix costumes and instruments used by top artists, with cutting edge displays designed to bring the last 60 years of British music to life.

Other acts behind the idea include The Who, Oasis, Blur and Paul Weller.

The Who singer Roger Daltrey has loaned the tassled outfit he wore on stage at Woodstock, while Sir Mick Jagger has given an Ossie Clark-designed 1970s jumpsuit.

David Bowie has handed over his Ashes To Ashes clown suit and a classic Ziggy Stardust costume.

A vintage dress worn by Amy Winehouse in her Tears Dry On Her Own video and a live DVD will also be seen.

Noel Gallagher's iconic Union Jack guitar will be on show, along with guitars played by Paul Weller, Marc Bolan and Blur.

As well as the memorabilia, curators are promising a fully interactive experience.

Roger Daltrey with The Who
Roger Daltrey's tassled stage outfit will be on show

The memorabilia will be accompanied by footage of the objects in action, while fans will be able to explore the history of pop and rock in a series of hi-tech zones.

Visitors will be able to scroll through a giant timeline, search a map containing 4,000 British rock and pop landmarks, and learn about record players and radiograms in a lesson about recording formats.

Artists ranging from Cream bassist Jack Bruce to rapper Dizzee Rascal have been filmed in conversation with other musicians, to be screened as "fantasy dinner parties".

Virtual dance instructors will teach moves from the twist to the macarena, while acts such as KT Tunstall and The Magic Numbers have recorded expert instrument tuition videos.

The visit will finish with a five minute finale designed to replicate a full-blown concert experience, with acts like The Beatles, Oasis and the Sex Pistols projected onto three sides of a room.

Each £15 ticket will include three free downloads from a list of 100 classic British tracks.

But it is not yet known whether any Beatles songs will be on the list due to the band's ongoing reluctance to enter the digital world.

Curator Paul Lilley said: "The Beatles have been very good, letting us use their video and audio [in the exhibition], but the details of the downloads are still to be confirmed."

'Constantly evolving'

Mr Lilley said the British Music Experience would be "the must see attraction for music lovers across the world".

"It will be like nothing seen before - an interactive and cutting edge exhibition which will bring the history of music and its influence on all of us to life.

"This is just the beginning of an exhibition that will constantly evolve as much as music does and will educate even the most avid music fans."

The British Music Experience will open almost exactly a decade after the launch of the National Centre for Popular Music in Sheffield.

That also promised an interactive journey through UK music history, but shut after 16 months after failing to attract enough visitors.

But the British Music Experience is confident of establishing itself as a major attraction, and is housed in the same building as the O2 arena, one of the UK's leading music venues.

It will be a permanent fixture in the space currently occupied by the Body Worlds exhibition, and which has also hosted Tutankhamun artefacts.

Rail earth to form nature reserve

European spoonbill
The RSPB hopes spoonbills will be attracted to Wallasea Island

Earth removed during the building of the £16bn Crossrail project will be used to create a nature reserve on the coast of Essex, the RSPB has said.

The clay, chalk, gravel and sand will transform 2.5 sq miles (6.5 sq km) of farmland into a tidal wildlife habitat.

The earth will reshape the landscape of Wallasea Island, near Southend-on-Sea.

The work on Crossrail, which will connect Maidenhead in Berkshire to Shenfield in Essex via Heathrow and central London, will begin from 2010.

'Innovative solution'

Saltmarsh, mudflats and other coastal habitats will be built on Wallasea Island to replace the land lost due to rising sea levels. Plans for the site were revealed last year.

The RSPB hopes that when completed the island will attract rare or vanished species such as spoonbills and Kentish plovers.

The boring of tunnels for the rail project will begin in 2011 and the work on the island habitat is expected to take up to 10 years.

See details of Crossrail route through central London

Dr Andre Farrar, the RSPB's protected areas manager, said: "From the outset we recognised that working on Wallasea Island would be technically challenging and would need innovative solutions.

"With most of the land well below high tide level, just letting the sea in would have brought in too much sea water causing problems with navigation and erosion elsewhere in the Crouch and Roach estuaries.

"The use of high quality material is the best way of achieving habitat restoration on these low-lying coasts."

Simon Phillips, Crossrail construction liaison manager said: "We have been looking for a good way to reuse the excavated material from Crossrail for some time and we believe that we could not have found a better home for it than the RSPB scheme at Wallasea Island."

The charity will submit its planning application to Essex County Council next week. The decision on the project is expected to come through by spring next year.

'Grape' is key to fossil puzzle

It moves slowly across the ocean floor
The protist is similar to a grape in size and shape

A single-celled ball about the size of a grape may provide an explanation for one of the mysteries of fossil history.

Writing in Current Biology, researchers say the creature leaves tracks on the seabed which mirror fossilised tracks left up to 1.8 billion years ago.

Many palaeontologists believe only multi-celled organisms could have made these tracks.

This has been difficult to confirm as no multi-cellular fossils of such an age have ever been found.

Covered in mud

The discovery was made by marine biologists monitoring the sea bed in the Bahamas. They noticed a great deal of tracks made by grape-shaped creatures called protists. Dr Mikhail "Misha" Matz from the University of Texas at Austin, US, led the research.

"We were looking for pretty animals that have eyes, are coloured, or glow in the dark; instead, the most interesting find was the organism that was blind, brainless, and completely covered in mud," he said.

The researchers say the 3cm-wide, single-celled protists propel themselves using tiny protruding legs called pseudopodia. A number of openings all over the body act as mouths and outlets for waste.

The protists move very slowly, taking weeks or even months to make a track of a few centimetres. As the sea bed currents where they were observed are very slight, their tracks are not washed away.

Worm casts

The protist tracks look very similar to fossil tracks found in the pre-Cambrian era more than 500 million years ago.

Perhaps the most famous are the "worm casts" found in the Stirling Ranges in Western Australia. In 2002, these were dated to at least 1.2 billion years old.

The Stirling formation fossil is at least 1.2 billion years old
The worm casts may not have been made by worms after all

This dating presented a problem for palaeontologists; they assumed multi-cellular organisms with bilateral symmetry, where two halves of their bodies are approximate mirror images of each other, had to be responsible for such tracks, but there is no fossil evidence for the existence of such creatures until several million years later.

Fossil experts believe bilateral symmetry is what gave the organism the ability to make the tracks, with the impressions being produced when the organism moved its weight from one side to another.

Dr Matz believes protists provide an explanation of how the tracks could have been made without the need for organisms with bilateral symmetry.

"We used to think that it takes bilateral symmetry to move in one direction across the seafloor and thereby leave a track," he explains.

"You had to have a belly and a backside and a front and back end. Now, we show that protists can leave traces of comparable complexity and with a very similar profile."

Cambrian explosion

Bilateral symmetry appeared in the Cambrian era about about 542 million years ago, early creatures quickly diversified into all of the major animal groups of today. Quite how or why this rapid diversification, known as the Cambrian explosion, occurred is still one of the biggest questions in animal evolution.

Very few fossils exist of organisms that could be the pre-Cambrian ancestors of bilateral animals, and even those are highly controversial. Fossil traces, such as these tracks are the most accepted evidence of the existence of these proto-animals.


We now have to rethink the fossil record

Dr Mikhail 'Misha' Matz, University of Texas at Austin

Dr Matz says all tracks which predate the rapid evolution of life seen in the Cambrian explosion - could come from protists.

"Pretty much anything within the Precambrian fossil record can in principle be attributed to large protozoans, from the earliest traces and fossils of the Stirling formation," he says.

The researchers say forms described as "globular or bulbous collapsible bodies" which were found fossilised together with the Stirling formation's worm trails are probably the remains of creatures very similar to the protists they found at the bottom of the sea.

The protist is about the size of a grape
The tracks resemble those found in prehistoric times

Genetic analysis shows this moving protist from the Bahamas is broadly the same as a stationary type found in the Arabian sea.

The researchers are now beginning a project which they call "deep-sea palaeontology" to create a catalogue of tracks produced by a variety of present-day underwater animals for comparison with the fossil record.

Dr Matz says the giant protists' bubble-like structure is probably one of the planet's oldest body designs, and may have existed for 1.8 billion years.

"Our guys may be the ultimate living fossils of the macroscopic world," he says.

Google unveils customised search

SearchWiki
Users have to be logged in to their Google account to use SearchWiki

Google has unveiled a tool that will allow users to customise and refine their search queries.

The company's SearchWiki lets users re-order, remove or add specific web search results.

This means the next time they perform the same search, the personalised version will pop up.

"I would call this revolutionary. It's a huge step, not a baby step in the world of search," Google's product manager, Cedric Dupont, told the BBC.

"This is part of an obvious movement of the web to become more participatory, so Google search is adapting to this movement," he said.

"The SearchWiki is about giving users more control over their search results and increasing user happiness," Mr Dupont added.

But industry watchers predict one huge problem with the effort.

"Most people are not going to engage with it and think about where the results should be - if it's above this one or below that one," said Greg Sterling, an editor with SearchEngineLand.com.

"This is really for a motivated or elite core of user who really wants to participate in the process."

"Social search"

As well as ranking results, SearchWiki allows users who have logged in to their Google account to write comments which will have a dialogue balloon next to the result when they return for any further searches.

These will also be public so that others using SearchWiki can view them and get feedback on a website.

Google search page with SearchWiki
It is hoped "people powered" tools like SearchWiki will benefit overall search

Mr Dupont stressed that SearchWiki would not affect the way websites were ranked by Google.

At the bottom of the page, there will be a link to take users to a page showing what search results others have re-ranked, deleted or added.

Mr Sterling said that if Google managed to get a great number of people re-ranking results, it could improve the overall search experience.

"Lots of people have tried so-called 'social search', combining algorithmic search with human editorial input, because the perception is that humans have the ability to craft a better result in any given situation because they can make distinctions machines can't," he said.

"So this could be quite dramatic if they get a lot of people participating because it could improve the algorithms of the process and serve up better search results."

Matthew Humphries of geek.com would like to see the tool available to the public at large and not just to account holders. He said that even among SearchWiki users, search would be improved.

"You always see posts on forums for different subjects asking for the best resources to help with X. With SearchWiki the responses won't be a bunch of links, they will be a single link to an annotated Google search page," he added.

20.11.08

Top of the Pops back at Christmas

op of the Pops presenters Edith Bowman, Reggie Yates and Fearne C

Music show Top of the Pops is to return to the BBC over the Christmas period - despite earlier promises it would not be brought back.

The Top of the Pops Christmas Special and Top of the Pops New Year's Eve Special will be presented by Fearne Cotton and Reggie Yates.

Last month, the BBC denied a return after The X Factor's Simon Cowell said he wanted to buy the rights for ITV.

A BBC spokesman said the show would return "bigger and better".

TOTP first

The U-turn comes after calls from pop stars and politicians to reinstate the much-loved music show, which ran for 42 years before being cancelled in 2006.

The Christmas special will feature performances from some of the biggest artists of 2008, before counting down to the Christmas number one.

TOP OF THE POPS
Began in 1964
The first episode included The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Dusty Springfield
Bands were at first expected to mime rather than sing
Dance troupes such as Pan's People were used when artists could not appear

The New Year's Eve show - which will review the year in music - is the first time the corporation has shown such a special.

Both shows will appear on BBC One, but transmission times are not yet known.

BBC One controller Jay Hunt said: "With shows on Christmas Day and New Year's Eve, Top of the Pops has never been bigger.

"The shows will form the centrepiece of a massive musical offering during the festive season that we hope viewers are really going to enjoy."

Cotton said: "I am beyond excited at the thought of a return to the mighty TOTP studios for these one-off shows.

"Reggie and I feel truly honoured to be able to introduce this year's number one - both shows are going to be huge."

This does not signal the return of Top of the Pops
BBC statement

The show's return comes a few weeks after Cowell said he wanted to buy the brand off the BBC and take it to ITV.

"If the BBC wanted to do a deal, and I can get ITV to buy it and broadcast it, I'd put it on ITV," Simon Cowell said ahead of the National TV Awards.

The BBC said, however, the show would not be returning for a regular series.

"This does not signal the return of Top of the Pops," the spokesman said, adding that the show was "not up for sale".

Culture Secretary Andy Burnham recently expressed an interest in the show's return, saying it had been a good vehicle to champion new music.

Pop band The Ting Tings - one of the biggest of this year's new bands - also called for the return of the show, saying they wanted to be the first band to play on it.

Sparrow numbers 'plummet by 68%'

House sparrow
The house sparrow feeds on insects like aphids during the summer months

The population of house sparrows in Britain has fallen by 68% in the past three decades, according to the RSPB.

A report by the charity said the paving over of front gardens and removal of trees had caused a big decline in insects that the birds eat.

It suggests sparrows are now disappearing altogether from cities such as London, Bristol and Edinburgh.

Dr Will Peach, from the RSPB, said many gardens had become "no-go areas for once-common British birds".

Starving chicks

Scientists from the RSPB joined forces with De Montfort University and Natural England to investigate the decline of the house sparrow.

They studied numbers in Leicester over a three-year period and found that they fell by more than two thirds.

Dr Peach said every pair of house sparrows must raise at least five chicks a year to maintain the population, but many were starving to death in their nests or were too weak to live long after fledging.

The study did find that chick survival was higher in areas where insects, such as aphids, were more abundant.

[Gardeners can help by] being lazy, doing nothing and allowing the garden to be a little bit scruffy
Dr Will Peach, RSPB

Dr Peach said: "Peanuts and seeds are great for birds for most of the year, but sparrows need insects in summer - and lots of them - to feed their hungry young.

"Honeysuckle, wild roses, hawthorn or fruit trees are perfect for insects and therefore house sparrows.

"The trend towards paving of front gardens and laying decking in the back, and the popularity of ornamental plants from other parts of the world, has made many gardens no-go areas for once common British birds."

He said gardeners could help sparrows by "being lazy, doing nothing and allowing the garden to be a little bit scruffy".

Urban birder David Lindo on how to attract sparrows to gardens

The study, published in the journal Animal Conservation, concluded that the decline in house sparrows in Britain began in the mid-1980s.

In London, numbers fell by 60% between 1994 and 2004.

The house sparrow has been added to the list of species identified by the UK Biodiversity Action Plan as in need of greater protection.

Britain 'leads digital TV uptake'

Digital switchover
Whitehaven in Cumbria was the first UK town to switch to digital in 2007

Digital television is spreading faster in Britain than in France, Canada, the US, Germany, Italy and Japan, according to UK communications regulator Ofcom.

Research suggests that 86% of homes in Britain can now receive digital on their main set, while 30% have digital video recorders.

Ofcom also says British consumers pay less than those in other countries for TV, mobile phones and broadband.

The report also says people in Ireland send the most text messages.

The regulator found that last year the Irish spent an average of 179 minutes on their mobiles each month and sent nearly twice as many text messages as people in the UK.

High definition

The International Communications Market report looked at the spread of different technologies across the globe.

It found that the US was leading the way on internet use, with Americans spending an average of just over 15 hours a week online.

The UK was second for surfing at just under 14 hours a week.

The research also found that:

  • Across all the countries examined, average broadband take-up was 56% of households in 2007. Britain came in at 60%.
  • Britain has more high definition television sets per capita than any other country in Europe, but less than in the US and Canada.
  • Mobile phone use is soaring in emerging markets with 216 million new mobile subscriptions registered in Brazil, Russia, India and China in 2007.
  • China alone added 88 million mobile users last year, more than the total number of subscriptions in Britain.

The digital switchover in Britain must be completed by 2012 when the analogue signal will be turned off for good.

Whitehaven in Cumbria was the first town to switch in October 2007.

Ofcom says British consumers get a good deal when it comes to technology, particularly where they purchase a "bundle" of television, phone and internet subscriptions from one provider.

BBC One and BBC Two to stream live online from next week

woman watches the BBC's Doctor Who on a laptop computer

(David Bebber/The Times)

Watching television programmes over the internet has taken off in the past year since the introduction of the BBC's catchup service, the iPlayer

The BBC is to begin showing all its programmes live over the internet from next week, raising questions about the long-term viability of the licence fee.

Critics said that although viewers would still need to buy a licence to watch programmes on their computers, it would become harder to ensure payment. There are also questions over whether the telephone network could cope with the expected rise in internet traffic.

Sir Howard Davies, the director of the London School of Economics, who sat on a committee reviewing the future of the licence fee at the beginning of the decade, said: “What are they going to do? Seize your computer and look through your history? Can you imagine the licensing people doing that level of enforcement?”

The corporation, which already makes digital channels such as BBC Three and BBC Four available online, announced yesterday that it would complete the picture by making BBC One and BBC Two available from next Thursday.


Watching television programmes over the internet has taken off in the past year since the introduction of the BBC’s catchup service, the iPlayer, which enables viewing of material broadcast in the previous seven days.

Since its launch on Christmas Day last year, some or all BBC programmes have been watched 250 million times. EastEnders, watched by an average of 18.9 million at least once a month on broadcast television, was watched 457,000 times on the iPlayer last month.

The corporation believes that viewing over the internet will not be enough to persuade the public to get rid of their televisions. A spokesman said that the BBC wanted to “offer our licence fee-payers more choice and flexibility” and that the broadcaster “fully expects this to supplement, rather than replace, viewing via traditional broadcast to a television”.

In total 25.3 million households pay the television licence, generating £3.37 billion for the BBC. However, one in 20 households dodges the levy, despite an aggressive enforcement campaign in which viewers are told that the list of nonpayers are “all in our database”.

A television licence is required “irrespective of what device you are using – television, computer, laptop, mobile phone or any other – and how you receive programmes, whether by satellite, cable, via the internet or any other way,” according to TV Licensing, the body that collects the fee. It also pays for BBC radio.

There are concerns about the impact that a surge in online viewing could have on the way the internet functions.

Francesco Caio, who conducted a review into the future of the network for the Government this year, believes that there could be medium-term problems because of the extra capacity required for live television.

Mr Caio said: “Online television does not cause any capacity issues for the moment but in three to five years’ time there could be problems that will particularly affect areas of dense population.”

A spokeswoman for Tiscali, the fourth-biggest internet provider, said: “If you download a television programme, it can be done efficiently, in between other network traffic, but streaming a video [showing live before it is completely downloaded] takes up a set amount of capacity – about 300 kilobits a second.” Tiscali believes that broadcasters could pay more to prioritise their content to run smoothly over the internet, although the BBC has shown little willingness to pay.

Mr Caio said that the unwillingness of broadcasters to pay would more likely lead to the cost being borne by consumers through an increased monthly subscription.

“Broadband prices have been falling but I think we could get to the point where the need for investment means that prices of telephone and internet services will start heading north,” he said.

Jana Bennett, the director of BBC Vision, said: “The launch of BBC One and BBC Two online completes our commitment to make our portfolio of channels available to watch on the internet.”

Formally, the BBC plans to run the online broadcasts of its two principal channels for a year but it is unlikely to abandon the experiment.

In any event it has little choice because existing rules mean that any website can transmit the two channels, plus ITV1, Channel 4 and Five, if they have the right technology.

Online broadcasting is also likely to be a boon for technologically sophisticated expatriates and other viewers who do not pay the licence fee.

Although the BBC, like other broadcasters, tries to ensure that its content can be watched only in the United Kingdom, it is possible to buy software that covers up a web surfer’s location, making them appear to be watching in Britain even when they are not.



17.11.08

1,700 pubs will have shut in 2008

Closures represent three per cent of overall UK pub estate

Research group Market & Business Development (MBD) forecasts that nearly 1,700 pubs will have closed in the UK in 2008.

In its latest UK Public Report, MBD says the number of closures - 1,665 - represents a reduction of three per cent in the number of pubs trading in the UK to 55,515.

The declining trend in the number of pubs reflects a number of factors, MBD said.

“One such factor is the trend towards drinking alcohol at home, as supermarkets sell alcohol at significantly lower prices than public houses.

“The decline also reflects the introduction of the smoking ban in 2007, weakening consumer confidence due to the current credit crunch and also the rising costs for public houses, such as the increasing cost of labour.

“Indeed, according to research by the British Beer & Pub Association during 2008, pubs were closing at a rate of 36 a week – nearly 1,900 in the year – up 33 per cent on the closure rate of 2007.”

MBD said it expected the number of pubs trading at the end of 2009 will be three per cent lower than at the end of this year.

Sales in UK pubs are forecast to decline by two per cent in real terms next year, according to MBD, although there could be a moderate increase between 2011 and 2013 as the UK comes out of recession.

16.11.08

Tulips

colours_ap203_154.jpgIf it's early May then the Dutch fields are full of tulips, with more than three billion planted every year.

The first tulips are thought to have been cultivated in Asia by the Turks, about a thousands years ago, then introduced in Western Europe and the Netherlands in the 17th century.

They have become such a national treasure that the Dutch are planning to build an island the shape of a tulip bulb

Buried pigs provide murder clues

A pig being lowered into the ground by scientists
The study could help police find murder victims' unmarked graves faster

Scientists in Staffordshire have been using dead pigs and geophysics to develop research that could help police find the buried remains of murder victims in unmarked graves faster.

Five pigs that were destined to be sausage meat have been buried in shallow graves on the Keele University campus, in Stoke-on-Trent so scientists can study their decomposition.

Researchers said it meant they could build up a template which would help police recognise buried human remains in typically British areas like woods and moorland, when sweeping areas with specialist geo-physical instruments.

In the US, the law in some states allows similar testing to be carried out on human corpses, but that data is based on decomposition rates specific to the US climate and soil.

Head researcher Dr Jamie Pringle said pig flesh had similar properties to human flesh, which was vital for a decent comparison.

He said: "We're not allowed to use human tissue in the UK, so pigs are a good second choice.

"Similar size to us and have similar hair, skin and body-fat ratio."

We're not allowed to use human tissue in the UK, so pigs are a good second choice
Dr Jamie Pringle

The 12-stone pigs were reared on an organic farm in Stoke-on-Trent and had previously been destined to be sausages, Dr Pringle said.

Some of the pigs were wrapped in plastic, while others were left "naked" in the graves, as 75% of human remains found by police were partially clothed or covered.

The four-month-old pigs were buried in December 2007 and their graves are tested each week with geo-physical instruments, including ground-penetrating radars used by the Highways Agency for detecting underground cables.

Radar readings allow the scientists to build up a two-dimensional image of the earth.

Fluids from pigs have contrasting properties that can sustain electric fields, which are reflected in the radar's beam.

The beam shows up as a bright blue patch on data, alerting searchers to a potential body.

PhD student John Jervis said: "This equipment transmits a pulse of radar energy into the ground.

"If there is anything with contrasting dielectric properties that will reflect that energy."

The team also used electrical currents to measure the level of resistance in the ground for any anomalies in the soil.

Tests have found the "naked" pigs' bodies decomposed very quickly and were about 10,000 times more conductive than the water in the surrounding soil, while tests on the wrapped pigs showed the current was forced to travel around the pig's body.

Serial killers

Similar geo-physical testing was used to find the bodies in the Fred West case.

Fred West, who was charged with 12 murders, escaped trial by committing suicide in his prison cell in January 1995.

His wife Rosemary West, now 50, was sentenced to 10 life sentences in November 1995 for the murder of 10 young women and girls.

Most of their victims were buried underneath the Wests' house at 25 Cromwell Street, Gloucester.

The team has also been working closely with experts from Staffordshire University.

Professor John Cassella, of Staffordshire University Forensic Science Department said: "What this research shows is that there is an optimum time for detecting bodies using geo-physical techniques.

There is a window of five to eight weeks after the body is buried when the signals are strongest
Professor John Cassella

"There is a window of five to eight weeks after the body is buried when the signals are strongest.

"After that the signal becomes weaker and weaker.

"If the police know a body has recently been buried, they might be better holding off for a couple of weeks before they use this technique to find it.

"This knowledge could help them narrow down the search area they need to examine."

Keele researchers said they were using their techniques in an ongoing murder investigation with police, but would not be drawn on the inquiry.

Dr Pringle said he hoped the data would provide a "gold standard" for helping police in their search for murder victims.

Pigs have similar flesh to humans

Dead Parrot sketch ancestor found

Monty Python
Monty Python's Dead Parrot sketch has topped comedy polls

An ancestor of Monty Python's famous Dead Parrot comedy sketch has been found in a joke book dating back to Greece in the 4th Century.

Philogelos: The Laugh Addict, which has been translated from Greek manuscripts, contains a joke where a man complains that a slave he was sold had died.

"When he was with me, he never did any such thing!" is the reply.

In the Python sketch, written 1,600 years later, the shopkeeper claims the dead parrot is "pining for the fjords".

The 265 jokes in Philogelos are attributed to a pair of jokers called Hierocles and Philagrius, about whom very little is known.

Similar themes

Their manuscripts have been published into a multimedia online e-book, which features video of veteran comic Jim Bowen bringing the old jokes back to life in front of a 21st Century audience.

Some of the jokes are strikingly similar to modern ones, with subjects including farts, sex, ugly wives and a dimwit referred to as "a student dunce".

"One or two of them are jokes I've seen in people's acts nowadays, slightly updated," said Bowen.

"They put in a motor car instead of a chariot - some of them are Tommy Cooper-esque," he added.

Jim Bowen
Jim Bowen performed the old jokes in front of a 21st Century audience.

Some jokes are likely to baffle modern audiences, however - especially the ones about lettuce, which only make sense if you share the ancient superstition that the vegetable is an aphrodisiac.

The book has been translated by William Berg, an American professor of Classics.

"The text of Philogelos comes to us from several manuscripts ranging from the 11th to the 15th Centuries," Berg said.

"All of them trace back to an earlier original, probably - judging from the content and language - from the 4th Century."

Other jokes in the book include:

Someone needled a well-known wit: "I had your wife, without paying a penny". He replied: "It's my duty as a husband to couple with such a monstrosity. What made you do it?"

An Abderite sees a eunuch talking with a woman and asks him if she's his wife. The guy responds that a eunuch is unable to have a wife. "Ah, so she's your daughter? "

A misogynist is attending to the burial of his wife, who has just died, when someone asks: "Who is it who rests in peace here?". He answers: "Me, now that I'm rid of her!"

Seven sports seek 2016 inclusion

Olympics
Seven sports will be vying for two remaining places at the 2016 Olympics

Golf and rugby sevens are among seven sports presenting their cases on Friday for inclusion in the Olympic Games.

The sports for London 2012 have already been decided and these seven have to wait until next October to find out if they have a place in the 2016 Games.

Baseball and softball are bidding for a return as both were dropped from the 2012 programme, baseball because many of the top players did not compete.

Squash, roller sports and karate are also making presentations.

The IOC has set a limit of 28 sports in 2016, meaning the sports will fight over the last two available slots.

The program commission is chaired by Italian Franco Carraro, one of eight IOC members on the panel questioning the delegations before presenting a report to the executive board.

Each sport has a one-hour slot, with baseball making the first pitch in the closed-door presentations in Lausanne, Switzerland.

To win reinstatement for 2016, baseball must show the IOC it can deliver major league players to an Olympic tournament.

The baseball delegation was asked about its ability to deliver major league players to a 16-team Olympic tournament in August 2016 - right in the middle of the US major league season.

"We're committed to bringing the best players ever to the Olympic baseball tournament," said International Baseball Federation president Harvey Schiller.

"We talked about our advances in drug testing. We have an agreement with the professional leagues in terms of out-of-competition testing for the events we sanction."

Softball - a women's sport in the Olympics - is battling to return to the Games after missing out by just a single vote in 2005.

606: DEBATE
Golf, which was last played at the Olympics in 1904, proposes to return with men's and women's tournaments.

The golf delegation, including USPGA executive Ty Votaw and Peter Dawson of the Royal and Ancient - golf's governing body outside the US - brought the trophy presented in St Louis 104 years ago.

Votaw said golf's strong points were "speaking with one voice, bringing top players, and worldwide participation," with the sport televised in 216 countries each week.

"We would be able to promote golf in the Olympics and the Olympic movement across that platform every single week," Votaw said.

The World Karate Federation, comprising 180 national governing bodies, proposes to award 10 gold medals in five classes for each of the men's and women's competitions, with the International Federation for Roller Sports hoping to stage races on city streets for men and women, but not rink hockey or skateboarding.

Rugby fell from the Olympic program in 1924 and wants to come back with the seven-a-side, shorter version of the game for men and women, rather than the more established 15-a-side competition.

Finally, the World Squash Federation hopes that television-friendly, glass-enclosed courts can counter the sport's reputation as one that struggles to translate the speed of play to viewers.

15.11.08

'Greatest' Children in Need show


BBC news readers perform Abba's Dancing Queen and Mamma Mia

BBC's Children in Need is on course to beat the £37m raised last year after a seven-hour entertainment extravaganza.

Its host Terry Wogan described it as the "greatest" show to date.

Stars from the worlds of music, sport, television and theatre took part and when the show ended at 0200 GMT, the total raised had reached £20,991,216.

BBC news readers performed an Abba medley, while Sir Terry Wogan and Tess Daly took part in a special edition of Strictly Come Dancing.

Sir Terry failed to win, with judge Bruno Tonioli describing his dance as "a good performance for radio".

Take That

Last year's Children in Need raised over £19 million on the night, with the final appeal total topping £37 million.

This year's appeal got under way at 1900 GMT with a performance of the charity single Stay With Me by McFly.

I am completely overwhelmed by the way the country has come together in support of BBC Children in Need, demonstrating such generosity in these tough times
David Ramsden, BBC Children in Need

Sir Terry presented the show with Fearne Cotton and Tess Daly.

It was themed "Do Something Different", with viewers and stars encouraged to venture outside their normal routine to raise money.

Girls Aloud, Will Young, Alesha Dixon, the Sugababes and the casts of EastEnders and Coronation Street were among stars taking part.

Take That donated £250,000 after singing their new song Greatest Day.

A spokesman said the money came from the Take That Trust - which has been boosted by £1 from each ticket from the band's last tour and most of the money from their Marks and Spencer modelling deal.

Hamster

Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond wore a dog collar to impersonate a miserable minister.

He appeared in a BBC One Scotland sketch as the Rikki Fulton character the Rev IM Jolly.

Stars of music, TV and sport have been appearing to support the BBC's Children In Need appeal

Dressed in tight-fitting flares and platform boots, six BBC newsreaders, including Fiona Bruce and Nicholas Owen, sang a variety of Abba hits.

Top Gear's Richard Hammond took a grilling from Ashes To Ashes character Gene Hunt, who said he looked like a ferret, a hamster and a gerbil before allowing him a spin in his red sports car.

The cast of ITV1's The Bill switched channels to perform a medley of Blues Brothers hits, including Jailhouse Rock.

Coronation Street stars got into the spirit of things by taking some expert fashion advice from How To Look Good Naked's Gok Wan, who dressed in drag.

The cast of EastEnders performed a musical extravaganza, and an exclusive preview of Doctor Who's Christmas episode was screened.

'Overwhelmed'

BBC Radio 2 broadcast a 13-hour music matrathon on Friday, before handing over to the main appeal on BBC One at 1900 GMT.

Radio 2 listeners raised just under £2m for the appeal. Presenter Chris Evans contributed £16,039 of his own money to round the total up to the million mark.

Listeners to Wake up to Wogan raised £500,000 by bidding in the Things Money Can't Buy auction.

One anonymous caller bid £100,000 for a guitar master class with Dire Straits star Mark Knopfler.

David Ramsden, BBC Children in Need chief executive, said: "I am completely overwhelmed by the way the country has come together in support of BBC Children in Need, demonstrating such generosity in these tough times, and I'd like to say a massive thank you to everyone involved.

"We can now focus our attention on finding more great projects that can change young lives for the better."

10 things we didn't know last week

10_eye_pods.jpgSnippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. Avatars have sex.
More details

2. Cocaine addiction has a gene.
More details (The Guardian)

3. Love handles shorten your life.
More details

4. Barack and Michelle Obama have code names Renegade and Renaissance.
More details

5. Germany, not China or the US, is the world's biggest exporter.
More details (The Economist)

6. The QE2 does 49 feet to the gallon.
More details

7. Monty Python's dead parrot sketch dates back to Ancient Greece.
More details

8. Gary Glitter's I'm the Leader of the Gang was on the syllabus for GCSE music.
More details

9. The song Two Little Boys was probably about the American Civil War.
More details

10. Alastair Campbell plays the bagpipes.
More details (Daily Mini-Quiz)

10 things we didn't know last week

10_bricks.jpgSnippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. Saddam Hussein's yacht had an escape tunnel leading to a submarine.
More details

2. The Dalai Lama boxes.
The Times (More details)

3. Women's hands have more bugs.
More details

4. Londoners complained about house prices in the 1600s.
More details

5. Antelopes click their knees to demonstrate sexual prowess.
More details

6. Drum-making can be fatal.
More details

7. Barack Obama supports West Ham.
More details

8. The average person can sing three octaves.
More details

9. Snow ploughs are used to clear dead lemmings on Norway's roads.
More details

10. About 20,000 people die globally every year from snake bites.
More details

10 things we didn't know last week

10columnsfrance.jpgSnippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. There's a town in Uruguay called Fray Bentos.
More details

2. The final day - or half-day - of World War I produced about 11,000 casualties.
More details

3. Ian Fleming's wife administered a rap over the knuckles with a spoon to a reviewer who didn't like Dr No.
More details

4. About 90% of pumpkins grown worldwide are not eaten - instead they are carved for Halloween and the innards discarded.
More details (The Guardian)

5. Men like women in red. And not just red clothing - even those in photos with a red frame are rated as more attractive than any other colour.
More details (Yahoo News)

6. The word "euthanasia means easeful death.More details

7. Tomatoes can be purple.
More details

8. There are about 200 earthquakes a year in Britain.
More details

9. The United Arab Emirates, along with the US, has the largest ecological footprint per person.
More details

10. "Charlie's dead" means that someone's slip is showing.
More details

Download Junkie

Highlights This Week Include:

Safari for Windows 3.2
Freeware
Latest version of the Apple web browser
14 November 2008

Mozilla Firefox 3.0.4
Freeware
Minor release of the popular web browser
13 November 2008
UltraDefrag 2
Freeware
Defragment your hard drive quickly and easily
13 November 2008
Mozilla Firefox Portable 3.0.4
Freeware
Portable version of the web browser
13 November 2008
Gobby 0.4.7
Freeware
Allow multiple users to access & work on the same document
12 November 2008
Eventbox Preview
Trial Software
Access various social networks from one application
12 November 2008
FinalBurner Free 2.6
Freeware
Basic & free disc burning suite
12 November 2008
PeaZip 2.4
Freeware
Powerful free archive manager
11 November 2008
Transmute 1.04
Freeware
Quickly convert your bookmarks between browsers
11 November 2008
DFIncBackup 2.8
Freeware
Backup your important files to a ZIP archive
10 November 2008
Recommended Downloads
  1. Paragon Hard Disk Manager 8.5 SE
  2. iolo Search and Recover 5
  3. PC Tools Desktop Maestro 2
  4. Iolo System Mechanic 8
  5. Spyware Doctor 6 Starter Edition
  6. Paragon Drive Backup 9 Express
  7. Avanquest Connection Manager
  8. Wise-FTP 3
  9. Ashampoo WinOptimizer 4
  10. Mozilla Firefox 3.01
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Songbirds 'sing from hymn sheet'

Zebra finch
Songbirds like zebra finches can give clues to how humans learn to speak

Songbirds learn to sing from a hymn sheet in their head, according to a new study.

Swiss researchers have identified a region of the Zebra Finch brain which they believe has an internal recording of how the birds ought to be singing.

A separate region seems to enable the birds to identify mistakes in their songs, they wrote in Nature journal.

The research could also shed light on how humans learn to speak, according to scientists from Zurich University.

They monitored the electrical activity of cells in the zebra finches brains which are associated with listening.

They did this as the birds were singing, and while the birds were listening to recordings of other zebra finches.

Hymn sheet

Some neurons were constantly active, as if the finches were listening to a recording in their brain.

Other cells became active when the birds made mistakes, or when they heard recordings of songs which featured disturbances or disruptions.

It is these cells that enable the birds to learn from their errors, according to lead author Professor Richard Hahnloser, of the University of Zurich.

He said: "This is a proof of concept that birds do actually listen to their own songs, and they do seem to be comparing it to something that they expect, or would like to hear.

"So these neurons could give us a clue of how the birds learn their songs, with reference to some song that they've previously stored in their brain".

The authors believe their research could also shed light on how humans learn to speak.

It has long been assumed that, like songbirds, humans learn complex vocal patterns by first listening to their speech and then comparing it to patterns stored in the brain.

But very little is known about the neural mechanisms involved.

Our closest relatives, the great apes, do not speak, so songbirds may provide a better model to observe how speech develops.

Zebra finch
Zebra finches appear to recognise their own mistakes and those of others

Clock chimes

Meanwhile, in a separate study in the same journal, scientists used zebra finches to identify the "clock" that controls the timing of complex vocal behaviour in songbirds.

Both birdsong and human speech require precisely timed execution. But the specific brain circuits involved in the timing were unknown.

Researchers Michael Long and Michale Fee attempted to identify these "clocks" by cooling down the cells in different areas of the finches' brain.

Cooling the temperature in a region known as the high vocal centre (HVC) slowed the finches' songs down by up to 45%.

But the cooling did not affect the sequence of notes sung. This suggests the "clock" that regulates the timing of birdsong lies in the HVC.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team from Massachusetts Institute of Technology suggests that its technique could help identify the "clocks" for other complex behaviours.

Google Earth revives ancient Rome

Google Earth Ancient Rome
The Colosseum is just one of many ancient buildings users can tour

Google has added a new twist to its popular 3D map tool, Google Earth, offering millions of users the chance to visit a virtual ancient Rome.

Google has reconstructed the sprawling city - inhabited by more than one million people as long ago as AD320.

Users can zoom around the map to visit the Forum of Julius Caesar, stand in the centre of the Colosseum or swoop over the Basilica.

Researchers behind the project say it adds to five centuries of knowledge.

"This is another step in creating a virtual time machine," said Bernard Frischer of the University of Virginia, which worked with Google on the Roman reconstruction.

"The project is a continuation of five centuries of research by scholars, architects and artists since the Renaissance, who have attempted to restore the ruins of the ancient city with words, maps and images," he said.

Also involved was Past Perfect Productions, which reconstructs archaeological and historical sites through virtual reality.

Joel Myers, the firm's chief executive, said: "Cultural heritage, although based in the past, lives in the present, as it forms our identity.

"It is therefore our responsibility to ensure its conservation, to nourish it and make it accessible, with the objective of promoting global understanding. Ancient Rome in 3D is a major step towards this goal," he added.

'Ideal allies'

Ancient Rome is the first historical city to be added to Google Earth. Google's blog said the model contains more than 6,700 buildings, with more than 250 place marks linking to key sites in a variety of languages.

"Whether you are a student taking your first ancient history class, a historian who spends your life researching ancient civilisations, or just a history buff, access to this 3D model in Google Earth will help everyone learn more about ancient Rome," said Bruce Polderman, Google Earth 3D production manager.

Google Earth Ancient Rome
Information bubbles pop up on more than 250 sites in the ancient city

Within ancient Rome there are some 200 buildings scholars know a lot about - classified as Class 1 -which Google says have been rendered as faithfully as possible.

The 3D models are based on a physical model of the city called the Plastico di Roma Antica.

The model was created by archaeologists and model-makers between 1933 to 1974 and housed in a special gallery in Rome's Museum of Roman Civilisation.

The new map was unveiled at an event in the Italian capital, and the modern day Mayor of Rome, Gianni Alemanno, praised the project.

"It's an incredible opportunity to share the stunning greatness of ancient Rome, a perfect example of how the new technologies can be ideal allies of our history, archaeology and cultural identity," Mr Alemanno said.

More than 400 million people have downloaded Google Earth since it was launched in June 2005.

'Super-microscope' opens at Isis

Golden orb weaving spider, Oxford Silk Group 2008
The golden orb weaving spider spins one of the toughest fibres known

Their silk is stronger than steel and more elastic than nylon.

So how do spiders weave their miracle material?

Unravelling the recipe for gossamer could help us make clothes fit for Superman.

Whether you are designing flexible body armour, or biomedical implants, silk would be the ideal fabric.

But despite years of research, the world's scientists have yet to get anywhere near the gold standard - the dragline silk of an orb-weaving spider.

Five times tougher than steel. Three times more elastic than Kevlar. It is potentially bulletproof. But you can't make it in factories.

The sole manufacturer is a beastie the size of the end of your thumb.

Liquid assets

But if there is one thing we have learned from spiders (with the help of Robert the Bruce) it is this: "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again."

Spiders can weave seven different types of silk.

That is why the Oxford Silk Group are confident the new target station at Isis will help them crack the elusive formula.

The last thing you'd expect to find at the sharp end of a £200m neutron beam is cobwebs.

But Isis is full of surprises.

The new target station is specifically designed to "photograph" proteins and bio-polymers.

Arachnids produce around seven different types of silk - each with different protein structures and mechanical properties, optimised for different tasks.

They weave their threads from a liquid known as "dope", stored as gel inside the spinning glands.

The gel is a mixture of water-soluble proteins, which behave under flow like molten polymers.

When this solution is pulled through the spider's spinning glands, it turns into a solid fibre.

Dream weavers

The Oxford scientists know the ingredients of the dope. They know the balance of these molecules. And they even know the structure of the spinning glands.

"So why can't we create a fibre as good as the spider?" says Dr Chris Holland, a research fellow in the lab.

Oxford Silk Group
The Oxford Silk Group will use Isis 2 to unravel spider silk recipes

Dr Holland is investigating the conditions required for this liquid-to-solid transition.

Isis allows him to measure the molecules in their natural liquid state, whilst subjecting them to the same kind of flow that occurs during natural spinning.

"We are studying the environment the spider creates in order to spin a fibre," he explains.

"If we have a solution of silk proteins in water, we can ask - what shape are they in, and how do they change under flow?

"How does silk aggregate? That's the key thing."

Common thread

To find out, the team took a few drops of dope, and placed it in the line of the neutron beam at Isis 1.

Silkworm
Silkworms and spiders use liquids with similar flow properties to spin their silk

They measured the properties of the dope with a detector called LOQ - a small angle neutron scattering instrument - in combination with a rheometer.

Rather than studying the spider dope directly, they are using silkworm dope as a substitute.

"The liquids have essentially the same flow properties," said Dr Holland.

"Materially, the silkworm silk is very different, but the proteins flow in the same way - and also like molten polymers, with water as the solvent.

"That's good because it means we have more silk available to study."

Whereas spiders will attack, or even eat each other, silkworms are simple to rear, thanks to centuries of human cultivation.

In just a few days, a single silkworm spins up to a kilometre of silk thread.

"Silkworms are the cattle of the insect world. All they want is some mulberry leaves and some peace and quiet," says Dr Holland.

Flow diagram

The Oxford team have been working with Dr Ann Terry, one of the dedicated instrument scientists at Isis 1.

Dr Terry specialises in applying neutron scattering towards understanding the flow and crystallisation of polymers.

How neutrons are made at the new £200m Isis target station

"We have been eagerly awaiting Isis 2, because it is targeted at biosciences," she explains.

"First of all, it will have a higher flux of neutrons - around 20 to 40 times brighter.

"And the detectors are better positioned for studying biological materials."

All in all, it is the perfect machine for deconstructing the spiders' magic tricks.

"In the past, we never knew if the problem was what we were spinning with, or the way in which we were spinning it," says Terry.

"Target station 1 tells us we are heading in the right direction. Target station 2 will make us sure."

Full-length MGM films on YouTube

Reese Witherspoon in Legally Blonde
Legally Blonde is one of 4,100 titles in the MGM library

YouTube, the largest video-sharing website, will show full-length films from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's archives.

The partnership is aimed boosting advertising revenue for both YouTube and the Hollywood studio.

It will result in the launch of a video-on-demand channel called Impact, dedicated exclusively to action films, TV shows and clips.

"I think it will grow into a nice little business," said Jim Packer, co-president of MGM Worldwide Television.

He told the BBC that YouTube made an ideal partner because of its 280 million monthly users.

"I think YouTube has something that a lot of sites don't have.

"They have a lot of people walking through their front door everyday. And if they are smart in how they grow this, YouTube should have a successful business also," said Mr Packer.

Another channel that has been unveiled will showcase episodes from the popular programme American Gladiators from the 1980s and 1990s.

The videos will cost users nothing to download but will contain advertising.

Initially they will only be available in the US. But there are plans to open the service elsewhere once rights issues have been cleared.

'Entertainment destination'

Google, which bought YouTube two years ago for $1.65bn, has been searching for ways to make money out of the site without driving away its huge fan base.

The site has been facing competition from other video-sharing services such as Hulu, which offers programming from NBC Universal and News Corp's Fox as well as MGM.

Cast of Star Trek
Star Trek was first broadcast in 1966

Under an agreement YouTube has already signed with CBS, users can download classic TV shows such as Star Trek, MacGyver, and Beverly Hills 90210.

It has other arrangements in place with companies like the BBC, Sony, Lionsgate and Oprah.

YouTube said that striking a deal with MGM made sense given its commitment to deliver premium content online.

"YouTube is committed to helping our community of fans discover new content and reconnect with their all time favourite TV shows and movies," said Jordan Hoffner, director of content partnerships for the company.

"By partnering with MGM, YouTube is strengthening its position as an entertainment destination where Hollywood studios can reach a global audience."

'Growing forum'

The YouTube Impact channel will feature clips from MGM classics such as Rocky, Ronin, Legally Blonde, and The Magnificent Seven.

The films on show include Lone Wolfe McQuade and Bulletproof Monk, as well as those starring the actor Chuck Norris.

Daniel Craig
The Bond movies represent a major franchise for MGM

"It's safe to say you won't see those blockbuster theatricals shortly after their release or after their TV window," admitted Mr Packer.

Neither will users see any of the James Bond films playing on YouTube.

"They do very nicely on their own under existing licences and we are very protective of that content," Mr Packer said, adding: "There are plenty of other films we would like to expose."

He told the BBC that he did not expect to be the only studio to make these kinds of deals.

Mr Packer also said there were plans to launch another five to 10 channels.

One would be aimed at female viewers.

"We are in the process of figuring out a female-skewed brand," explained Mr Packer.

"We could put up a number of say romantic clips from shows like Moonstruck and put up a number of key feature films and create a female targeted site that would get a much higher advertising rate."

MGM said it hoped new channels would be launched within the next 18 months.

Octopuses share 'living ancestor'

Megaleledone setebos, the common ancestor's closest living relative

Many of the world's deep-sea octopuses evolved from a common ancestor, whose closest relative still exists in the Southern Ocean, a study has shown.

Researchers suggest that the creatures evolved after being driven to other ocean basins 30 million years ago by nutrient-rich and salty currents.

The findings form part of a decade-long global research programme to learn more about life in the world's oceans.

The first Census of Marine Life (CoML) is set to be completed in late 2010.

The project, which began back in 2000, involves more than 2,000 scientists from 82 nations.

The research into the evolution of deep-sea octopuses was part of a programme called the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML), explained Ron O'Dor, CoML's co-senior scientist.

"Many of these octopuses were collected from the deep sea by a number of the CoML's different projects," he told BBC News.

Octopus specimens collected by Census of Marine Life researchers

"All of that material was brought together and made available to Dr Jan Strugnell, a biologist at Queen's University Belfast, and she used this material to carry out DNA studies.

"She was looking at the relationship between these different deep-sea octopuses and how they originated.

"She has been able to trace the timeline for their distribution back 30 million years to a common ancestor."

The species could all be traced back to a shallow-water octopus that lived in the Southern Ocean. Today, the creature's closest living relative (Megaleledone setebos) can still be found in the icy waters around Antarctica.

Dr O'Dor added that Dr Strugnell's work also enabled her to identify how changes in the region's ocean played a pivotal role in the development of the new species, especially the emergence of a "thermohaline expressway".

"When you get an increase in sea ice, fresh water forms ice crystals and leaves behind high-salinity, high-oxygen water, which is denser than the surrounding sea water, so it sinks," he explained.


We can use the first census as a benchmark to see what happens in the oceans over the next decade or more

Dr Ron O'Dor,
CoML's co-senior scientist

"It gets mixed by sea currents and flows into all of the deepest parts of the ocean.

"At the time this process started, there was no oxygen at the bottom of the ocean, so it brought oxygen into these areas, and we can now see that the octopuses moved out from the Antarctic into deeper water."

Dr Strugnell's work, supported by the UK's Antarctic Funding Initiative (AFI) and the National Environment Research Council (Nerc), also showed how the creatures adapted to the new deep-sea environment.

One example was the loss of their ink sacs, because there was no need for the defence mechanism in the pitch black waters.

As well as being one of the CoML's highlights, the research is also being published in the journal Cladistics on Tuesday.

'Unprecedented project'

The deep-sea octopus study, along with dozens of other projects, form part of the census's fourth progress report, which will be presented at the World Conference on Marine Biology, which begins in Valencia, Spain, on Tuesday.

The overarching objectives of the global collaboration between CoML's scientists include:

  • Advancing technology for discoveries
  • Organising knowledge about marine life, and making it accessible
  • Measuring effects of human activities on ocean life
  • Providing the foundation for scientifically based policies

Dr O'Dor said that the main focus of the CoML for the remaining two years was to "synthesise" the data.

"Many of our projects have already completed their fieldwork and we have a lot of information," he observed.

CoML RESEARCH RESULTS
Tag receivers (Image: Paul Winchell)
An array of receivers in the Pacific Ocean reveal fish migration routes

"What we are now trying to do is to bring all that information together in a form that allows the public to understand how much we have learned about the ocean and what lives in it."

As far as improving our understanding of life beneath the waves, Dr O'Dor said: "It has been successful beyond what I imagined when I first became involved.

"It will provide a baseline. We are not going to know everything about what is happening within the oceans, but we have samplings of most marine habitats.

"We are moving into this period of global warming, which is resulting in the acidification of the oceans, melting of the polar ice cap.

"We can use the first census as a benchmark to see what happens in the oceans over the next decade or more."

Meeting formally for the first time at the five-day gathering in Valencia will be the CoML's Science Council, which will take an overview of the 10-year Census.

"Over the past few years, there has been huge public interest in biodiversity because there is a legitimate concern about the changes being caused by humans," commented Patricia Miloslavich, the Census's co-senior scientist.

"The Science Council will (consider) what people have said about areas that have not been explored or taxonomic groups that have been overlooked in the past," she told BBC News.

"We have had this first census that has given outstanding and amazing results for many ecosystems and regions.

"But now that we have been able to identify where there are some gaps, we would like to explore these areas."

Dr Miloslavich added that the Science Council will also develop the objectives of the second census, which will run from 2010 until 2020.

Cinema begins over-18s screenings

Quantum of Solace
Quantum of Solace is rated 12A but will get the over 18s treatment.

A cinema chain is to begin adults-only film screenings across the UK after a successful trial last year.

Vue cinemas will show selected PG, 12A and 15-rated films to audiences of over-18s in 58 cinemas nationwide.

James Bond film Quantum of Solace, which is rated 12A, will be the first film to get the treatment, starting on Friday, 7 November.

The Day the Earth Stood Still, Yes Man and Australia are also scheduled for adults-only screenings in December.

'Unwanted disruptions'

"These screenings have been launched in direct response to overwhelming positive customer feedback obtained from extensive research studies and trials carried out over the past year," said Mark de Quervain of Vue Entertainment.

"This confirmed a significant number of cinema goers wanted to see PG, 12A and 15-rated films in screenings that could avoid unwanted disruptions that can sometimes be caused by audiences under the age of 18."

A member of staff will be present during the screenings to ensure the over-18s policy is upheld.

Movie fans are also being given the opportunity to vote for future films they would like to see with age-restricted audiences on Vue's website.

The selected films will still be screened for under-18s.

Darwin's specimens go on display

Darwin's great-great-grandson Randal Keynes holding the specimens (Image: Natural History Museum)
Darwin's first sighting of the Galapagos mockingbirds were to prove historic
Randal Keynes, Charles Darwin's great-great-grandson

Two mockingbirds, which are said to have helped Charles Darwin develop his theory on evolution, are to go on public display for the first time.

The specimens, gathered by Darwin from the Galapagos, are said to be the "catalyst" for his transmutation theory - how one species changes into another.

A variety of differences between the specimens led to him questioning the "stability of species".

The birds will go on show at London's Natural History Museum next week.

The mockingbirds will feature in an exhibition dedicated to the pioneering work of the naturalist, which is part of Darwin200, a national programme of events running throughout 2009, celebrating the 200th anniversary of his birth.

"What is fantastic about these two birds is that visitors will be able to see for themselves the crucial differences that Darwin saw," said Jo Cooper, the museum's bird curator.

The mockingbirds were collected during Darwin's five-year voyage on board HMS Beagle, which was captained by Robert FitzRoy.

'Common ancestor'

One of the birds was captured on the island of Floreana, while the other was gathered from another Galapagos island, which is now called San Cristobal.

As a result of an earlier visit, Darwin knew that there was only one species of mockingbird in South America, yet he found a different species on each of the islands in the Pacific Ocean archipelago he visited.

From this, he reasoned that all mockingbirds in the world had descended from a common ancestor, because they shared a number of similarities with each other.

This ultimately led Darwin to the conclusion that all organisms on Earth had common ancestors.

Randal Keynes, Darwin's great-great-grandson, said the specimens played an important part in shaping the ideas that led to Darwin's theory of evolution.

"Darwin's first sighting of the Galapagos mockingbirds were to prove historic," he said.

"He later noted in the The Voyages of the Beagle that the small differences between the two birds on the two islands was a 'most remarkable fact in the distribution of organic beings'."

"Darwin had come to understand that species can change and this ultimately led to our present understanding of life on Earth."

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Total Uninstall 5.01
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Ubuntu 8.10 Desktop Edition
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TrueCrypt 6.1
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New lifeline for Bletchley Park


Bletchley Park roof (BP Trust)
The maze of roof sections and repairs is putting Bletchley's interiors in danger of damage

Britain's code-cracking and computing heritage has won a lifeline in the form of a donation from English Heritage.

The grant of £330,000 will be used to undertake urgent roof works at Bletchley Park - where Allied codebreakers worked in World War II.

Discussions are also in progress on a further three-year, £600,000 funding programme for the historic site.

The donation follows efforts to highlight the dilapidated state of the huts and other buildings at Bletchley.

The rooms of the Grade II-listed mansion, replete with painted ceilings, timber panelling, and ornate plasterwork, are at risk because the roof has been patched rather than renovated so many times during the 130 years of the mansion's history.

The work funded by the grant is projected to finish in March.

'Enormous endeavour'

"Bletchley Park played a fundamental role in the Allies winning the Second World War and is of great importance to the history of Europe," said Dr Simon Thurley, chief executive of English Heritage.

"English Heritage is committed to saving this fascinating group of buildings so that future generations can understand something of the enormous human endeavour which went on there."

In July about 100 UK academics signed a letter to The Times condemning the neglect of Bletchley.

The Bletchley Park Trust has raised more than £5m since taking over the site in 1992. It is in ongoing talks with English Heritage, as well as the Milton Keynes Borough Council, to raise a further £600,000.

English Heritage has pledged £100,000 a year for the next three years if its partners in the deal can match those funds.

The sum would be put toward a rolling programme to restore the huts that housed the World War II codebreakers who cracked many of the codes used by the German.

The cash from English Heritage follows a donation by hi-tech firms IBM and PGP to the National Museum of Computing which shares the Bletchley site.