Monday, June 29, 2009

WHAT"S NEW

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Jackson’s Chilling Autopsy Report

Michael Jackson had a tortured body as well as a tortured soul. The Sun has glimpsed his autopsy report and passes along the grisly details: Jackson weighed 112 lbs. at the time of his death, had lost nearly all of his hair, was covered in needle wounds from his thrice-daily painkiller injections, and was covered in scars from at least 13 plastic-surgery operations. His stomach was empty except for dissolved pills, and he suffered several broken ribs as rescuers pumped his chest to try to resuscitate him.
Read it at The Sun

WHAT"S NEW

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John Edwards’ Sex Tape?


John Edwards has not, apparently, hit the bottom yet: The New York Daily News reports that the book proposal of Andrew Young—the former Edwards staffer who once claimed to be the father of Rielle Hunter’s baby—says that Edwards and Hunter once made a sex tape, according to someone who has seen the proposal. “While he was unpacking, Young discovered a videocassette, according to the book pitch. Hunter had been hired by the Edwards campaign to videotape the candidate’s movements, but this one is said to have shown him taking positions that weren’t on his official platform.” The pitch also alleges that Edwards, and not Young, is the father of Hunter’s baby.

WHAT"S NEW

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Iraq Marks U.S. Exit with Holiday

Iraq has declared Monday a national holiday, planning festivals and celebrations, as it prepares to mark the end of the U.S. presence on the streets of its towns and cities, more than six years after the Iraq war began. As of Monday, 130,000 U.S. troops will be confined almost exclusively to American bases, leading up to the final U.S. departure in mid-2011—a milestone that’s been highly anticipated by Iraqi officials, who see it as a return to sovereignty. But the festive mood has angered some U.S. officials, who feel that U.S. troops’ contributions are being overlooked. The Iraqi prime minister has fueled the fire by describing the withdrawal as Iraq’s successful bid to “repulse” the invaders.
Read it at The Guardian

Saturday, June 27, 2009

HM The Queen confers Knighthood on Jaffna educated, Sri Lankan, Professor Sabaratnam Arulkumaran Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, conferred a Knighthood on Professor Sabaratnam Arulkumaran, professor and head of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of London and president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. He is one of the most forward-thinking medical leaders in the country. Sir Arulkumaran, 61, was educated at Jaffna Central College and Mahajana College, Telippalai, entered the University of Ceylon and took his MBBS degree in 1972 with honours. He obtained the additional degrees of DCH (Cey), LRCP &MRCS (UK), MRCOG, FRCS Ed by examination and his MD and PhD (Sing) by thesis. He received the Honorary fellowships of FSOGC (Canada), FACOG (America), FSCOG (Sri Lanka) and FAMS (Singapore). His current appointments and positions include Professor and Head, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, St.George's Hospital Medical School, University of London, and Secretary General of the Federation Internationale of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO). He is Editor-in-Chief of Best Practice and Research in Clinical Obstetrics &Gynaecology; Associate Editor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Survey, Current Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Paediatrics, Journal of the Hong Kong Academy of Medicine Medicine, International Journal of Obstetrics &Gynecology), and O&G Survey. He has published over 200 International reviewed articles, around 125 Chapters in books and edited or authored 18 books. Prior to his current appointment he was Professor (1997 to 2001) at The University of Nottingham, Non-Executive Director (1997-2001) of Southern Derbyshire Acute Hospital NHS Trust and Professor (1993 to 1997) and Head (1995 to 1997) of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, National University of Singapore. (Ozlanka joins the Global Sri Lankan community is saluting Sir Sabaratnam Arulkumaran on his receiving this great honour) We republish an interview that was done this year with Professor Arulkumaran by the leading publisher of science and health information, Elsevier. What aspect of being an editor do you find most rewarding? Making sure that the practitioners have good knowledge about the subject as it evolves, so they can further increase care for their patients. With the Best Practice series, where we select a topic to focus on, people write to me after and tell me how it has helped them to change their practice. What would you change about your role as editor or the scientific journal publishing industry if you could? The only thing would be to see how accessible journals are for various people. For instance, the Best Practice series is produced in English and there are a lot of practitioners, in countries like Japan, that don't speak English. Accessibility of the materials is really important. In certain areas like Africa and India, they can't afford to buy the literature. How do we get the knowledge there without cost or language restrictions? How do you balance your role as editor with your other roles? It takes extra time; you need to spend the weekends and evenings working. I travel a lot, so I take the transcripts with me and, instead of watching the movie, I'm reading papers. When you were a child, what did you want to be when you grew up? I had what I call evolving ambitions. Initially I wanted to be a pilot, then a doctor, then a GP and, ultimately, an obstetrician. Children are attracted to jobs with uniforms. As you approach university, you realize there are more jobs and things to do. Why did you choose medicine as your field of study? I got to know some students who went to medical school. Hearing about their work really interested me, the science aspect, but also the need to be a good communicator. I was attracted to the idea of spending my time with patients and trying to figure out what could be done. An important part of being a good physician is being a good listener. Tell me about collaboration. What is the secret to success? I had a lot of collaboration in my early days with doctors from Sweden. They would come to Singapore, where I used to work, and we would bring our ideas to the table to see how we could work together. To collaborate well, you need to be prepared to travel and meet people. What gets you up in the morning? I just get up on my own at 5:15, there seems to be a clock in my head. I often work until midnight, there's always so much work and I have to prioritize. I supervise a number of junior doctors and I need to spend time motivating them. They stimulate me by asking questions and they want the answers so they can get better at what they're doing. What is the biggest lesson you've learned in your career? The biggest lesson is that success comes with hard work. People talk about luck, but you produce that by working hard. It means you have to sacrifice the usual pleasures that others enjoy. What is your biggest achievement? I have contributed to our specialty in a number of ways. I enjoy my role as Head of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at St. George's College, London. I was the secretary General of the International Federation of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and I'm now the President of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists in the UK; a college that produces a lot of leading materials and programs relating to women's healthcare. It sets standards of practice in all hospitals and I am proud to be leading this organization. It is nice to be acknowledged in this way by my peers and to do good work in this specialty. What is your favorite quote? There are several, of course. One simple one might be: “A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation with the bricks that others throw at him.” It is from one of the Hindu philosophers, Chinmayananda. What are you currently reading? Would you recommend it? If so, why? There's an interesting book written by Gordon Brown, the current Prime Minister, called Courage: Eight Portraits . Essentially, he's portraying eight leaders who have gone out of their way to do things differently, like Nelson Mandela and Aung San Suu Kyi. They took the majority view and worked against the odds for the betterment of all people. Who or what is your biggest inspiration? Hindu philosophy, specifically the Bhagavadgitha . It's a story about a king fighting against his own brothers for the sake of good. They are having a discussion on the battlefield. It's full of quotes about how to live a good life, not to regret what you are doing and to do what is best for the good of others. I normally have a CD of it in my car, or when I travel. What would you like your legacy to be? That I contributed to the field, at least in a small way. To improve women's health is my chosen vocation. I like to think that I contributed through my scientific research, writing papers, editing and in my clinical work. What do you like to do for fun? I like to meet with my friends and talk about issues in life. We only meet three or four times a year, but we've been getting together for decades. We talk about how things are in our personal lives and the world around us. In my extra time, I like to travel and explore new cultures, to see how people in other places live now and what their history was before. Ozlanka is not responsible for the contents of this article or for any external internet sites that may be linked through this website. The views expressed above are the author's alone and do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions or concepts of the webmaster or the owners &operators of Ozlanka.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

WHAT"S NEW


Oscars Doubling Best-Picture Nominees

The Academy Awards may get even longer: The Oscars have announced that, starting next year, it will double the number of best-picture nominees from five to 10. Academy President Sid Ganis said that, after reviewing last year's top contenders, they realized there was room for more in the premiere category—and they feel their decision will open the field up to more worthy films, including documentaries, animated movies, foreign-language films, and even comedies. "Everybody says the Academy will never nominate a comedy," Ganis said. "Well, maybe we will." The move marks a return to Hollywood's golden age 60-70 years ago, when having 10 or more nominees was common.
Read it at Associated Press

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

DOCTORS AND WHITE COATS

Why Do Doctors Wear White Coats?
Because they say "science."By Adrian ChenPosted Friday, June 19, 2009, at 6:42 PM ET
The
American Medical Association voted Tuesday on a resolution that would recommend hospitals ban doctors' iconic white lab coats, citing evidence that the garment contributes to the spread of infection. (The resolution was referred to a panel for further consideration.)* Indeed, a number of studies have shown that the coats harbor potentially harmful bacteria (and may cause "white coat hypertension"). If white coats are so bad, why do doctors still wear them?
Because a white lab coat says "
I am a scientific healer." The knee-length coat in medicine crossed over from the laboratory sciences at the turn of the 20th century. Before that time, medicine was generally seen as the haphazard province of quacks and frauds, and physicians wore street clothes even in the operating room. As the field developed into a respected branch of applied science in the early 1900s, doctors adopted the costume of the laboratory as a way of bolstering their scientific credibility.
In pre-white-coat times, physicians used primitive
tools and techniques and had little formal training. (Medical school could be finished in a year.) Early doctors competed for legitimacy (and patients) with other healing arts like homeopathy and medical eclecticism. But the development of antiseptics and anesthesia, among other things, demonstrated the exceptional power of science to improve health. Doctors strove to become more scientific, in practice and in dress. The lab coat served both purposes by providing a (supposedly) sterile work environment and soothing patients with its air of scientific authority. The traditional lab coat was beige, but doctors adopted white because the color symbolizes life and purity. (In earlier times, doctors were more likely to wear black, in keeping with the high mortality rates seen at hospitals. The nuns who served as nurses often wore black habits.) By 1915, physicians working in hospitals had for the most part switched from street clothes to white coats and pants.
With their scientific bona fides firmly in place, doctors today are divided on the white-coat question.
Supporters say the coat instills docs with a humbling sense of responsibility and puts patients at ease, while detractors see it as an alienating symbol of medical hubris. More than 100 medical schools host "white coat ceremonies" where first-year med students are outfitted with shortened versions of the white coat, and the coats are ubiquitous at large teaching hospitals where they help differentiate between doctors and students. However, doctors in smaller hospitals and private practice are more likely to wear regular clothes. A recent study suggests that only 1 in 8 doctors actually sport a white coat at work. Perhaps the most ardent supporters of the garment are patients: In one study, 56 percent of those surveyed believed doctors should wear coats, compared with only 24 percent of doctors. (Elderly people tend to be most supportive of the white coat.) Another study found that patients were much more likely to trust a doctor if they were wearing a white coat than if they were in scrubs.
If hospitals followed the AMA resolution and banned the white coat, what would doctors wear? The Scottish National Health Service
outlawed white coats in 2008 and instituted a uniform of color-coded scrubs for all medical personnel. The Mayo Clinic doesn't allow white coats; their doctors wear business attire.

WHAT"S NEW

Nixon worried that greater access to abortions would foster “permissiveness,” and said that “it breaks the family.” But he also saw a need for abortion in some cases — like interracial pregnancies, he said.
“There are times when an abortion is necessary. I know that. When you have a black and a white,” he
told an aide, before adding, “Or a rape.”

WHAT"S NEW

Evidence of Financial Links Between Saudi Royal Family and Al Qaeda
In an attempt to link members of the Saudi royal family to the financing of Al Qaeda, lawyers for Sept. 11 families and their insurers have collected several hundred thousand pages of interview transcripts, government reports, financial records, court testimony and other material. Four of the documents, not entered in the court record but provided to the New York Times, are shown here. Lawyers for the Saudi royal family deny any connection to the financing of Al Qaeda and say the links claimed by the Sept. 11 families are tenuous and misleading. The Supreme Court is expected to decide this week whether to take up the case; lower courts have found that the Saudis cannot be sued in U.S. court based on a 1976 law giving sovereign immunity to foreign nations and their leaders.

By Ogden Nash

Beneath this slab
John Brown is stored.
He watched the ads,
And not the road.

Monday, June 15, 2009

WHAT"S NEW

KNIGHTHOOD FOR SRI LANKAN
TAMIL,2009 QUEENS BIRTHDAY
HONOURS LIST--- Knighthood for Professor Sabaratnam Arulkumaran, professor and head of obstetrics and gynaecology at the University of London and president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. He is one of the most forward-thinking medical leaders in the country.

Sabaratnam Arulkumaran:
Professor Arulkumaran qualified with MBBS Hons from University of Ceylon (Sri Lanka) in 1972. He obtained the additional degrees of DCH (Cey), LRCP & MRCS (UK), MRCOG, FRCS Ed by examination and his MD and PhD (Sing) by thesis. He received the Honorary fellowships of FSOGC (Canada), FACOG (America), FSCOG (Sri Lanka) and FAMS (Singapore). His current appointments and positions include Professor and Head, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, St.George's Hospital Medical School, University of London, and Secretary General of the Federation Internationale of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO). He is Editor-in-Chief of Best Practice and Research in Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology; Associate Editor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Survey, Current Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Paediatrics, Journal of the Hong Kong Academy of Medicine Medicine, International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology), and O&G Survey. He has published over 200 International reviewed articles, around 125 Chapters in books and edited or authored 18 books. Prior to his current appointment he was Professor (1997 to 2001) at The University of Nottingham, Non-Executive Director (1997-2001) of Southern Derbyshire Acute Hospital NHS Trust and Professor (1993 to 1997) and Head (1995 to 1997) of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, National University of Singapore.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

WHAT"S NEW

WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden isn't ruling out his own presidential aspirations.
The two-time presidential candidate says the current lineup is the right one, with Biden as President Barack Obama's No. 2. The vice president says he is a close adviser to Obama and is satisfied with his role in the administration.
For instance, Biden says he reacted to
Supreme Court nominees as a veteran senator. Now, he gets to help pick them.
But he says he still has his eye on the Oval Office.
Biden is 66 years old and would be 73 on Election Day in 2016.
Biden unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination in 1988 and again in 2008.
Biden appeared Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press."

WHAT"S NEW

WHAT"S NEW


Michelle’s Royal Friendship

Who says the Queen is chilly? Michelle Obama made a private visit to Buckingham Palace last week to visit her new friend, Queen Elizabeth. Michelle and daughters Malia and Sasha were given a three-hour tour of the grounds as a special treat for Sasha’s birthday, and then met with the Queen. A “royal source” told Reuters that there has been much personal warmth between the two women since they met at the G20 summit. They’ve spoken on the phone and exchanged letters since then, and, despite their age difference, have much in common. Michelle, 45, enjoys gardening, the countryside and clothes, much like the 83-year-old monarch, the source reports. Sounds deep.
Read it at Reuters
Posted at 8:09 AM, Jun 14, 2009

THE SRI LANKAN TAMILS

Origin of Tamils in Lanka:
Tamils were in Lanka about 300 to 500 years before the Gangetic Immigration symbolized by Vijaya. Excavations in near Mattota, the ancient sea port in the North, have established that the South Indian population first settled in the North of the Island as early as 700 to 1000 BC. The 8000 Urn burials found at Pomparripu cemetery, dating back to 700 to 1000 BC, indicate the presence of significantly large population from South India. The artefacts and Urn Burials found at this site are almost identical to those excavated by Robert Bruce Foot (1834-1912) in South India at Adichanallur and Tirunelvely districts; the seat of old Pandiyan kingdom, from where Vijaya obtained his bride. Foot, a young English geologist, joined the Geological Survey of India in 1858, and through his outstanding contributions, came to be regarded as the father of Indian geology. About twelve miles from Tirunelvely on the banks of Tambarappani river lies the world’s largest ancient burial ground covering over 114 acres with thousands of Urn burials consisting of ritual objects made of bronze, gold and pottery. It is here that R.B. Foot unknowingly found the archaeological link to Ceylon. The advanced state of culture that prevailed at Pomparippu, similar to Tirunelvely, is revealed by the copper and iron implements, beads and Black-and-Red-Ware, dated to before 900 BC. The excavations at Pomparippu in Lanka were carried out by Department of Archaeology, Colombo (1956), Institute of Archaeology, London (1965) and University of Pennsylvania (1970). These excavations, including those at Kantharodai were discontinued by Sri Lankan government as truth began to emerge. No conclusive archaeological findings are there yet to link Lanka with North India to justify the claim that Aryans were in Lanka before the arrival of Vijaya. Of Mullaitivu: In 1885 several ancient coins were discovered in Mullaitivu. A man with a small coconut garden in the village started clearing and levelling his land. In the process he discovered an ancient shallow well with fresh water. There he found silver Purana coins 51 in number and 16 copper plaques. The date of issue of these coins of Indian origin was initially estimated to be phenomenally old at 2000 BC or the latest 1100 BC. Sir Alexander Cunningham (1814-1893), first Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India, who studied around 5000 such coins held a view that the Puranas, also called, Kārshāpana, Dharanas or Salakas were issued by 1000 BC. Of Kantharodai and Jaffna: It is true that Buddhist monuments were found in Kanthadarodai, so were Buddhist Dagobas found in the Indus Valley: two thousand years before Buddha was born! Most places of historic settlements have layers of cultural and biological debris, and on the top is the most recent. In the proper archaeological world, we have learnt from the excavations at Mohenjadaro that the depth of debris from previous occupations, can amount to as much as 70 feet below the ground surface. Also a great number of ancient Tamils were Buddhists. A Chinese traveller who spent his time in both Lanka and Tamil Nadu describes one hundred monasteries in Kanchipuram, in the Chola Kingdom, where nearly 10,000 Buddhist monks resided. Interestingly dating of evidence found in Kantharodai sites coincides with early historic period at Kanchipuram and Paiyampalli in Tamil Nadu. Study of this piece of pottery has shown that the letters were written before firing the vessel, which excludes the possibility that the vessel was brought to the spot from another area. The Brahimi-inscribed seal found in Anaikottai near Jaffna town is at least 250 BC to 100 AD if not earlier. It is interesting to note that many letters in the Brahimi alphabet are almost identical to that of some Tamil alphabets. Tamils did not write their history: It is true that the Tamils did not write their history. Their history is seen through their poetry. The oldest extant Tamil works, Tolkapium, dating back to 250 BC, gives a complete picture of ancient Tamils, including romance, customs, habits beliefs and the conduct of their kings. The contemporary king of Lanka around this period would have been King Devanambiyatissa. The extant 3rd Sangam literature,a round 100 AD (Mahavamsa was written 400 years later) describes the Tamil kings in the form of poetry. The Nagas in Lanka: Mahavamsa says that Nagas were inhabitants of Lanka at the time of Buddha’s first visit to Lanka: The Naga kings sat on gem thrones and lived at Nagadipa (North of Lanka). The chronicle also states that Buddha preached to eighty kotis of Nagas on his second visit to Lanka: ‘Beautiful Nagas of brilliantly blue colour, holding flags, praised the most excellent Bodhi (tree) which was being established in the island of Lanka’ (Mahavamsa). These Nagas are from South India and were inhabiting Lanka, long before Vijaya. The South Indian history is abound with Naga kings. Puranas describe seven Nagas who ruled at Mathurai, the Tamil Pandyan kingdom. We learn from the same sources that nine Naga kings ruled at Padmavathi. One of them was Bhavanaga who is well documented in history though his coins. Well respected historian Henry Parker in his Ancient Ceylon, 1909 uses the term Naga synonymously with Tamils. Most Mahavamsa kings were Nagas, as we gather from their name, and other historical evidence. Also in this book, Parker reveals his discovery of many ancient Tamil cities, quite unknown to Mahavamsa. Being an irrigation engineer, Parker, identified several reservoirs, built by Tamil kings, before the Christian era. Vijaya and his Tamil Queen: King Vijaya, in order to consecrate himself as King, drove out Kunevi and married a Pandyan princess from Madurai, so says Mahavamsa. The Pandyan princess arrived at the northern port of Mantotta dressed with every possible form of gold jewellery. With her came hundred maidens on elephants, horses and wagons according to their rank and craftsman and a thousand families of eighteen guilds. Vijaya held a pompous and lavish ceremony in making the Pandiya princess his consort. Mathurai, was the seat of ancient Tamil literature, where the three Sangams existed. The second wave of Tamil immigration had begun in 500 BC. Of Tamil Kings in Ancient Lanka and Mahavamsa: According to Mahavamsa, 32 Tamil kings ruled in the North of Lanka in 2nd century BC and Dutta Gamunu had to fight all of them, not just Elara, to achieve a unitary Lanka, for the first time. R.A.H.L. Gunawardana in his Prelude to the State, (Reflections on Heritage, Central Cultural Fund, Ministry of Cultural and Religios Affairs, Sri Lanka, 2000) demolishes the Mahavamsa theory that the Sinhalese kings before Duttu Gamunu ruled entire Lanka. According to him “It is even possible to suggest that there was probably conscious attempt on the part of the chronicler (author of Mahavamsa), as in the case of imperial historiography in China, to withhold information that was available to him on the conditions that prevailed before the emergence of a unified polity (reign of Duttu Gamini) in Sri Lanka”. He presents evidence for kings in Lanka, other than those mentioned in Mahavamsa. The historian Adikaram in his Early History of Buddhism in Ceylon (1953) says “The only explanation possible (for not mentioning earlier religions including Buddhism in Lanka, by Mahavamsa ) for, is silence was observed with regard to their existence in order to create a dark background on the canvas on which the enthusiastic narrator of the Buddhist history might successfully paint his glowing picture of Mahinda’s miraculous conversion of the island”. Although a great chronicle (Mahavamsa), its author has withheld the truth in several instances. How did the Singhalese become a majority? The most probable theory is that the original Gangetic immigrants, symbolised by Vijaya, got assimilated with the large number of local Yakka race. As we see in Mahavamsa, during the first visit of Buddha to Lanka, there was a great gathering of the Yakkas, dwelling in the island. The currently the language of Vaddas is a Singhala dialect which lends to this theory. Of the Nagas and Yakkas who existed in Lanka before Vijaya, the latter were the majority going by references to them in Mahavamsa which talks of relatively lesser Nagas but large numbers of Yakkas on various occasions. The Yakkas in many instances stood by the kings in times of conflict and sat on equal throne as the king. As John M Senaveratne states in his Story of the Singhalese ‘In process of time they (Yakkas) and the settlers were merged in to one people, professing the same religion and speaking the same tongue, the people who were thenceforth to be known in history as the Singhalese’. He continues to explain the existence of Vaddas: ‘Such of the Yakkas, however, as held themselves aloof from the strangers settled in the land, refusing to make common cause with them, found themselves gradually compelled to take up their abodes in the mountain fastnesses or in the remote and dense forests of the interior’. This view was accepted in the 1930’s as Senaveratne’s book was approved by the Director of Education for use in Ceylon schools. During the process of time the Singhalese population growth was augmented by inflow of Tamils from South India, since Vijaya’s times, and these Tamils genetically merged with the Singhalese race and became socially and philologically identical to them. Thus the race became a mixture of Gangetic immigrants, Yakkas, and to a lesser extent Tamils and other minority immigrants from Burma and Nepal. We see the remnants of Tamil Dravidian names amongst the Singhalese. The Dravidian Tamil term for God is Ko and the name for the king is Kon. The Tamil names of of non-Aryan are seen in Tennakone (Tamil: Thennai, south, kon, king), Alahakone (Tamil: alagu, beautiful, kon, King), Weerakone(Tamil: veera, brave), Illangakone (Tamil: Ilankai, ancient name for Lanka in Sangam literature), Alahapperuma (Tamil: Peruma, prince), Illangasinghe (Tamil: Ilankai, Singham is common for Sinhalese and Tamil root). Henry Parker states that the birth of Singhalese nation, in the absence of mass migration from north India, was a coalescence of Vaddas and the Singhalese. In the census of 1901 the total number of Vaddas in Ceylon were 3971, where as they formed a greater portion of population in the 12th century. Parakramabahu I, according to Mahavamsa trained and armed several thousands of Vaddas for his military campaign. Compared to the number of original Aryan migration to Lanka today’s number of Singhalese is greatly high to maintain that the present Sinhalese race is exclusively Aryan. On the basis of study of the skulls of both the Singhalese and the Vaddas, the German pathologist and anthropologist Rudolph Virchow (1821–1902) states ‘The Vaddas would appear rather as a representative of aboriginal race; the Singhalese on the other hand, as hybrids produced by union of immigrant Indians with Vaddas’. Henry Parker on the subject concludes ‘That manifold resemblance exist between the Vaddas and the Singhalese, and that of the origin of the Singhalese race from a mixture of Vaddas and immigrants from India possess great probability, as well as on historical as also on anthropological grounds’. Of the Kandyan Convention: The Kandyan Convention signed on the 2nd March 1815 in the Audience-Hall of the Palace of Kandy, between the Governor Brownrigg, representing His Majesty George III, and the Kandyan chiefs, had no bearing on the rest of the country. The twelve clauses applied to Kandyan administration and over non-Kandyans, the position was to remain according to British law. The British View: The first British Colonial Secretary, Sir Hugh Cleghorn in his letter in June 1799 wrote to the British Government: "Two different nations from a very ancient period have divided between them the possession of the Island. First the Sinhalese, inhabiting the interior of the country in its Southern and Western parts, and secondly the Malabars (Tamils) who possess the Northern and Eastern Districts. These two nations differ entirely in their religion, language and manners." Of Ancient Irrigation Schemes and the Tamils: The Pavatkulam, a reservoir in the vicinity of Nagadipa in the north bears no previous or other names. Not mentioned in Mahavamsa or other Singhalese chronicles, this great tank was constructed in the 3rd century BC on the basis of the type of bricks used, according to irrigation engineer and archaeologist Henry Parker. This reservoir draws water from two streams in south of Vavuniya. Study of its layout proves that the site in the valley was well explored and surveyed before its construction commenced. The devices used are sophisticated princliples of irrigation engineering. This tank held a depth of 18 feet of water with an area of 2020 acres holding 779 million cubic feet of water. Another reservoir in the north, Vavunik-kulam also matches up to the scale of Pavatkulam. This tank is formed by raising the embankment across the valley of Pali-aru, another Tamil name for a river, hence its former name Peli-vavi. Irrigation was a priority in Tamilaham in South India and it is very conceivable that the South Indians brought this skill to northern Lanka in the pre-Chriatian era. When another engineer C. F. S. Barker surveyed the northern embankment of the Vavunikulam tank, he came across some ruins which indicated that there was an ancient city at this site. H Neville at this site discovered several images of Hindu deities including Vishnu. This city, Pali Nagara (Tamil: palai, dessert, nagaram, city) is found in the inscription of king Wasabha (66-110 AD) at Periyamiyan Kulam. It states that the king gave Pali Nagara tank to the Buddhist monks. A single reference to Pali-vavi in the Mahavamsa shows that it was in existence before Dutta Gamini, carrying its origin back to the time of Ellala from 205 BC to 161 BC. Parker suggests that it was constructed during Ellala’s regime but the ancient Lankan chronicles failed to record the fact. According to Parker’s study Pavatkulam engineered before the Christian era could have served as a model to later tanks. An ancient highway from Anuradhapura to the Nagadipa, now the Northern Province, passes immediately below the banks of Pavatkulam. The fact that such large and cleverly constructed tanks in the north are not mentioned in the Singhalese chronicles, especially Mahavamsa can only mean that they were not related to the Buddhist kings. These tanks up to now have retained their Tamil names including Periya-Kattu Kulam (big forest lake) near Marichi Katti (block and build), a village near ancient Kuthira Malai (Horse-hill). The name kudirai for horse is a Dravidian pedigree name for horse. The Sanskrit term for horse is ghota. An ancient Hindu temple near this place was discovered by J Haffner, an officer of the Dutch East India Company who walked from Jaffna to Colombo. This temple was important enough for the priests who officiated here were given a share of the pearl-fishing. Ancient Tamil classics, refer to two chieftains Ellini and Korran who ruled at Kuthiramalai. The port where the Roman Annius Plocamus, landed after losing course on his voyage has been identified as Kuthiramalai by Christian Lassen (1800-1876). This event occurred around 44 AD during the reign of king Candamukha Siva. Of Tamil Mercenaries: Yes time and again the Sinhalese kings sought the help of Tamil mercenaries. After the death of Vijaya Bahu I, there was disunity amongst the Singhalese royalty and the country plunged in to civil war, and the chief Buddhist monk himself had to call upon the Vellaikaras to protect the Tooth relic temple and the villages endowed to it. Sunil Liyanage sunilpl@btconnect.com Isabella Liyanage isabellal@btconnect.com

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

WHAT"S NEW

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Palin: Letterman Is 'Pathetic'


Someone may want to advise Sarah Palin to choose her battles. The Alaska governor has called late-night host David Letterman “pathetic” after he cracked a joke about her “slutty flight-attendant look” on his show. “What a commentary there,” Palin told radio host John Ziegler. “That’s pretty pathetic, good ole David Letterman.” Palin said Letterman was part of a media culture “where everything is commentary and facts don’t matter anymore.” Letterman’s joke came as part of a Top Ten List about Palin’s recent trip to New York. The number two reason for her visit, he said, was she “bought makeup at Bloomingdale’s to update her ‘slutty flight attendant’ look.”
Read it at Politico
Posted at 6:27 AM, Jun 10, 2009

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Palau to Take Uighur Detainees

Perhaps the U.S. government is thinking out of sight, out of mind? The tiny Pacific island nation of Palau—population 20,000—has agreed to resettle up to 17 Uighur detainees from Guantanamo Bay. The Chinese Muslims have been stuck at Gitmo, despite the fact that the Pentagon has said they are not “enemy combatants.” Palau said that it will accept them “as a humanitarian gesture” toward, as President Johnson Toribong put it, “our best friend and ally.” According to the Associated Press, “The U.S. was prepared to give Palau up to $200 million in development, budget support and other assistance in return for accepting the Uighurs and as part of a mutual defense and cooperation treaty that is due to be renegotiated this year.”
Read it at Associated Press
Posted at 6:30 AM, Jun 10, 2009

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

WHAT"S NEW

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Obama's Jesus Addiction

Who would Jesus reference? Politico reports that Barack Obama uses Christ in public speeches more frequently than his predecessor. It's odd, considering that George W. Bush's identity as an evangelical was central to his political identity, while Obama has been rather ecumenical—his inauguration ceremony included shout-outs to different faiths as well as nonbelievers. Obama may be advancing two political agendas through his rhetorical use of Jesus: The mentions may help counter the politically risky rumor that he is a Muslim, which 11 percent of Americans still believe; and Obama may be trying to resurrect the Christian Left, which has included such figures as Martin Luther King Jr. Not everyone is on board, though. As a disillusioned former official from Bush's faith-based office put it, "When God becomes identified with a political agenda, God gets screwed."
Read it at Politico

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

WHAT"S NEW

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Housing Crisis Hits Geithner's Home

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has a very personal incentive to fix the housing crisis: His mansion won't sell. After scoring his new Washington job, Geithner put his old house—a five-bedroom Tudor located in New York City's tony Larchmont suburb—up for sale for $1.635 million, the Associated Press reports. After a few weeks, the price dropped to $1.575 million (less than the $1.602 million he paid for it), and finally, on May 21 the place was rented for $7,500 per month. The rent might sound expensive, but it's probably not enough to cover mortgage payments on Geithner's two loans, which total $1.25 million, plus the $27,000 he shells out in yearly property taxes.
Read it at Associated Press
Posted at 6:40 AM, Jun 3, 2009

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

WHAT"S NEW


From The Times
June 2, 2009
Britain sold weapons to help Sri Lankan army defeat Tamil Tigers

Britain and other EU countries sold military equipment worth millions of pounds to the Sri Lankan Government in the last three years of its bloody civil war with the Tamil Tigers, The Times has learnt.
Britain approved commercial sales of more than £13.6 million of equipment including armoured vehicles, machinegun components and semiautomatic pistols, according to official records.
Slovakia provided 10,000 rockets worth £1.1 million, while Bulgaria approved sales of guns and ammunition worth £1.75 million, according to EU documents and officials.
It is impossible to verify whether all the approved sales were delivered as the governments involved do not publish those details. Only Slovakia has confirmed delivery of the rockets.
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WHAT"S NEW


Oprah's Quack Medicine


Charles Rex Arbogast / AP Photo
When Oprah features a product on her show—a wrinkle cream, book, or type of food—it immediately starts flying off the shelves. But what happens when her endorsements are bad for viewers’ health? Newsweek reports that Oprah had actress Suzanne Somers on her show to praise non-FDA-approved “bioidenticals,” hormone injections that keep the actress feeling younger but increase risk for heart disease, cancer, and other illness. "We have the right to demand a better quality of life for ourselves," Oprah said, after she allowed a few doctors to argue against the hormones. "And that's what doctors have got to learn to start respecting." Oprah also had anti-vaccine activist Jenny McCarthy launch her platform on her show, praised risky cosmetic surgery procedures, and featured medical experts spouting half-truths about weight loss and various medical conditions.
Read it at Newsweek

WHAT"S NEW


Mel Gibson Cracks at Church


Matt Sayles / AP Photo
Mel Gibson clearly wasn’t thinking about Christ at church on Sunday. When Gibson attended services at Holy Family Chapel, in Agoura Hills, California, he may have intended to pray, but “completely lost it,” instead. Interrupting the service, Gibson--who has recently faced scrutiny for his extra-marital affair with a Russian pop-star--got on the altar and, in front of two priests, a bishop, and a packed house, “paced back and forth, furiously telling the congregation that he would not stand by and be judged and scrutinized,” a source said. “[His] holier than thou world is falling apart around him–all these years he’s been preaching the good holy word, and now that the wizard’s curtain has been pulled back, we find that Mel hasn’t been practicing what he preaches.”
Read it at Radar
Posted at 7:03 AM, Jun 2, 2009

Monday, June 01, 2009

WHAT"S NEW


Last Titanic Survivor Dies at 96


John Stillwell / AP Photo
Sad news: The last survivor of the Titanic died Sunday at the age of 97. Millvina Dean was two months old when she escaped the sinking ship on a lifeboat—leaving behind her father, who went down with the boat. The Deans were third-class passengers, en route to America to look for work after the coal strike in England. Dean worked as a secretary until she retired and lived in a nursing home not far from where the ship set sail. But after she retired, Dean couldn’t afford the cost of living, and—though she never saw Titanic herself—only a month ago Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, and director James Cameron donated £20,000 to the Millvina Fund to pay for her nursing home fees.
Read it at The Guardian

WHAT"S NEW


Blood on Bill O'Reilly's Hands?


Yesterday, after the murder of Dr. George Tiller, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder directed the United States Marshals Service to offer protection to abortion clinics and providers around the country. Also, Tiller’s assassin, Scott Roeder, was arrested once before in 1996 for having bomb-building materials. And at Salon, Gabriel Winant examines the role Bill O’Reilly played in the campaign against Tiller. Since 2005, O’Reilly mentioned Tiller on his program 29 times, calling him “Tiller the Baby Killer,” accusing him of “Nazi stuff,” and saying “This is the kind of stuff happened in Mao's China, Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union.” Winant writes, “While he never advocated anything violent or illegal, the Fox bully repeatedly portrayed the doctor as a murderer on the loose, allowed to do whatever he wanted by corrupt and decadent authorities.”

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Reagan Did It
By PAUL KRUGMAN
“This bill is the most important legislation for financial institutions in the last 50 years. It provides a long-term solution for troubled thrift institutions. ... All in all, I think we hit the jackpot.” So declared Ronald Reagan in 1982, as he signed the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act.
He was, as it happened, wrong about solving the problems of the thrifts. On the contrary, the bill turned the modest-sized troubles of savings-and-loan institutions into an utter catastrophe. But he was right about the legislation’s significance. And as for that jackpot — well, it finally came more than 25 years later, in the form of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
For the more one looks into the origins of the current disaster, the clearer it becomes that the key wrong turn — the turn that made crisis inevitable — took place in the early 1980s, during the Reagan years.
Attacks on Reaganomics usually focus on rising inequality and fiscal irresponsibility. Indeed, Reagan ushered in an era in which a small minority grew vastly rich, while working families saw only meager gains. He also broke with longstanding rules of fiscal prudence.
On the latter point: traditionally, the U.S. government ran significant budget deficits only in times of war or economic emergency. Federal debt as a percentage of G.D.P. fell steadily from the end of World War II until 1980. But indebtedness began rising under Reagan; it fell again in the Clinton years, but resumed its rise under the Bush administration, leaving us ill prepared for the emergency now upon us.
The increase in public debt was, however, dwarfed by the rise in private debt, made possible by financial deregulation. The change in America’s financial rules was Reagan’s biggest legacy. And it’s the gift that keeps on taking.
The immediate effect of Garn-St. Germain, as I said, was to turn the thrifts from a problem into a catastrophe. The S.& L. crisis has been written out of the Reagan hagiography, but the fact is that deregulation in effect gave the industry — whose deposits were federally insured — a license to gamble with taxpayers’ money, at best, or simply to loot it, at worst. By the time the government closed the books on the affair, taxpayers had lost $130 billion, back when that was a lot of money.
But there was also a longer-term effect. Reagan-era legislative changes essentially ended New Deal restrictions on mortgage lending — restrictions that, in particular, limited the ability of families to buy homes without putting a significant amount of money down.
These restrictions were put in place in the 1930s by political leaders who had just experienced a terrible financial crisis, and were trying to prevent another. But by 1980 the memory of the Depression had faded. Government, declared Reagan, is the problem, not the solution; the magic of the marketplace must be set free. And so the precautionary rules were scrapped.
Together with looser lending standards for other kinds of consumer credit, this led to a radical change in American behavior.
We weren’t always a nation of big debts and low savings: in the 1970s Americans saved almost 10 percent of their income, slightly more than in the 1960s. It was only after the Reagan deregulation that thrift gradually disappeared from the American way of life, culminating in the near-zero savings rate that prevailed on the eve of the great crisis. Household debt was only 60 percent of income when Reagan took office, about the same as it was during the Kennedy administration. By 2007 it was up to 119 percent.
All this, we were assured, was a good thing: sure, Americans were piling up debt, and they weren’t putting aside any of their income, but their finances looked fine once you took into account the rising values of their houses and their stock portfolios. Oops.
Now, the proximate causes of today’s economic crisis lie in events that took place long after Reagan left office — in the global savings glut created by surpluses in China and elsewhere, and in the giant housing bubble that savings glut helped inflate.
But it was the explosion of debt over the previous quarter-century that made the U.S. economy so vulnerable. Overstretched borrowers were bound to start defaulting in large numbers once the housing bubble burst and unemployment began to rise.
These defaults in turn wreaked havoc with a financial system that — also mainly thanks to Reagan-era deregulation — took on too much risk with too little capital.
There’s plenty of blame to go around these days. But the prime villains behind the mess we’re in were Reagan and his circle of advisers — men who forgot the lessons of America’s last great financial crisis, and condemned the rest of us to repeat it.