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TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015 • [email protected] • www.thepeninsulaqatar.com • 4455 7741
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• Tulukoota Qatar holds environmental awareness programme at schools
• Send in your best recipe and win a dinner voucher for two
• A tastier wrap is in the bag
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• Google Maps: A decade of transforming the mapping landscape
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Baftas 2015: Boyhood wins top honours
GRAMMY GRAMMY AWARDSAWARDS
The annual Grammys gala was once again a spectacle full of sparkling performances, but the music industry this year chose to recognise artists not for showmanship but for unadorned emotion.
2 COVER STORYPLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
By Shaun Tandon
Sam Smith, the British soul singer who was virtually unknown a year ago, dominated the Grammys
on Sunday with four awards, although adventurous rocker Beck unexpectedly took home Album of the Year honors.
Superstar Beyonce and “Happy” creator Pharrell Williams took home three prizes each on the music industry’s biggest night, which was marked by displays of artist activism against domestic violence and police brutality.
The 22-year-old Smith swept up three of the night’s four top trophies — Record of the Year, Song of the Year and Best New Artist — as well as Best Pop Vocal Album honours.
Smith, who not long ago was working as a bartender in London, thanked the man who inspired “Stay With Me” — his mega-hit ballad.
Smith has refrained from on-stage theatrics and has walked a fine line on his personal life.
He earned an ovation at the Staples Center in Los Angeles when he performed his signature tune in his rich, soulful tenor voice with Mary J Blige.
“Before I made this record, I was doing everything to try to get my music heard. I tried to lose weight and ... I was making awful music,” said Smith.
“It was only until I started to be myself that the music started to flow and people started to listen. So, thank you, guys, for accepting me to be just me.”
Smith was prevented from a clean sweep of the top categories by Beck, whose introspective “Morning Phase” — full of lush orchestration around his acoustic guitar — won the Album of the Year prize.
Beck, who also won Best Rock Album, has for two decades been known for his inventive and often ironic style which has won him critical acclaim and a cult following, if not the mainstream success usually recognised by the Grammys.
Sam Smith dominates Grammys,but Beck gets surprise win Musician Beck accepts the Album
of the Year award for “Morning Phase” from musician Prince.
Sam Smith poses backstage with his awards for Record of the Year, Best New Artist and Best Pop Vocal Album.
Singer Brian Johnson of AC/DC performs onstage.
3PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
Album of the Year Morning Phase, Beck
Record of the Year Stay With Me,Sam Smith
Song of the Year Stay With Me, JimmyNapes, William Phillips and Sam Smith
New Artist Sam Smith
Pop Vocal Album In the Lonely Hour,Sam Smith
Country Album Platinum, Miranda Lamber
Rap Album The Marshall Mathers LP2,Eminem
R&B Album
Rock Album
Rock Song
Love, Marriage & Divorce,Toni Braxton and Babyface
Morning Phase, Beck
����������,Hayley Williams and Taylor York
‘Black Lives Matter’Beck’s Album of the Year award was
presented by the often-elusive Prince who, sporting a futuristic orange suit and carrying a staff, pointedly spoke out against a series of killings of African Americans that has galvanized public opinion.
“Like books and black lives, albums still matter,” Prince said.
The theme was echoed throughout the Grammys.
The rapper Common referred to the tensions with police in Ferguson, Missouri, as he joined John Legend on the song “Glory,” which is featured in the Oscar-nominated civil rights drama “Selma.”
And Williams turned “Happy” — what had been a straightforward ode to joy — into a more political track.
With his back-up dancers wearing hoodies, Williams led them in a “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot” gesture — a subtle protest against police shootings of African Americans.
US President Barack Obama also appeared unexpectedly on an overhead screen to urge action to stop violence against women.
Saying that more than one in four women has experienced some form of domestic violence, Obama declared: “It’s not okay. It has to stop.”
Survivor-turned-activist Brooke Axtell told the audience how she let a seemingly “handsome, charismatic man” abuse her, before Katy Perry sang an unadorned rendition of “By The Grace of God.”
In a less grand gesture, rapper Kanye West defiantly raised his finger to the world as he performed with Paul McCartney and Rihanna.
Madonna — who was furious last month when songs from her upcom-ing album leaked — performed her new song “Living for Love” in a red mata-dor-inspired outfit with male dancers in bull horns.
The music industry’s top names opened the night by wearing red devil horns as aging hard rockers AC/DC performed two songs including “Highway to Hell” with drummer Chris Slade taking over from Phil Rudd, who is facing charges in New Zealand including making death threats.
Another feat for BeyonceBeyonce won for Best R&B Song and
Best R&B Performance with “Drunk In Love,” her tale of marital bliss sung with her husband Jay-Z, as well as for the more technical Best Surround
Sound Album. With the latest honor, Beyonce has won 20 Grammys — top-ping Aretha Franklin for the woman with the second biggest all-time haul, although still well behind the country star Alison Krauss at 27.
“This has been such an incredible year. I love you all. I’d like to thank my beloved husband. I love you deep,” said the 33-year-old singer.
Williams took home prizes for Best Pop Solo Performance and Best Video for “Happy,” as well as Best Urban Contemporary Album honors for “Girl.”
Rosanne Cash — the daughter of folk legend Johnny Cash — took home awards in three Americana categories in her first Grammys since 1985.
Eminem won a record sixth Grammy for Best Rap Album for “The Marshall Mathers LP 2.”
Iggy Azalea, a white Australian who has become a cultural flashpoint for performing in an African American accent, was one of the night’s big losers.
AFP
Singer Pharrell Williams performs ‘Happy’.
Beyonce Paul McCartney, Rihanna and Kanye West share the stage.
Common
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 20154 COMMUNITY / MARKETPLACE
Tulukoota irganised many awareness and tree planting sessions at
various schools — Delhi Public School at Al Wakra, Qatar Finland International School and Little Flower Kindergarten — recently.
Navin Hegde, in his presentation, explained in detail about the connect between the life on earth and the environment. The chief campaigner of the “Environmental awareness Program” Chaitali Suhas Shetty interacted with the children through a puppet and showcased the significance of saving water and electricity. She also showed through audio and video examples how plastic is dangerous for
health and our environment. She also discussed with children how they can take simple steps and conserve water and eletricity at home and at school.
At Delhi Public school, President Nainar, Board member Rocky Fernandez, Principal, Vice principal and Manager Facilities were present along with president and memebers of Tulukoota. At Qatar Finland International School, the Principal Juha, staff and 100 children participated actively in the campaign.
At Little Flower Kindergarden, Principal Harini Rai and Administration Head Sudha Shetty along with 120 kids were present for the programme.
The Peninsula
‘SPORTSfocus-2015’ concludes
focusQATAR, a socio cultural Indian youth organi-sation, conducted sports and games competitions
titled ‘SPORTSfocus-2015’ for the expatriate Indians, supporting the Qatar National Sports Day. Madina Khalifa Area won the overall championship in the event conducted at Al Furqan School, Luqta.
Dr Abdulla Hamad Al Mulla, Secretary General of Qatar Sports Club, distributed the trophies and prizes to the winners.
Wakra, Hilal, Bin Mahmoud, Doha, Madina Khalifa, QIIC and Insight Qatar participated in the event. Football, volley ball, badminton, Arm wrestling, Chess, Walking race, Sac race and Tug of War were included in the competition section. Madina Khalifa won 45 points to become the overall champion and Insight Qatar came second with 25 points.
focusQATAR Sports Department manager Jashmeer Kasaragod led the event. Nisthar, Nagesh, Mohammed Rizwan, Riyas Vanimel and Shihabudheen were the referees of the different competitions. CEO, Muneer Ahmed, Admin Manager, Askar Rahiman and QIIC General Secretary, Ali Chalikkara addressed the gath-ering. The Peninsula
Tulukoota Qatar holds environmental awareness programme at schools
Ebrahim Abdulla M H Al Hail inaugurated the new branch of Gold Star Shopping Centre in Al Khor recently in the presence of Asharaf Vavullat, Chairman of Gold Star Busines Group, Shabeer of Persian Group Qatar, Mustafa of Luxury Group Qatar, Rasheed of Al Mushraf Group and other officials from Gold Star Group.
5COMMUNITY / MARKETPLACE PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
Total launches Total Cup during Qatar Sport Day
Total’s annual sports tournament ‘Total Cup’ will commence today, coinciding with Qatar Sport
Day, and will contain three months of exciting competitions for Total’s employees and their families. The tournament will combine eight main competitions, namely Total Olympics, tennis, football, bowling, badminton, table tennis, volleyball, and basketball with special tournaments for men, women and children.
Total Olympics will be held on Tuesday in Thumama sports ground with eight different disciplines, includ-ing walking, sprinting, tug of war, potato sack race, Frisbee target, relay and a 3000 kilometre marathon.
One of the major competitions this year will be Tennis, whose finals will take place during Qatar Total Open, the Total-sponsored world class ladies’ tennis tournament held in Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex.
Total also uses sports as a means to break all barriers as it brings people
of different origins and backgrounds together, facilitating cultural integra-tion, unity and cooperation whilst com-peting for a common goal.
For the Total Cup tournament, all the employees and their families will be into four teams representing the company’s colors – Navy, Red, Blue and Orange.
An awards ceremony will be held in
the finale of the tournament to com-memorate the the top players of each competition and to crown the overall winners of the tournament. The win-ning team will receive the Total Cup trophy, which will be passed on from last year’s winners, the Blue team.
Guillaume Chalmin, Managing Director of Total E&P Qatar and Group Representative said: “We are
very keen to support Qatar National Sports Day through our 1st Total Cup event – Total Olympics. We will have a great diversity of participants - men, women and children of different nationalities. This is all being done in the sports spirit, and this healthy com-petition brings about the positive val-ues of unity and cultural integration”.
The Peninsula
Win a trip to Canada at Prime steakhouse
In honour of National Flag of Canada Day (February 15), InterContinental Doha The City announced its “Take a Trip to Canada” promotion with Etihad
Airways. From the February 8 to 28, the award-winning Prime
steakhouse at InterContinental Doha The City will be featuring a special Canadian menu crafted by guest chef Andrew Frastacky (pictured) from InterContinental Toronto Yorkville. Also, for the first time in Qatar, Prime will be serving Canadian beef. In addition, throughout the duration of the promotion, guests at Prime will have the chance to enter a prize draw for two round-trip Business Class tickets to Toronto from Etihad Airways.
“We are honoured to welcome the talented Chef Frastacky, who will create a menu of authentic cuisine from Canada. There are more than 8,000 Canadians liv-ing in Doha who will certainly be pleased to learn that for this promotion, we have incorpo-rated the country’s famous Canadian beef into the menu at Prime,” said Pascal Eggerstedt, General Manager at InterContinental Doha The City.
“We are likewise delighted to part-ner with Etihad Airways on this ini-tiative to offer our diners the chance to enjoy a luxurious flight to Toronto, where the lucky winners can experi-ence all that Canada has to offer.”
Etihad Airways’ General Manager in Qatar, Houssam Weiss said: “Etihad operates six daily flights between Doha and Abu Dhabi offering our guests seamless connections to our flights to Toronto and other North American and European destinations across the network. We are indeed excited
to partner with InterContinental Doha The City enabling the lucky winner to fly with us and experience all Etihad Airways’ premium services has to offer.”
The menu for the “Take a Trip to Canada” promotion will give diners a taste of cuisine from across the country with dishes such as Alberta Striploin, Ontario Venison Pot Pie, Nova Scotia Lobster and Apple Salad and Quebec Maple Pecan Tart. In addition, there will be a strong emphasis on Canadian beef.
“Canadian food products are abso-lutely second to none,” said Ambassador of Canada to Qatar, André Dubois. “As the world’s fourth largest agriculture and agri-food exporter, Canada is dedicated to producing high-quality, safe products while respecting the environment. I’m very happy that InterContinental Doha The City will be sharing with everyone in Qatar the great food that Canadians enjoy.”
The Peninsula
OSN Pehla shows now available on OSN Play
Subscribers of OSN now have the opportunity to keep up with some of the most popular South Asian
entertainment from the OSN Pehla roster at no extra cost on OSN Play, the region’s first online viewing platform.
Assuring an ‘anytime, anywhere’ TV experience, OSN Play is bringing a fast-expanding repertoire of South Asian content, starting with four of the lead-ing OSN Pehla channels – Colors, Sony, SAB and Aaj Tak. OSN Play is available for free to OSN subscribers as a value added service.
Emad Marcos, OSN’s Senior Vice President of Business Development, Strategy and Digital, said: “Starting with content from four OSN Pehla channels now available on OSN Play, subscribers have the choice of watching their favourite programmes on-the-go demonstrating our continued commitment to bring the home television experience closer to our custom-ers, anytime and anywhere.”
Among the content that OSN sub-scribers can watch on the award-winning service include one of India’s most popular comedy talk shows, Comedy Nights with Kapil, hosted by Kapil Sharma. Awarded ‘Entertainer of the Year 2013,’ Kapil regales audiences with his quick wit and repartees, and has defined the programme, telecast on Colors, as one of the highest rated non-fiction shows.
The Peninsula
Alberta Striploin
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 20156 RECIPE CONTEST
WINNER
Crispy Prawn Kebab
Ingredients:• 250 gms prawns, cleaned and deveined
• 2 tbsp vinegar
• 1 tsp garam masala
• 2 tbsp curd
• ½ tsp cumin powder
• 2 tsp ginger – garlic paste
• ½ tsp coriander powder
• 1 piece ginger
• 2 tbsp ghee/ Butter
• 2 tsp red chilli powder
• 1 Capsicum
• 1 Onion
• Bush red food colour
• Salt
Method:Take a bowl. Add to it prawns, vinegar, garam
masala powder, cumin powder, ginger – garlic paste,
chilli powder, curds and bush red food colour.
Mix the above mixture well and set aside for 2 hrs.
Cut the capsicum and onion in dices and keep a side.
Add a little vinegar to it.
Take 2 – 3 skewers. Put the marinated prawn a cube
of capsicum, prawn, a cube of onion. Repeat it till the
end of the skewer.
Brush a little ghee/ butter to the prawns and grill
it for 10 minutes till it becomes golden brown colour.
Arrange the skewers in a plate and add grated
cheese to it. Serve it hot with mint chutney.
Vernon Fernandes
Corn and Potato Kebab
Ingredients:• 1 cup boiled sweet corn kernels
• 1 cup potato, boiled and grated
• 2 tbsp chopped coriander
• 2 green chillies, finely chopped
• 1/2 tsp garam masala
• 2 tsp lemon juice
• 2 to 3 tbsp bread crumbs
• salt to taste
• Oil for grilling
Method:Mix all the ingredients in a bowl.
Divide the mixture into 4 equal portions.
Using a metal skewer, press each portion of the corn and
potato mixture on it using your fingers to make a 100 mm.
(4”) long kebab. Brush each kebab generously with a little oil.
Cook the kebabs over a charcoal or electric barbeque till
the kebabs are evenly browned (approx 3 to 4 minutes), on
all sides.
Serve the kebabs hot with green chutney and tandori roti.
Juanita D’souza
Caribbean Chicken Kebab
Ingredients:• 4 boneless chicken breasts cut into 1 inch pieces 4 • 5-6 dried red chillies seeded• 2 onions • 8-10 cloves garlic• 2-3 sprigs fresh parsley• 7-8 fresh basil leaves • 1/2 tbsp lime juice• 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce• 5-6 black peppercorns
• 1/2 tsp curry powder• Salt to taste• 1 medium green capsicum cut into 1 inch pieces• 2 slices tinned pineapple cut into 1 inch cubes• 1 medium Tomato seeded and cut into 1 inch pieces
Method:Chop one onion and cut another onion into one and half
inch square pieces. Make coarse paste of whole red chillies, chopped onion,
garlic, parsley, basil, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce, pep-percorns, curry powder and salt.
Transfer the paste into a bowl and add the chicken cubes. Add capsicum, pineapple, tomato and onion cubes and let them marinate for two hours preferably in a refrigerator.
Thread chicken, capsicum, pineapple, tomato and onion cubes one after the other onto skewers. Keep the remaining marinade for basting. Heat a non-stick tawa.
Place the skewers on the tawa and cook, basting with remaining marinade every five minutes, for ten to twelve minutes or until chicken is done. Serve hot.
Rania
Tuna-Methi Kebab
Ingredients:• 1 tin tuna chunks in olive oil• 1/2 cup methi (fenugreek) leaves• 1 cup channa dal• 5-6 pods garlic• 1 tsp grated ginger• 5 green chillies• 1 medium onion• 1 tbsp chilli flakes• 2 tbsp crushed kasuri methi• 1 tsp chat masala• 1 tbsp crushed roasted ground nuts• 1-2 tbsp bread crumbs• 1 tsp mango powder• 1 egg• Salt to taste
Method:Soak channa dal in hot water for 20 minutes.
Finely chop onion and 2 green chillies. Now boil channa dal
with salt, 3 green chillies, garlic pods and methi leaves. Drain
oil from tuna chunks and keep aside. Drain water thoroughly
from boiled channa dal.
Take a mixing bowl and put boiled dal, chilli flakes, grated
ginger, chat masala and mango powder. Mix well with the back
of a wooden spoon till smooth. Add tuna chunks, ground nuts,
chopped onion and green chillies. Blend all ingredients.
Add kasurimethi, egg breadcrumbs. Heat oil in a pan. Prepare
kebabs in desired shapes.
Shallow fry the kebabs carefully and sprinkle oil as required.
Serve hot with chilli sauce and potato wafers. Riniki Ghosh
Mahi Makhani Kebab
Ingredients:• ½ kg fish (boneless)
• 1 cup water
• 2 black pepper
• 1 inch cinnamon
• 4 bread slice
• 2 tbsp oil
• 1 onion Chopped
• 1 tsp ginger garlic paste
• 1 /2 tsp turmeric
• 1 tsp salt
• 1 tsp red chili powder
• ¾ tsp all apice powder
• 2 tbsp green coriander
• 4 green chilies chopped
• 1 tsp sugar
• 4 ounce butter
• 2 eggs
RECIPE CONTEST
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Peninsula PlusPO BOX 3488, Doha,
The theme for this
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(Send in your recipe with
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To claim your prizecall 44557837.
• Bread Crumbs as required
Method:Add water, black pepper, cinnamon in fish
and boil it. Shred the boiled fish.
Soak bread slices in water and mash them.
In the oil, add onion and cook it till soft.
Add in ginger-garlic paste and fry. Then add
turmeric, salt, red chili, fish, all spice powder
and mix it.
Cook the mixture and add mashed bread
slices. Mix till all the ingredients are com-
bines together.
Add green chilies, green coriander and mix
it. Roll ½ + 1/2 butter and freeze it. When it
is hard. Put them in the middle of the kabab
and give them the shape of croquettes. Roll
them in crumbs and dip them in egg.
Deep fry them and serve.
Najma Rafiq
Hara Bhara Kebab
Ingredients:• 1 bunch blanched palak (Spinach)
• 1/2 cup green peas (cooked and
smashed)
• 2 medium size potatoes (cooked and
smashed)
• 1/2 cup chopped coriander leaves
• 1 tsp cumin powder-
• 1/2 tsp garam masala powder
• 1/2 tsp chopped fine ginger
•2 nos chopped fine green chilly
• Beaten egg
• 1 cup bread crumbs
• 1 to 2 tsp corn flour
• Salt to taste
MethodMix the blanched palak, smashed green
peas and potato together. Add in the chopped
ginger, chopped green chilly, cumin powder,
garam masala powder and the coriander
leaves and mix well.
Also add required amount of salt. To this,
add 1-2 tsp of corn flour to bind the mixture
well. Now make shaped balls all of same
size (approx) and finally dip them in the egg
first and then bread crumbs and shallow fry
them. Fry until the outer surface gets crispy.
Serve hot with tea. Hina Ansari
Prawn Kebab
Ingredients:• 1 dried red chilli
• 1 cardamom ( lightly crushed)
• 1tsp coriander seeds
• 1tsp fennel seeds
• 1tsp black peppercorns (crushed)
• Salt -as per taste
• 200ml coconut milk
• 200ml chicken stock
• 1kg prawns(raw)
• 5 lime (cut into wedges)
MethodHeat a small fry pan over a medium heat.
Add the chillies, cardamom, coriander,
fennel, pepper and salt. Stir well for 2–3
minutes until the spices are aromatic.
Crush it coarsely.
Place the crushed spices in a saucepan,
along with the coconut milk and chicken
stock. Boil, then simmer until reduced by
half. Strain and allow the liquid to cool.
Peel and clean the Prawns, and remove
the head. Arrange the prawns in skewers,
through the centre lengthways, followed by
1 lime wedge.
Apply spiced coconut milk in the prawns,
place on a medium–hot barbecue grill and
cook for 5-6 minutes on each side. Vijayalakshmi
FOOD 7
By Joe Yonan
Here’s the rap on wraps (sorry): At some point they became so ubiqui-tous — and they’re often
so boring — that they turned into the poster child for bad sandwiches everywhere. For those of us who strongly prefer corn tortillas over the flour ones often used in wraps, it was especially grating to see their growth, and all too easy to condemn them.
But they don’t have to be all that bad. One of the reasons they became common, in fact, is their upside: a functional design, especially for brown-bagging. And when you fill them wisely, they can be as satisfy-ing to eat as they are to tote.
One key is to make sure there’s enough moisture in there. The wrap-per — a flour tortilla, lavash bread or generic “roll-up” — is super-sturdy, which is what makes them good for transport — and what also often makes them dry. You can be gen-erous with condiments, or you can make sure the bulk of your filling includes enough wet ingredients. In the case of a wrap recipe that caught my eye recently, it was the latter, and the ingredient that I think made all the difference was avocado.
In her charming book But I Could Never Go Vegan! (The Experiment, 2014), Kristy Turner’s take on a wrap combines mashed avocado with mashed white beans in a mix-ture made tart and a little spicy by the addition of vinegar and canned green chilies, respectively. When it gets spread on lavash, topped with tomatoes and baby spinach leaves and rolled up, the result is some-thing that’s more than just func-tional enough to take to work. If you’ve dipped into the filling while making it, you might not be able to wait until lunchtime before you open up that bag and take a bite.
Avocado and White Bean Salad Wraps
2 servingsMake Ahead: The filling can be
refrigerated for up to 3 days; bring it to room temperature before making the wrap.
Adapted from But I Could Never Go Vegan! by Kristy Turner (The Experiment, 2014).
Ingredients2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil1/4 cup finely chopped yellow
onion1 clove garlic, finely chopped1 1/2 cups home-cooked or canned,
no-salt-added white beans, such as Great Northern or cannellini, drained
1 teaspoon low-sodium tamari (may substitute soy sauce or liquid aminos)
1 tablespoon red vinegar (may substitute white balsamic)
1 large, ripe avocado, halved and pitted
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice2 tablespoons chopped fresh
cilantro or parsley1 tablespoon diced canned green
chilies (mild or hot, depending on your preference), lightly drained
1/2 teaspoon Spanish smoked paprika (pimenton)
1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt, or more as needed
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, or more as needed
2 whole-grain lavash wraps, flat-bread roll-ups or large flour tortillas
1 large plum tomato, thinly sliced2 cups lightly packed baby spinach
leaves
Method:Heat the oil in a large skillet over
medium heat. Add the onion and garlic; cook, stirring frequently, until
tender, 4 to 6 minutes. Rinse the beans if using canned
and add them to the skillet, cook-ing briefly to warm them through. Add the tamari and vinegar; cook, stirring briefly, until the liquid has cooked away, 2 to 3 minutes.
Remove from the heat; use a fork to mash the beans.
Scoop the avocado flesh into a large bowl and mash until there are no chunks. Add the mashed beans, the lime juice, cilantro or parsley, chilies, paprika, salt and pepper, and mix until thoroughly combined. Taste, and add salt and pepper as needed. Lay out one lavash wrap. Spread half of the avocado mixture on it. Going widthwise, or the short-est distance across the lavash, lay out a row of tomato slices and a row of spinach next to it.
Repeat as needed to use half of the tomatoes and spinach.
Start rolling the wrap over the first row of tomatoes and continue until it is completely rolled up. Cut into 3 or 4 sections.
Repeat with the second wrap and remaining ingredients, and serve.
Nutrition | Per serving: 520 calories, 23 g protein, 74 g carbohydrates, 17 g fat, 2 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 550 mg sodium, 19 g dietary fiber, 4 g sugar WP-Bloomberg
A tastier wrap is in the bag
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015 ENTERTAINMENT8 9
BOLLYWOOD NEWS
Politics on Mallika Sherawat’s mind
Inspired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s work, Dirty Politics actress Mallika Sherawat says if she gets the right platform, she won’t mind
joining politics. Women’s empowerment is a cause close to her heart.“If I get a good platform, I would like to join politics. If through that
platform, I can do something for the women in our society, then I would like to do it,” Mallika said.
“I’m inspired by Narendra Modi’s work. He is doing a great job. It’s not just me, the entire nation is impressed with his work,” he added.
Directed by K C Bokadia, Dirty Politic also features Om Puri.
Karan Johar in new avatar — a villain
Filmmaker Karan Johar, known for his glamorous movies, sharp one-liners and sense of humour, is seen in a new avatar in a poster of
his acting project Bombay Velvet. His villainous look with a shrewd smile and a moustache has got a thumbs up from his friends and colleagues from tinsel town.
In the Anurag Kashyap directorial, Karan plays Kaizad Khambatta, an arch rival of street fighter Johnny Balraj, played by Ranbir Kapoor.
Actor Varun Dhawan, who is gearing up for his intense and dark revenge drama Badlapur, was also floored by the intensity in Karan’s eyes.
“@karanjohar @anuragkashyap72 here comes the ACTOR. Can’t wait for bombay velvet. kaizad khambatta. Look at those eyes,” Varun tweeted.
Actress Alia Bhatt, who too debuted with Student Of The Year, also supported the filmmaker on the social medium.
“@karanjohar: The villain in @anuragkashyap72 ‘s #BombayVelvet... Kaizad Khambatta essayed by yours truly!!! Woohooooo,” she tweeted.
Overwhelmed by the response generated by the poster, Karan thanked everyone for appreciating his look.
“Thank you very much for the amazing feedback on my first look in #BombayVelvet...all credit to Niharika and Anurag,” he wrote on Twitter.
Meanwhile, actress Preity Zinta said KJo’s portrayal of a manipulative person in the film will be bang on.
“@karanjohar @anuragkashyap72 KJO! Cannot wait to see U in Bombay Velvet . Have a feeling you are going to kill it in the movie ;-))) ting,” Preity said.
Bombay Velvet is jointly produced by Phantom Films and Fox Star India, and is set for release on May 15. The film is set in the 1960s and is a large screen adaptation of Gyan Prakash’s Mumbai Fables.
Vidya mum on Benazir Bhutto biopic
Actress Vidya Balan pre-fers to maintain silence
on reports that she has been approached to portray Pakistan’s former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in an upcoming biopic. She says “many biopics” have come her way.
Asked about the reported project, Vidya said: “Even I have heard that I am doing some films this year, but I don’t know actually ... many biopics have been offered to me. “I have not decided anything yet. So I would not like to say anything about any biopic right now.”
Vidya, who portrayed Silk Smitha in The Dirty Picture in 2011, won the Best Actress National Film Award for her performance.
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
By Mark Brown
A moving, groundbreaking film about growing up, which was shot with the same actors a few consecutive Sundays at a
time over 12 years, won the top awards at the 2015 Baftas.
Boyhood won best film, best director for the absent Richard Linklater and best supporting actress for Patricia Arquette.
The film, which portrays in real time a boy growing up from six to 18, has struck a chord with almost everyone who has seen it. People are watching it and then calling their mothers to apologise for things, said Arquette before the ceremony. Accepting the Bafta, she said Linklater had made a film like no other, which had broken “the rules of cinema … you made an ordinary story extraordinary.” The film’s star Ellar Coltrane, who we see growing from a boy in to a man, said it had not felt like making a movie, it felt “like an exercise of collaboration and vulnerability”.
It was a year in which no one film dominated. The most awards, five, went to The Grand Budapest Hotel and there
was success for Whiplash, Birdman, Still Alice and The Theory of Everything – and nothing for The Imitation Game and Foxcatcher.
Eddie Redmayne triumphed in the best actor category for his portrayal of Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything. He dedicated the award to his own family, to “his professional family”, the cast and crew, and the Hawkings, “for reminding me of the great strength that comes from the will to live a full and passionate life”. The film also won best adapted screenplay and outstanding British film.
Julianne Moore won best actress for her unbearably moving portrayal of a woman succumbing to Alzheimer’s in Still Alice.
The well-liked Whiplash, “in essence, Rocky with snare drums,” wrote the Observer’s Mark Kermode, came away with three awards including best editing, best sound and for JK Simmons as the tyrannical and ruthless music teacher Terence Fletcher, best supporting actor from an all-American shortlist. Thanking the director Damien Chazelle, his wife, children, mum and dad, Simmons said: “The whole experience
has been a gift to me.”Birdman, could probably feel
disappointed with just one award: best cinematography.
Not so The Grand Budapest Hotel, which dominated the craft categories, winning best original music, makeup and hair, costume design, production design, as well as best original screenplay for its absent director Wes Anderson.
The winner of the best documentary was Laura Poitras’ gripping Citizenfour, which documents Edward Snowden’s efforts to expose the scale of NSA post-9/11 spying. It was a predicted triumph as well as the only award where there was no one to pick it up.
Other awards included writer Stephen Beresford and producer David Livingstone winning in the outstanding British debut category for Pride; Interstellar won best special visual effects; Ida won best film not in the English language; and Jack O’Connell won the EE rising star award.
Some of the evening’s loudest applause came for The Lego Movie, which won the best animated film from a shortlist that also included Big Hero 6 and The Boxtrolls. Receiving the prize were Phil Lord and
Christopher Miller. Miller joked of the statuette: “It’s like a Halloween mask for a one-eyed child.”
In the two shorts categories, Boogaloo and Graham won best short film and The Bigger Picture won best short animation.
There had been many raised eyebrows that Mr Turner was only nominated in the craft sections, with nothing for its lead actor Timothy Spall or its director Mike Leigh. Leigh at least had a significant consolation prize: the Bafta Fellowship, presented by two actors who know his working methods well, Imelda Staunton and Sally Hawkins.
The 71-year-old Leigh, who won a best director Bafta 10 years ago for Vera Drake, joins an impressive list, from Alfred Hitchcock in 1971 to Helen Mirren last year, with names such as Elizabeth Taylor, Laurence Olivier and Judi Dench in between.
Leigh said he has was happy enough with the four nominations: “Your taste is your perogative,” he told Bafta voters. “Some people are expecting me to be rude this evening … you’re in for a disappointment.”
He thanked everyone he had ever worked with as well as “the boneheads, philistines and skinflints who said no” when asked for money. The films were better off without them, he said, then adding: “May you all rot in hell.”
BBC Films received the evening’s other special award: outstanding British contribution to cinema. It was presented by Julie Walters and Ralph Fiennes and collected by Christine Langan, representing a company responsible for more than 250 films over 25 years, from Truly Madly Deeply to Billy Elliot to Philomena.
It was a typically fun and jovial evening, leavened by poignant special tributes to Richard Attenborough from Prince William and Robert Downey Jr.
Ultimately, no one film dominated – Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’s record of nine Baftas was never troubled – and it could be a similar pattern in a fortnight’s time. Seasoned awards observers believe the Bafta results can have a real impact on the Oscars, with voting for those not due to finish until February 17.
The Guardian
Baftas 2015: Boyhood wins top honours but Grand Budapest Hotel checks out with most
The cast of Boyhood with Tom Cruise (left) after receiving the award for Best Film.
Eddie Redmayne with the award for best leading actor for The Theory of Everything.
Julianne Moore poses with the Best Leading Actress award for Still Alice.
© GRAPHIC NEWSPictures: IFC Films, Focus Features,Sony Pictures Classics
Best Film BoyhoodBest Director
Richard Linklater, Boyhood
Best British FilmThe Theory of Everything
Best Actor Eddie Redmayne,The Theory of Everything
Best Actress Julianne Moore,Still Alice
Best Supporting ActorJ.K. Simmons, Whiplash
Best Supporting ActressPatricia Arquette, Boyhood
Best foreign film Ida (Poland)
Special Effects Interstellar,Paul J. Franklin, Scott R. Fisher,
Andrew Lockley
Animated Film The Lego Movie
F1PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 201510
HEALTH / FITNESS 11
Heart risks remain for a year after hospital discharge
Risks of rehospitalisation and death remain high for up to a year after an older heart
patient’s hospital discharge, a study has warned.
The researchers defined the absolute risks of rehospitalisation and death on each day during the full year after discharge.
“If we can track absolute risks and their changes over time, this information will be critical in helping patients and hospitals set realistic expectations and goals for recovery, and plan for appropriate care after discharge,” said lead author Kumar Dharmarajan, assist-ant professor at Yale School of Medicine.
However, specific risks vary by discharge diagnosis and outcomes over time.
For example, risk remains elevated for a longer period of time following hospitalisation for heart failure compared with hospitalisation for acute myocardial infarction and pneumo-nia, the researchers added.
The study looked at three million patients aged 65 or older who survived hospitalisation for heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, and pneumonia from 2008 to 2010.
“Patients should remain vigilant for dete-rioration in health for an extended time after hospitalization,” Dharmarajan pointed out.
“This might mean checking in more often with a primary care physician or specialist,” he added.
The study was published in the British Medical Journal.
Diabetes treatment should be localised, says study
The factors behind the prevalence of diabe-tes may be affected by the geography and
hence the prevention and treatment should be based on the local factors, said a study.
“In one region of the US, poverty and lower education outcomes are more predictive of higher diabetes prevalence, and in other regions, physical inactivity and obesity are more predictive,” said lead author J Aaron Hipp, assistant professor from Washington University’s Brown School in the US.
The study suggests that approaches to com-bating the disease should be localised.
Hipp and co-author Nishesh Chalise analysed county data from the US Census Bureau and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to find attributes associated with diabetes.
They discovered that results varied by region. Poverty levels and inactivity were asso-ciated with diabetes, but only in some areas. The percentage of the population cycling or walking to work correlated with lower preva-lence of diabetes in most counties, but not in some rural areas of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota.
“Given this clustering of predictors of dia-betes prevalence, and knowing the effect of the predictors we used in our study, counties, states and regions should be able to better tar-get the most common predictors of diabetes in their more local area,” Hipp added.
The study was published in the journal Preventing Chronic Disease. Agencies
By Linda Thrasybule
Eating blueberries every day might improve borderline high blood pressure in mid-
dle-aged women, according to a small US study.
Women who ate freeze-dried blueberries for two months had lowered blood pressure and increased levels of a chemical that relaxes blood vessel walls.
“This tells us that blueberries may improve the health of blood vessels in addition to reduc-ing blood pressure,” said Sarah Johnson, a nutrition and exer-cise researcher at Florida State University in Tallahassee who led the study.
Johnson and her coauthors do not suggest that blueber-ries should replace hypertension medications. But they say the ber-ries might help offset a tendency toward rising blood pressure and stiffening blood vessels after men-opause that raises women’s heart disease risk.
Past research has suggested that blueberries may help lower blood pressure, the authors write in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Some studies have also indicated that the flavonoids and other healthy plant compounds in blueberries may help to boost nitric oxide, a chemical that affects the cells that line blood vessel walls.
The 48 women in the study were all past menopause, with an average age of 55 and borderline high blood pressure.
For eight weeks, half the women consumed 22 grams (about 1.5 tablespoons) of freeze-dried blue-berry powder every day (equivalent
to a cup of fresh blueberries) and the other half consumed an iden-tical-looking powder that didn’t contain blueberry.
At the beginning of the study, then four and eight weeks later, researchers measured their blood pressure and the stiffness of their arteries.
According to the American Heart Association, a blood pressure reading of less than 120 mm Hg for the top number and less than 80 mm Hg for the bottom number is considered healthy. All the women in the study were either close enough to the top of the healthy range to be considered “pre-hyper-tensive” or already in the low end of the hypertension range.
At the start, the average blood pressure in both groups of women was 138/79 mm Hg. After four weeks, it hadn’t changed in either group.
After eight weeks, however, women who had been eating blue-berry powder had an average blood pressure of 131/75 mm Hg, repre-senting a drop of 5 to 6 percent. The readings of women eating the fake powder had not changed.
The researchers also found that blood nitric oxide levels rose by 68 percent among women eating the real blueberry powder. The rise in nitric oxide, which would relax and widen blood vessel walls, could have contributed to their lower blood pressure, according to Johnson.
She said the blood pressure decrease in the blueberry group is significant when compared to blood pressure medications and other types of interventions, but that it also depends on the individual.
“People respond differently to medications and in some people medications are even less effective than this,” she said.
“Some medications may work better but may also have negative side effects.”
Freeze-dried blueberry powder is available in stores and online for around $2 to $5 per ounce.
For women in the 50 to 55 age range who have borderline high blood pressure, medication isn’t always recommended, according to Dr Chileshe Nkonde-Price, director of the Penn Women’s Cardiovascular Center in Philadelphia, who was not involved with the study.
“Menopausal women who are often in that ‘gray zone’ can manage their blood pressure by maintaining a normal body weight through diet and exer-cise and watching their sodium intake,” she said. “But that can be hard to implement in every-day life.”
Nkonde-Price thinks adding a cup of blueberries to a daily diet is “simple” and something her patients can easily handle.
More research into understand-ing how blueberries affect arte-rial function is needed, however, Nkonde-Price said.
“This study opens the gateway for other foods or other drugs that could lower blood pressure through the same mechanism,” she said.
“I’d like to see more studies that show why foods or drugs work through this pathway.”
SOURCE: bit.ly/1C5buor Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, online January 8, 2015.
Reuters
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
Blueberries may help Blueberries may help control blood pressurecontrol blood pressure
TECHNOLOGYPLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 201512
By Samuel Gibbs
Ten years ago, a weekend journey to a friend’s wedding was likely to involve typing a postcode into Multimap, printing out step-
by-step instructions and then enduring amateur navigation from your partner in the passenger seat.
A decade on, digital maps and the inexorable rise of the smartphone have radically changed how we locate, navigate and plan our journeys. Mobiles, satnavs and computers act as our guides for eve-rything from driving holidays to nipping to the shops.
Apps such as Google Maps have become the de facto interface between the the physical and the digital world, meaning people need never be lost again — even if they don’t have a sense of direction.
While Sir Tim Berners-Lee’s nas-cent world wide web supported the first online maps in 1993, it wasn’t until the launch of Google Maps ten years ago today that digital maps began to enter the mainstream.
In 2004, Danish brothers Lars and Jens Eilstrup Rasmussen went to Google with an idea for a web app that would not only display static maps, but pro-vide people with a searchable, scrollable, zoomable map.
Google acquired their company Where 2 Technologies — along with a second company called Keyhole developing the geospatial visualisation software that would become Google Earth — and the new team of 50 people set out building Google Maps.
Google Maps launched in the US on February 8, 2005 and in the UK two months later, though by that time it wasn’t the first digital map of its kind: Yahoo had beaten Google to it with a redevelopment of its long-standing Yahoo Maps in 2004.
“Yahoo beat Google to web maps and MapQuest beat it to turn-by-turn direc-tions, but people didn’t stand up and take notice until Google Maps came along,” said Gary Gale, the Ordnance Survey’s head of APIs. “It wasn’t the first out there, but the role of Google Maps in transforming digital maps, making them popular and bringing them from a tech niche into the public consciousness can-not be underplayed.”
Google Maps didn’t stand still. Later in 2005 Google launched driving and public transport directions, but it wasn’t until the launch of satellite imagery that Hanke saw how committed Google was to the project.
“Our aim was to create one seamless, browsable map of the entire world — an Earth that you could browse,” John
Hanke, co-founder of Keyhole and vice president of Google’s geospatial division until 2011 told the Guardian. Google’s co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page, he said, thought that geospatial — data and information related to maps and location services — was a key element of Google’s organising the world’s information.
“At the time satellite imagery was quite expensive to acquire and scarce because there weren’t that many satel-lites available. I went to show Sergey on the map all the major cities we wanted to acquire. He looked and he just said, ‘why don’t we do all of it?’”
Street View was founder’s ideaStreet View has proved to be one of
Google Map’s most controversial but popular features. Launched for select US cities in 2006, and rolled out to Europe, Japan and Australia in 2008, the serv-ice relied on building up pictures of every street in the city using a specially equipped camera mounted on a car.
“Larry and Sergey had toured around the Stanford campus with Larry taking photos out the window of a car with a dSLR camera to experiment with stitch-ing them together,” said Hanke. “That was their idea, but it took a partnership with Stanford and Sebastian Blune to make it work.” Each car was fitted with a range of sensors including GPS, which allowed Google to trace routes and meant the company no longer had to reply on data from third parties.
The cameras also captured road signs, house numbers and other data not visible from the sky, giving its maps local knowl-edge of no-turns, speed limits and other street rules. This was all part of what Google termed “Ground Truth”, aiming to create the most accurate, detailed maps possible.
Google Maps debuts on first iPhoneGoogle Maps first appeared on a
smartphone in 2007 on Apple’s first iPhone — a very different era when Google and Apple were partners more than rivals as they are today.
“Smartphones were the key crystal-lising moment causing people to fall back in love with the map,” said Gale. “Digital maps are essential to everyday life — you wouldn’t buy a smartphone without them.”
“Steve Jobs called me at my desk to ask me to help out on a project — he wouldn’t tell me what it was, but of course I knew,” said Hanke. “We worked closely with Apple to get maps ready for the launch of the first iPhone, which opened up so many possibilities.”
Google Maps has since added turn-by-turn satellite navigation, Zagat restaurant ratings, traffic updates
and expanded Street View to include Venetian canals and the Grand Canyon — yet progress has not always been smooth.
In 2010 it was revealed that Street View cars had also been capturing information about private Wi-Fi net-works as they roamed the streets of US and Europe, prompting a $7m fine from US authorities. The service’s expansion into Europe, especially in Germany, also caused home owners to take issue with their property being captured and placed online for the world to see without their permission.
“We were doing something that hadn’t been done before,” said Hanke. “People had put up with surveyors going out with range finders and survey equipment, but now cars with cameras were doing the work. It was a learning process for us, the whole idea of photography in a public space and what it means; it was a big cultural shock and we were part of it.”
And the competition?Google Maps faces ever increasing
competition. Some, such as popular third party travel app Citymapper, use Google’s own mapping data, while other services have created their own geospa-tial resources.
Apple turned from partner to com-petitor in 2012, deciding to dump Google Maps from the iPhone for Apple Maps. The company quickly learned that mak-ing a solid map service was more difficult than it looked, forcing chief executive Tim Cook to publicly apologise for the bug-ridden product. Today it is a viable alternative and gaining in popularity as the default maps app for the iPhone, iPad and Mac computers.
Microsoft’s Bing Maps was one of the first to improve upon top-down aerial images, introducing a birds-eye view that allows browsers to see streets and build-ings from a 45-degree angle.
Nokia also acquired the largest maker
of automotive-grade map data, Navteq, in 2007 and has been using it to build highly accurate maps which it sells to other companies, including Garmin, BMW and Amazon.
Beyond the professional maps, there are also collaborative projects such Open Street Map creating free, editable maps of the world and relying on users to cor-rect things that are wrong in much the same way as Wikipedia.
“The mapping war isn’t over, and it won’t ever be,” said Gale. “It’s all about the fight to keep the map accurate and to give it context. A map is never fin-ished, there is always more to be done. Anyone who gives people and business what they want, making it valuable to them will win.”
The future of maps is indoorsFor Gale, the next five years in map-
ping technology will be about a new gen-eration of sensors to take over from GPS and mobile phone signal triangulation.
“The moment we get cut off from GPS the mapping experience becomes rubbish. We need something to fill the gap for mapping indoors, where accu-rate positioning is difficult. We’re not clear on what that will be yet – whether Bluetooth beacons or another suite of sensors,” Gale said.
The future of the digital map, how-ever, is not actually of the map, but using the map. Projects like those created by Hanke’s own Niantic Labs are good examples.
Field Trip, for instance, uses location awareness to notify users of interesting landmarks, features and places in the real world. Another, Ingress, is a location aware game that overlays a virtual play-ing field on top of our towns and cities.
These are the next evolution of the map, humanising and contextualising location to make it more relevant to us.
The Guardian
Google Maps:A decade of transforming the mapping landscape
“The mapping war isn’t over, and it won’t ever be. It’s all about the fight to keep the map accurate and to give it context. A map is never finished, there is always more to be done. Anyone who gives people and business what they want, making it valuable to them will win.”
COMICS & MORE 13
Hoy en la HistoriaFebruary 10, 2005
1955: Thousands of armed police evicted 60,000 blacks from their homes in Sophiatown, near Johannesburg, South Africa, under the apartheid policy1970: Arab terrorists killed one Israeli and wounded 10 others in an attack on an El Al airliner at Munich1975: Pakistan’s National Awami Party was banned and its leaders arrested2005: Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, announced he would marry Camilla Parker-Bowles
Influential playwright Arthur Miller, whose works included Death of a Salesman and The Crucible, died aged 89. He was briefly married to Marilyn Monroe
Picture: Associated Press © GRAPHIC NEWS
ALL IN THE MIND Can you find the hidden words? They may be horizontal,vertical, diagonal, forwards or backwards.
ALBATROSS, BUDGIE, BUZZARD, CANARY, CORMORANT, CRANE, CROW, DOVE, EAGLE, EMU, FINCH, FLAMINGO, HAWK, HERON, JACKDAW, KESTREL, KOOKABURRA, LAPWING, LARK, NIGHTINGALE, OSTRICH, OWL, PARROT, PENGUIN, PIGEON, QUAIL, RAVEN, ROBIN, SANDPIPER, SEAGULL, SPARROW, STORK, SWALLOW, TERN, TOUCAN, VULTURE.
Baby Blues by Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman
Zits by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Hagar The Horrible by Chris Browne
LEARN ARABIC
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
With the tobacconist
Good morning �aba�ou al�ayr
Do you have of this kind of cigarettes?
Hal çindaka sa�air min ha�a alnawç?
Give me one pack only Aç�inee çoulba wa�ida faqat
How much does this box of cigarettes cost?
Ma siçrou ha�a alkroz mina sa�air?
It is very expensive Innahou �alin iddan
I want one pack of cigars Oureedou çoulbata saair wa�ida
No, I do not want the box of cigarettes La oureedou çoulba sa�air
Thank you Šoukran lak
Note: ç = ‘a’ in ‘ag
HYPER SUDOKU
CROSSWORD
CROSSWORDS
YESTERDAY’S ANSWER
How to play Hyper Sudoku:A Hyper Sudoku
Puzzle is solved
by filling the
numbers from 1
to 9 into the blank
cells. A Hyper
Sudoku has
unlike Sudoku
13 regions
(four regions
overlap with the
nine standard
regions). In all
regions the numbers from 1 to 9 can appear
only once. Otherwise, a Hyper Sudoku is
solved like a normal Sudoku.
ACROSS 1 “Oh, so that’s it!” 4 Impetuous 9 Norwegian tourist attraction14 Tease15 Author of Gothic short
stories, in short16 Slave away17 Music producer Brian18 Sleep state for an
electronic device20 Fesses up22 Ruckus23 Tidbit for a bird24 Outsource, as part of a job27 Still-life subject28 SXSW festival setting33 Blossom support36 Really cool, in slang39 Hooch40 Secret military mission
… or a hint to the circled letters in this puzzle?
43 Oscar winner for “Skyfall”44 Yemen’s capital45 Ye ___ Shoppe46 What covers many
blocks?
48 Gremlins and Pacers50 Like World of Warcraft
and other fare for 66-Acrosses
56 Coin whose front varies by country
60 Stable diet?61 Mopey donkey of
children’s literature62 It’s on the left in the
U.S. and the right in the U.K.
65 Boy66 See 50-Across67 Doughnut’s shape68 Wildcats of the N.C.A.A.69 Kagan of the Supreme
Court70 Potter’s potions
professor71 Simone de Beauvoir’s
“The Second ___”DOWN 1 Fields 2 One who believes in
karma 3 Weapon of mass
destruction in ’45 headlines
4 Confer (upon) 5 Tangle 6 Therapists’ org. 7 Submarine sensor 8 ___ Gabler, Ibsen
heroine 9 Really cool, in slang10 Copier malfunctions11 Instrument that tunes
an orchestra12 Cycled, say13 Great Scott?19 ___ Raton, Fla.21 Magnesium chloride,
e.g.25 Nirvana and Destiny’s
Child26 Big horn29 In a manner of speaking30 Slave away31 Preppy clothing brand32 Protected bird in Hawaii33 Grift, e.g.34 ___ list35 Of all time37 One working overtime
in Apr., maybe38 Alaskan peninsula
41 20 quires of paper42 Increased, as
production47 German coal region49 “Monty Python” actor John51 Persists52 Astrophysicist Neil
deGrasse ___53 They provide richness
in batter54 Wipe away
55 Brought back56 Sharp part57 Eurasia’s ___
Mountains58 Frost59 Place for a roast63 Historical interval64 Flatow or Glass of
public radio
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16
17 18 19
20 21 22 23
24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 32
33 34 35 36 37 38 39
40 41 42
43 44 45
46 47 48 49
50 51 52 53 54 55
56 57 58 59 60 61
62 63 64 65
66 67 68
69 70 71
M A J O R F A D Y W C AA M I N O E R R F O A L SS O F T C Z O O L U L U S
O K D U P M Y K E NE G Y P T I A N D I E T SL O O H A N D I N C HM A Y B E E T C G R E T AS T O I C W H O T U D O R
T A R A E M I R O U TO R S A Y W A S A N G R Y
F R I D E C O A P EL O C A L I R K E P S O MA N K L E A L I Z A P P AP O S T O D D E L A T E
How to play Kakuro:The kakuro grid, unlike in sudoku, can be of any size. It has rows and columns, and dark cells like in a crossword. And, just like in a crossword, some of the dark cells will contain numbers. Some cells will contain two numbers.However, in a crossword the numbers reference clues. In a kakuro, the numbers are all you get! They denote the total of the digits in the row or column referenced by the number.Within each collection of cells - called a run
- any of the numbers 1 to 9 may be used but, like sudoku, each number may only be used once.
YESTERDAY’S ANSWER
14
EASY SUDOKUCartoon Arts International / The New York Times Syndicate
Easy Sudoku PuzzlesPlace a digit from 1 to 9 in each empty cell so everyrow, every column and every 3x3 box contains allthe digits 1 to 9.
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
1The Gambler (2D/Drama)
– 10:45am, 1:00, 3:10, 7:30, 9:40 &11:55pmMortdecai (2D/Action) – 5:20pm
2Jupiter Ascending (2D/Adventure)
– 2:00, 7:00, 9:30 & 11:55pm3D – 11:30am & 4:30pm
3Paddington (2D/Family)
– 10:20am, 12:20, 2:20 & 4:20pmSon of A Gun (2D/Action) –7:00, 9:15 & 11:30pm
4A Most Violent Year (2D/Crime)
– 10:10am, 2:40, 7:10, 9:40 & 11:50pmTaken 3 (2D/Action) – 12:30 & 4:40pm
5Yellowbird (2D/Animation)
– 10:30am, 12:30, 2:30 & 6:30pmWild Card (2D/Action)
– 4:30, 8:30, 10:30pm & 12:30am
6Stone Hearst Asylum (2D/Thriller)
– 11:10am 4:00 & 9:00pmAmerican Sniper (2D/Action)
– 1:30, 6:20 & 11:15pm
7 Shamitabh (2D/Hindi) – 12:30, 6:00 & 11:55pmSelma (2D/Drama) – 10:00am, 3:30 & 9:00pm
8Vitamin (2D/Arabic)
– 11:15am, 1:30, 6:10, 8:30 & 11:00pmMortdecai (2D/Action) – 3:50pm
9Jupiter Ascending (IMAX 3D/Action) – 10:00am,
12:20, 2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:50pm & 12:10am
10Wild Card (2D/Action) – 1:30, 6:30 & 11:30pm
Jupiter Ascending (2D/Action)
– 11:00am, 4:00 & 9:00pm
MALL
1 Yennai Arindhaal (2D/Tamil) – 2:00pm
Yellowbird (2D/Animation) – 5:00pm
Stone Hearst Asylum (2D/Thriller) – 6:30pm
A Most Violent Year (2D/Crime) – 8:30pm
Shamitabh (2D/Hindi) – 10:45pm
2 Yennai Arindhaal (2D/Tamil) – 2:00pm
Son of A Gun (2DCrime) – 5:00pm
Jupiter Ascending (2D/Adventure)
– 7:00 & 9:15pm
The Gambler (2D/Drama) – 11:30pm
3 Yennai Arindhaal (2D/Tamil) – 2:00 & 10:30pm
Vitamin (2D/Arabic) – 5:00pm
Mariyam Mukku (2D/Malayalam) – 7:00pm
LANDMARK
1The Tale of The Princess Kaguya
(2D/Animation) – 2:15pm
Yellowbird (3D/Animation) – 4:45pm
A Most Violent Year (2D/Crime) – 6:15pm
Stone Hearst Asylum (2D/Thriller) – 8:30pm
Yennai Arindhaal (2D/Tamil) – 10:15pm
2 Yennai Arindhaal (2D/Tamil) – 2:00, 5:00 & 8:00pm
Jupiter Ascending (3D/Adventure) – 11:00pm
3 Son of A Gun (2DCrime) – 2:00pm
Mariyam Mukku (2D/Malayalam) – 4:00pm
Jupiter Ascending (2D/Adventure) – 6:15pm
Vitamin (2D/Arabic) – 8:30pm
The Gambler (2D/Drama) – 11:00pm
ROYAL
PLAZA
1
Yellowbird (2D/Animation) – 2:30 & 4:00pm
Shamitabh (2D/Hindi) – 5:45 & 10:45pm
Jupiter Ascending (2D/Adventure) – 8:30pm
2
Stone Hearst Asylum (2D/Thriller) – 2:30pm
The Tale of The Princess Kaguya
(2D/Animation) – 4:30pm
American Sniper (2D/Action) – 7:00pm
The Gambler (2D/Drama) – 9:15pm
Jupiter Ascending (2D/Adventure) – 11:15pm
3 Son of A Gun (2DCrime) – 2:30pm
The Gambler (2D/Drama) – 4:30pm
A Most Violent Year (2D/Crime)
– 6:45 & 11:15pm
Vitamin (2D/Arabic) – 9:00pm
CINEMA / TV LISTINGS 15
TEL: 444933989 444517001SHOWING AT VILLAGGIO & CITY CENTER
13:05 Eastenders
13:35 Doctors
15:30 The Vicar Of
Dibley
16:00 Moone Boy
16:25 The Weakest
Link
17:10 Eastenders
17:40 Doctors
18:10 Lark Rise To
Candleford
19:00 As Time Goes
By
19:30 Being Eileen
20:00 Call The
Midwife
20:55 Mistresses
21:45 Saxondale
22:15 Frankie
23:05 Rev.
23:35 Being Eileen
00:30 Eastenders
01:00 Doctors
13:50 Treehouse
Masters
International
14:45 Wild Life Of
Tim Faulkner
15:40 Tanked
17:30 Rogue Nature
With Dave
Salmoni
19:50 Call Of The
Wildman
20:15 Tanked
22:05 Treehouse
Masters: Bionic
Treehouse
13:00 My Boys
13:30 Better Off Ted
16:00 Modern Family
16:30 The Goldbergs
18:00 New Girl
18:30 The Michael J.
Fox Show
19:00 The Simpsons
21:00 The Daily
Show With
Jon Stewart
21:30 Modern Family
22:00 Web Therapy
22:30 It's Always
Sunny In
Philadelphia
13:00 The Legend Of
Sasquatch
14:30 Barbie And The
Magic Of Pegasus
18:00 Barbie Of Swan
Lake
22:00 Barbie And
The Magic Of
Pegasus
23:30 Tony Hawk:
Boom Boom
Sabotage
12:00 Big Daddy
14:00 All In Good
Time
16:00 Mr. 3000
18:00 Grown Ups 2
20:00 What To Expect
When You're
Expecting
22:00 Servitude
13:00 Caught In The
Act
14:00 Wild Australia
15:00 Prehistoric
Predators
16:00 Chasing UFOs
17:00 Air Crash
Investigation
18:00 Breakout
19:00 Prehistoric
Predators
20:00 Chasing UFOs
21:00 Air Crash
Investigation
22:00 Breakout
13:00 The Ellen
DeGeneres
Show
14:00 Parenthood
15:00 Covert Affairs
16:00 Emmerdale
16:30 Coronation
Street
17:00 The Ellen
DeGeneres
Show
18:00 Parenthood
19:00 Criminal Minds
20:00 State Of Affairs
21:00 Killer Women
22:00 True Blood
23:00 Grimm
11:00 The Magic Of
Belle Isle
13:00 Stolen Child
15:00 Struck By
Lightning
17:00 Phantom
18:45 Jobs
21:00 Disconnect
23:00 Puncture
01:00 Phantom
02:45 Jobs
14:30 Hobbit: Desolation
Of Smaug
17:15 Last Vegas
19:00 47 Ronin
21:00 Animal
23:00 Thor: The Dark
World
01:00 The Best Man
Holiday
12:00 Jodha Akbar
12:30 Kumkum Bhagya
13:00 Jamai Raja
13:30 Bandhan
14:00 Doli Armaano Ki
14:30 Jodha Akbar
15:00 Kasamh Se
16:00 Hum Paanch
17:00 Teenovation
17:30 Neeli Chatri
Waale
18:00 Maharakshak
Aryan
18:30 Bandhan
19:00 Hello Pratibha
19:30 Jodha Akbar
20:00 Jamai Raja
20:30 Kumkum Bhagya
21:00 Qubool Hai
21:30 Satrangi Sasural
22:00 Doli Armaano Ki
22:30 Hello Pratibha
23:00 Best of Fear Files
00:00 Jodha Akbar
12:15 A.N.T. Farm
12:40 Hannah Montana
13:05 Hannah Montana
13:30 Wizards Of
Waverly Place
14:20 Jessie
15:20 Austin & Ally
15:45 Liv And Maddie
16:10 Violetta
17:00 Austin & Ally
17:25 Jessie
17:50 Liv And Maddie
18:15 Girl Meets World
18:40 Austin & Ally
19:30 Violetta
20:20 Kim Possible
20:45 Kim Possible
22:00 Suite Life On
Deck
22:25 A.N.T. Farm
22:50 Shake It Up
23:10 Wolfblood
23:35 Wolfblood
00:00 Violetta
13:05 Auction Hunters
13:30 The Liquidator
13:55 Auction Hunters
14:20 Marooned With
Ed Stafford
15:10 Philly Throttle
16:00 Fast N' Loud
16:50 How It's Made
17:40 Dual Survival
18:30 Bear's Wild
Weekend With
Stephen Fry
19:20 Survive That!
20:10 The Liquidator
20:35 Auction Hunters
21:00 Bear Grylls' Wild
Weekend
21:50 Dive Wars
Australia
23:30 Dual Survival
01:10 Bear Grylls' Wild
Weekend
02:00 Dive Wars
Australia
08:00 News
08:30 Counting the
Cost
09:00 Al Jazeera
World
10:30 Inside Story
11:30 The Stream
12:30 Earthrise
13:00 NEWSHOUR
14:30 Inside Story
15:00 The System
17:30 The Stream
18:00 NEWSHOUR
19:00 News
19:30 Living The
Language
20:00 News
20:30 Inside Story
21:00 NEWSHOUR
22:00 News
22:30 The Stream
23:00 Al Jazeera
World
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015
PLUS | TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015 POTPOURRI16
Acting Editor-In-Chief Dr Khalid Al-Jaber Acting Managing Editor Hussain Ahmad Editorial Office The Peninsula Tel: 4455 7741, E-mail: [email protected] / [email protected]
IN FOCUS
A view from Corniche.
by Geo Thomas
Send your photos to [email protected]. Mention where the photo was taken.
Chilean mountaineers say they have found the wreckage of a plane that crashed in the
Andes 54 years ago, killing 24 people, including eight members of a profes-sional soccer team.
The group said they came across the wreckage at an altitude of about 10,500 feet (3,200 metres) about 215 miles (360 kilometres) south of Santiago, the capital. Expedition member Leonardo Albornoz told Chile’s Channel 7 they’re keeping the exact site secret to prevent looting.
The disappearance of the Douglas DC-3 carrying members of the top-division Chilean team Green Cross on April 3, 1961 was one of the great unsolved mysteries in the South American country and at the time stunned the sporting world.
The club had played an away match in Osorno in the Copa de Chile and was returning to Santiago. The team and staff were spread over two flights. One of the planes reached the Chilean capi-tal and the other apparently vanished.
Rescuers spent fruitless weeks searching for the missing plane and
symbolic funerals for the missing players drew huge crowds in Chile.
“It was a breathtaking moment and we felt all kinds of sensations. One could feel the energy of the place and breathe the pain,” Albornoz said of apparent discovering the wreckage.
The mountaineers said they could
see a good part of the fuselage without needing to dig it out and found scat-tered debris and bones. The location of the wreckage was not where official publications indicated it should be.
Green Cross played in Chile’s first division until it was dissolved in 1965.
AP
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Events in Qatar
Family Art Workshops When: Till March 31, 2015 Where: Katara Art Studios - Bldg 19What: Katara Art Studios is hosting a series of Diverse Family Art Workshops from September 2014 to March 2015. They invite families to attend with their children aged between 5 years old to 10 years old.The cost of each workshop is QR150
Shirin Neshat: Afterwards When: Till February 15, 2015 Where: Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art What: The first solo exhibition in the Middle East by internationally acclaimed artist Shirin Neshat. Occupying the entire ground floor galleries, the exhibition features existing and newly produced works. Free admission
Rock Paper ScissorsWhen: Till February 15, 2015Where: HBKU Student Center Art Gallery What: Kelley Lowe, Fleming Jeffries, Sophiya Khwaja: a collaboration between three artists exploring their material and immaterial worlds through hand-work. Raw materials range from the industrial and discarded to the natural and domestic. Themes of scavenging, mapping, and deciphering coincide with the joy of making in a diverse show of hybrid installations and works on paper.Free entry
Yousef Ahmad: Story of ingenuity When: Nov 11- Feb14; 10am-8pmWhere: Qatar Museums Gallery, Building 10, Katara What: As a pioneer of Qatar’s modern art movement, Yousef Ahmad’s artistic journey has spanned over three decades, and his work has been influenced by his surroundings and emotional ties with Qatar’s culture and traditions. It showcases three phases in his career, from the early oil paintings that include the depiction of Al Zubarah Fort, to mixed media calligraphic pieces to new conceptual artworks.Free Entry
Mal Lawal BiennaleWhen: Till February 28Where: Doha Exhibition Center What: Spread over 5,000sqm space, the expo is divided into 11 categories and offers a feast to the eyes and intellect of visitors with a diverse array of objects.There has been a rise in the number of participants from 90 in the first edition to 152 this year, 110 of whom are from Qatar and 42 from other GCC countries.Free entry
Chile mountaineers find plane missing for half century
A group of Chilean mountaineers pose for a photo on what they say is the wreck-age of a plane that crashed in the Andes 54 years ago.