YRF’s Anushka – Ranveer Singh starrer titled Band Baajaa Baaraat?

While the promos of Yash Raj Films’ next big release Lafangey Parindey is on in full swing, the production house is also busy with its forthcoming film starring Anushka Sharma and newcomer Ranveer Singh. The untitled film tells the story of two just out of Delhi University students, Shruti (Anushka Sharma) and Bittoo (Ranveer Singh) who reluctantly set out on their tumultuous entrepreneurial venture. Together their friendship and business enters the ups and downs of the lavish world of the glamour and glitz of Delhi baaraats and weddings!
There have been a lot of speculation doing the rounds on the title of the film with the latest being that the film is titled Band Baajaa Baaraat. When we got in touch with Rafiq Gangjee, VP, Marketing and Communications at YRF, he said, “This is one of the titles being strongly considered for the film. We will be taking a final decision by the end of this week.”
Yash Raj Films to launch youth films division

After venturing into the TV space last year, Yash Raj Films, one of the country’s top production houses is all set to launch a new films division that would specifically target the youth. The division which is apparently called Yash Raj Youth will work towards promoting new, young and fresh talent.
Most of the actors, directors, script-writers who will be working for this division will be youngsters. Commenting on this, Rafiq Gangjee, VP- Marketing and Communications YRF said, “Yes…we are launching a new youth films division. However, we will sign new talent on the basis of the requirement of the script and characters, not necessarily limited to the 16-22 age groups.”
dekalb county schools
May 6, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
DeKalb School Buses Vandalized
Thieves have been targeting DeKalb County school buses and making off with some critical parts.
Police said the thieves are stealing the batteries – making it impossible to start the buses. The problem is costing the district a lot of money and aggravation.
The problem has cost taxpayers thousands of dollars and students hours of valuable classroom time.
“I think it’s horrible because we all suffer, you know? The child, parents, taxpayers…we suffer,” said bus driver Alice Maddox.
Each school bus has three batteries and with some of the battery compartments unlocked and the gates wide open at bus depots, like one in Decatur, the buses are easy targets.
A source inside DeKalb County schools told Channel 2 Action News that thieves have hit several bus parking depots, taking more than 60 batteries from buses at Cedar Grove Middle School. On Tuesday, thieves stole 14 from buses at Henderson Middle School. A week ago, 70 batteries were stolen from Stevenson High School buses. At $75 a battery, that’s nearly $11,000 down the drain.
Mechanics can’t replace the batteries fast enough. And bus drivers worry about whether their buses will crank each day when they arrive, or if their students will be stranded.
Bowen insists that the expenditure is necessary and said he hopes to cap the contract at $25,000.
On Monday, the school board is scheduled to approve a budget with $115 million in cuts, including 430 layoffs and increases in class sizes. Administrators are already scrambling to find another $2.35 million to cut after the board voted Monday night to delay closing schools, which was included as a cost savings in the fiscal year 2011 budget.
Bowen said line item cuts will not be made to pay for the public relations contract. Instead, the communications budget will be trimmed.
The PR firm would assist the current communications staff. Communications director Julie Rhame said the system employs five people in communications and three working for its TV station.
The request for proposals says the school system is looking for someone who can help the district “mitigate adverse news reports and engage stakeholders” and provide “crisis response management” and “creation of good will and positive school district developments.”
Bharat Electronics Limited Recruitment 2010 for 158 Posts | BEL Jobs 2010
Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL), established in 1954 with corporate offices in Bangalore, has nine units in the country. It is occupied in design development and production of highly developed Tate-of-the-art electronics equipment and mechanism for use in military, paramilitary organizations and other public users such as All India Radio, Doordarshan, Department of Telecommunications, Police Wireless, Meteorological Department, etc. BEL is also the first original source for professional electronic equipment.
Bharat Electronics Limited is recruiting for 158 positions and they are looking for Engineering graduates and HR professionals.
1:- Civil Engineers
Jobs – 153 Speakers [Electronics - 80 posts, Mechanical - 30 posts, Computer Science - 38 posts, Civil - 04 messages, Chemical - 01 posts]
Qualification: - Engineering degree holder in electrical engineering, Electronics and Communications, Electronics and Telecommunications, Communications, Telecommunications, Mechanical, Computer Science, Computer Science and Engineering / building / Chemical Engineering disciplines only from AICTE approved colleges can apply. Engineering Degree holders in other disciplines need not apply
2:- HR Professional
Vacancies – 05 posts
Qualification: - MSW / MBA (2 years full time, specializing in HRM / Personnel Management and Industrial Relations) / Post Graduate Degree / Post Graduate Diploma (two years full time) in HRM / Personnel Management & Industrial Relations from a recognized university / institute / Post Graduate Degree qualification in Human Resources Management
Last date: -
14/05/2010
nfl draft 2010
April 22, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
The 2010 NFL Draft officially starts tonight (Thursday, April 22nd, 2010) at 7:30pm EST with the 1st round draft picks, and then continues through the weekend with the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th round draft picks on Friday and Saturday.
I decided to put together an NFL Draft 2010 live Twitter stream so that you can get up to the second information on anything and everything happening in the 2010 NFL Draft
One of the biggest stories so far in the 2010 NFL draft centers on Tim Tebow and where, or what team, will finally end up drafting him. I wrote yesterday about how Tim Tebow made the decision to not show up to the 2010 NFL Draft in New York City. He decided instead to stay at home in Florida and watch the draft from TV with his family and friends.
Some people commented that the reason Tim Tebow wasn’t attending the 2010 NFL Draft was because he was afraid of being on national TV and not being drafted until late in the draft picks – somehow, I doubt that is going to happen.
centurytel
April 22, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
NEW YORK — CenturyTel Inc., the country’s fifth-largest local-phone company, said Thursday that it will buy Qwest Communications International Inc., the third-largest, in a stock swap worth $10.6 billion to gain the benefits of scale in a shrinking business.
The combined company would have about 17 million phone lines serving customers in 37 states, but would still be dwarfed by AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. It would be based at CenturyTel’s headquarters in Monroe, La., rather than in Denver, where Qwest is based.
The deal would shore up the combined company by helping it reduce expenses and improve its ability to compete with cable. But it would still be in the grip of a dismal trend: The number of landlines in the U.S. shrinks by about 10 percent per year as consumers chose to rely on their wireless phones or service from cable companies. The fourth-largest provider of landline phone service in the country, by number of subscribers, is now cable company Comcast Corp.
Neither Qwest nor CenturyTel own wireless networks that can compensate for the loss of landlines, as AT&T and Verizon do. Last year, 22.7 percent of homes used only cell phones, according to a survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But Qwest and CenturyTel hope the acquisition can make their combined company more competitive as a provider of
telecommunications services to businesses and expand the reach of their broadband Internet service for consumers. It may also provide TV services over phone lines to compete more aggressively with cable, according to Glen Post, the CEO of CenturyTel, who would head the combined company. CenturyTel has started providing TV services on a small scale in some areas.
Analyst David Dixon at FBR Capital Markets noted that the federal government is moving to shift subsidies away from rural phone service and toward broadband lines. Rural phone subsidies are a large source of revenue for CenturyTel, and the shift could be a challenge.
The deal would likely to lead to job cuts at the companies, which are already shedding positions. The Communications Workers of America, the largest union in the telecommunications industry, said it “looks forward to serious discussions” with both companies. Qwest had 30,138 employees at the end of last year, while CenturyTel had about 20,000.
kennedy space center
April 22, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
Kennedy Space Center:Discovery makes successful landing at the Kennedy Space Center: CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Space shuttle Discovery glided to a landing at 9:08 am at Kennedy Space Center on Tuesday, ending its mission to supply the International Space Station.
The crew returned to Earth on a track that led to the shuttle in much of central United States for only the second time since the Columbia disaster in 2003.![]()
“Stop Wheels, Discovery, Rick Sturckow in Mission Control by radio from Houston. “Welcome home, Dex. Congratulations to you and the crew on a mission exceptional.”
“It was a great mission,” said Discovery commander, Alan Poindexter. “We are pleased that the International Space Station is replenished.”
Discovery also brought home two tons of scientific equipment and consumables used in the supply module Leonardo.
Fort clouds blocked Discovery’s planned return Monday and forced a wave-off of its first landing attempt Tuesday. But the clouds parted and the discovery on Tuesday gave the green light to start over one hour that broke the speed of 17.500 mph to 225 mph at the time of landing at KSC runway 33.
Yesterday morning the shuttle was landing more than Vancouver, northeastern Washington, across northeast Kansas Tulsa, Oklahoma, and finally, along the Florida east of Gainesville and west of Jacksonville.
qwest
April 22, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
CenturyTel to buy Qwest in $10.6B stock swap
NEW YORK — CenturyTel Inc., the country’s fifth-largest local-phone company, said Thursday that it will buy Qwest Communications International Inc., the third-largest, in a stock swap worth $10.6 billion to gain the benefits of scale in a shrinking business.
The combination would have about 18 million phone lines serving customers in 37 states, but would still be dwarfed by AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. It would be based at CenturyTel’s headquarters in Monroe, La., rather than in Denver, where Qwest is based.
The number of landlines in the U.S. shrinks by about 10 percent per year as consumers chose to rely on their wireless phones or service from cable companies. The fourth-largest provider of landline phone service in the country, by number of subscribers, is now cable company Comcast Corp.
The acquisition continues a trend of consolidation in the landline business. But neither Qwest nor CenturyTel own wireless networks that can compensate for the loss of landlines, as AT&T and Verizon do.
But they hope the acquisition can make their combined company more competitive as a provider of telecommunications services to businesses and expand the reach of their broadband Internet service for consumers.
Analyst David Dixon at FBR Capital Markets noted that the federal government is moving to shift subsidies away from rural phone service and toward broadband lines. Rural phone subsidies are a large source of revenue for CenturyTel, and the shift could be a challenge.
The deal would likely to lead to job cuts at the companies, which are already shedding positions. The Communications Workers of America, the largest union in the telecommunications industry, said it “looks forward to serious discussions” with both companies.
CenturyTel, which does business as CenturyLink, acquired Embarq Inc., the landline service company once part of Sprint Inc., last year.
Qwest provides traditional phone service in 14 mostly Western states and is a successor to one of the regional Baby Bell companies spawned by the breakup of AT&T in the 1980s. Financial maneuvers during the Internet boom left it saddled with a heavy debt load, making it an unlikely acquirer, even though it is larger than CenturyTel.
CenturyTel is offering stock worth about $6.02 per share for each Qwest share, a premium of about 15 percent to Qwest’s Wednesday closing price of $5.24.
Meteor Shower Milwaukee Fireball Lyrids on April 2010
The Lyrid meteors – April is “shooting star” – a tendency to be bright and often leave trails. 10-20 meteors per hour at the most can be expected. Unusual surges can sometimes get speeds up to 100 per hour, but these rare outbursts are not easy to predict.
The broad peak to this shower means that some meteors can fly a few days before and after the optimum time. Even the most meteors will likely rain down on May 6 requires dawn, the last quarter moon almost wash out this year’s Eta Aquarid shower. The Lyrids results from Comet Thatcher, which has a period of 415 years. We will not see Thatcher around the sun for more 200 years.
It just disappeared behind the trees, leaving onlookers amazed at the wonderful view of nature. The meteors’ showers were reported from south-western Wisconsin and northern Iowa to central Missouri. The recent meteor shower was seen 14 April 2010 night around 10:15
Meteor showers are caused by Earth passing through debris field left behind a comet. As a comet approaches the sun and pass will provide a stream of dust and rocks. If the comet’s orbit happens to cross Earth’s orbit, we will see an increase in meteor activity, which we pass through the comet orbit. Sent in Outagamie County Communications Center said that they have received about 20 calls in the sky showing between 10 and 10:15
Daily Post blog reported that there seems to be a meteor shower, which drew a crowd gasp with astonishment last night. According to StarDate website, there will be another meteor shower 21 April at around 3am Thurs 4am. If we see the videos, it looks as if the meteor then moved towards the earth, and its size also increased.
los angeles
April 7, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
Census ads seek to boost minority participation
LOS ANGELES — Radio commercials blare ranchera tunes, beseeching Mexican-Americans to fill out their census forms. Print ads with a portrait of a Thai family with a carved elephant in the background implore Thais to do the same. So does a Congolese basketball hero in another.
The ads scream stand up and be counted, and are designed to reach some of the most difficult to count communities across the nation.
“We wanted to make sure that in addition to being ‘in language,’ we were also ‘in culture,’” said Raul Cisneros, chief of the 2010 Census publicity office. “We’ve got to count everybody, so we’ve got to pull all the levers.”
During the 2000 Census, when the bureau used paid advertisements for the first time in its history, critics accused the agency of adopting an overly generic, one-size-fits-all approach in its efforts to reach minorities.
Speakers of Vietnamese, Persian, Hindi, Greek and other languages were not addressed in their native tongues. Billboards designed for continental-U.S.-based Hispanics were also deployed in Puerto Rico.
The same East Asian-looking family was used for ads targeting communities with heritage that reached from Pakistan to the Philippines.
“Simply having a poster of a Chinese-American family is not going to resonate. If you’re from India, you’re not going to say, ‘Oh, that’s my family.’” said Karen Narasaki, president and executive director of the Asian American Justice Center. “It’s much more sophisticated this time around.”
Ads promoting participation are appearing in 28 languages this year, up from 17 in 2000. Although minority groups make up just 26 percent of the population, more than half of the bureau’s $140 million ad-placement budget is going to campaigns that target them.
That expenditure is based on an understanding of how difficult it is to get many members of those groups to mail in their census forms and, for those that don’t, to cooperate with census takers who visit their homes.
“Minority populations are historically more difficult to reach,” said Phil Sparks, a former Census Bureau director who oversaw the 2000 ad campaign and now leads the Census Project, a nonpartisan census watchdog.
Language barriers keep some from filling out their forms, while others haven’t been in the country long enough to understand that congressional districts are drawn up and federal resources allocated based on the count.
Still others are wary of cooperating with a public agency like the Census Bureau because of fears over confidentiality or feelings that they’ve been neglected by the government in the past.
Last decade’s minority-focused ads helped boost response rates, Sparks said, but this census’ campaign should help even more.
“It’s much more sophisticated, it’s much more targeted and I think it will be that much more effective,” he said.
A print ad campaign targeting Asians, for example, swaps families that are identifiable members of their target markets into the same living-room backdrop, with culturally specific trinkets on their walls and mantles: a small wooden box with drawers for the Chinese family; a carved figurine of an elephant in the Thai ad; an ornamental bamboo tube on the wall of the Filipino home.
For U.S. radio markets with large Mexican communities, the Census Bureau set its Spanish-language message promising anonymity and a fair share of federal cash to a plaintive ranchero tune.
But for areas with a larger Dominican contingency, the agency set the message to a more lively, tropical bachata beat.
The ads aimed at blacks from sub-Saharan Africa, meanwhile, feature retired Congolese American basketball pro Dikembe Mutombo, who appears in posters and magazine spreads surrounded by children.
A different group of children, whose broad range of skin tones reflect the diversity of the Caribbean Islands, appear in the ads aimed at immigrants from that region. They surround a model that focus groups identified as convincingly West Indian.
African-Americans, meanwhile, were targeted using a TV spot with characters whose voices are muted until they mail their census forms.
Those last ads resonated with African-Americans because they played to perceptions among blacks that they’re not listened to by the members of the broader culture, said Damien Reid, vice president of GlobalHue, the firm that produced the ads.
Not all demographic groups got the same deep-bore approach.
The American Indian population was divided into four geographic zones — instead of the more than 500 federally recognized tribal divisions — with familiar-type landscapes featured in ads for target areas.
And among Arabic-speaking residents, the shared experience of feeling under suspicion in post-9/11 America was stronger than any cultural differences in their backgrounds, said Jalal Sayed, an account manager with Allied Media Corp., which produced ads for those groups.
In one Arabic-language ad, the central image is of the main character joining a multicultural cast in mailing his census form. The purpose was to show that Arab residents weren’t being singled out for surveillance by the census agency, Sayed said.
“It’s a tough sell in my community frankly because this is the first census since Sept. 11 and there are all these fears and concerns about racial profiling that have gone on over the last nine years,” said Helen Hatab Samhan, executive director of the Arab American Institute Foundation and a member of a committee that is advising the census on its ads targeting minority communities.
Samhan and other advocacy group leaders gave the census bureau high marks in its efforts to reach minority communities, but said there were still gaps in the communications strategy that they had to fill.
One particularly glaring omission, she said, was the lack of advertisements targeting the native-English speaking Arab community.
Her group, along with organizations representing the Hispanic and Asian communities, have independently produced English-language public service advertisements for their respective communities.
Urban League president and chief executive Marc Morial, who also sits on the advisory committee, said the census campaigns effectively stressed that communities need to be fully counted in order to receive their entire allotments of political clout and economic resources.
But he said the paid advertisements are no replacement for personal interactions with trusted community members.
“Sometimes it’s not only the message, it’s the messenger,” he said




