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  • UP Post Graduate Medical Entrance Exam 2012 counselling to be held from May 15 2012

    The state medical education directorate has announced the counselling schedule for Uttar Pradesh Post Graduate Medical Entrance Exam 2012. As per the schedule, counselling would take place between May 15 and 18 in Lucknow. Hectic preparations were underway in this regard on Saturday despite it being a holiday. The counselling will take place at Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj Medical University premises. The results of UPPGMEE 2012 were declared on March 1 and counselling was slated to take place in the month of April. However, the process was delayed due to delay in allocation of seats through the All India Post Graduate Medical Entrance Exam. "Had we organised the counselling prior to the AIPGMEE, the exercise would have gone waste. The reason: many students who appear for UPPGMEE also take the all India test. Those who get through the national test, usually tend to leave the seat compelling us to organise the counselling process over again. To avoid wastage of effort, we postponed the counselling," said a senior officer. The UPPGMEE was organised by CSMMU on February 26 and more than 3,700 candidates had taken the test that ensures admission to 400 odd seats in specialised courses across the state medical colleges and CSMMU. The results were announced in a record time of 72 hours. Officials declared the results in two categories namely the MD/MS and MDS. A total of 3,243 candidates had taken the exam in the first category, out of which 142 secured more than 75% marks. VIEW MORE

    LeBron, D-Wade power Heat past Pacers

    The MVP didn't care, not after he and the Miami Heat struck the first blow against the Indiana Pacers. James accepted his third MVP trophy from Commissioner David Stern before the game, then scored 26 of his game-high 32 points while playing every second of the second half — adding a season-high 15 rebounds as well — as the Heat survived some rough stretches to beat the Pacers 95-86 on Sunday in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series. ''I just looked at him straight in the eyes and said, `You can flat-out not get tired, period,''' Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. ''And he made MVP plays on both ends of the court.'' Dwyane Wade scored 29 points for the Heat, who won the game but lost Chris Bosh for the second half and possibly longer. Bosh scored 13 points before leaving late in the first half with a lower abdominal strain, with the team saying he was being scheduled for an MRI exam to determine the severity. ''Hopefully (Monday) we get good news,'' Wade said. ''We all just want to make sure Chris is healthy. So that's all we know right now. Our brother is going to go (Monday) to see if he can get back out there and play with us. If not, then we've got to have someone step up very big. You can't fill Chris Bosh's shoes, but you can have a few guys step up. So we'll see.'' David West and Roy Hibbert each scored 17 points and combined for 23 rebounds for the Pacers, who got 10 points each from Darren Collison and George Hill. Indiana controlled long stretches of the first half and didn't trail by more than two points at any time until the fourth quarter, when it was outscored 25-16. Indiana shot 50 percent in the first half, 30 percent in the second. ''We started to get defensive stops,'' James said. ''We started getting things rolling.'' Game 2 is Tuesday in Miami. ''We're not just here to play. We're here to win,'' Hibbert said. ''We need to win Game 2 and come back strong.'' Playing one star down, James and Wade raised their games accordingly after halftime. They combined for 42 points in the third and fourth quarters, four more than the entire Indiana roster. The Pacers scored 16 in the fourth, and James had that many alone. Stay up to date with all the matchups at Playoff Central. ''We definitely let this one get away,'' Indiana's Paul George said. ''It seemed like we weren't supposed to win this one. Everybody in this room knew we had this game.'' Everything was undecided until the final moments. Hill made a 3-pointer with 4:51 left, getting Indiana within 86-85. But the Pacers missed their final nine shots of the game, James had a dunk in transition to make it 90-85 with 4:10 left, and his jumper with 31.8 seconds remaining wrapped up the Heat win. ''It's a battle and we know, regardless of being at home, being away, who we're playing, what round, it's tough to win in the playoffs and you have to fight for every single possession,'' Spoelstra said. ''And that's what it was.'' From his seat a few rows above the court, it was like Stern knew what was coming long before it happened.READ MORE

    Michigan Teen Makes Prom Dress Out of Starburst Wrappers

    Diane McNease, a high school student from the northern Michigan town of Ishpeming, had sweet idea when she saw a friend folding Starburst wrappers. "I was waiting for my event at a swim meet," she tells Shine, "and an exchange student from Ecuador was making them into bracelets." Eighteen thousand candies later, she fashioned the bodice of a homemade dress completely out of the colorful papers and wore it to the prom last Saturday night, May 5. Her date, Luke DeWitt, is one of her best friends from the swim team. VIDEO: Pier Breaks As Prom Picture Taken The teen told WLUC-TV it took her a year-and-a-half to collect all the wrappers and five months to create the dress which also features a black satin "ball gown" skirt layered with tulle. "It was kind of a dare," she tells Shine. "Someone said I couldn't do it. That's the last thing you should say to me." She says DeWitt encouraged her through the whole process. McNease explains to Shine that she did have some help. "My friend Bria Johnson made the fabric part of the dress for me. I couldn't have done it without her." The high school junior also says that dad, David, pitched in. "Every night he would help hand sew the folded strips of wrappers to the dress for a few hours." For the first month, McNease ate all the candy herself. "But then I got sick of it." Friends at her school, which only has about 300 students, were happy to assist in the eating phase of the project. detail, Frye's dressMcNease isn't the first young woman to don a candy wrapper dress on her big night. Last year, Tara Frye splashed out in a tutti-frutti colored gown that her mom, Kerrin, had spent six years crafting out of Starburst wrappers. Kerrin Frye explained the process to KARE-TV. Each wrapper had to be folded eight times and squeezed with tweezers to "get it just perfect." Mom initially contacted Wrigley Company to see if she could just buy the wrapping papers but they declined. Instead she purchased bulk bags, 20 pounds at a time, and enlisted her neighbors' sweet tooths. McNease says she already had her plan and was collecting wrappers when pictures of Frye came out in the news. "But I really admire her dress. Especially the shoes. They are fantastic." The crafting website fluffyland.com has an easy tutorial for how to make a cute Starburst bracelet with only 30-36 wrappers.

    Can Japan find "New Deal" after triple whammy?

    A hydrogen explosion rocked the plant on Monday, sending a huge cloud of smoke over the area while engineers flooded the three reactors in the complex with sea water in a desperate attempt to prevent what was shaping up as the worst nuclear emergency since the Chernobyl disaster 25 years ago. Nuclear fuel rods at one of the reactors may have become became fully exposed raising the risk they could melt down and cause a radioactive leak, Japanese news agency Jiji said. U.S. warships and planes helping the relief efforts have moved away from the coast temporarily because of low-level radiation from the stricken nuclear power plant, the U.S. Navy said on Monday. Singapore said it was checking Japanese food imports for radioactive contamination. The nuclear crisis was a triple whammy for Japan, coming on top of the earthquake -- the fifth strongest ever recorded -- and one of the most powerful tsunami in history, which caused scenes of unimaginable destruction in northeast Japan. Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan said the country was facing its biggest crisis since the end of the Second World War, which was when the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "We're under scrutiny on whether we, the Japanese people, can overcome this crisis," Kan told a Sunday night news conference, his voice rising with emotion. The quake caused Japan's main island to shift 2.5 meters (8 feet) and moved the earth's axis 10 cm (2.5 inches), geologists say. The question now is whether the catastrophe will spur other seismic changes in Japan, which has yet to emerge from its "lost decades" of stagnant growth, aging population, and loss of international prestige following the collapse of the Japanese asset bubble in the early 1990s. At the very least, the drama at Fukushima is bound to shake the faith of many Japanese in the safety of their nuclear plants. The catastrophe will also sorely test Kan's deeply unpopular government. And the immense reconstruction effort that is coming may bring changes to rural Japan, where many of its older citizens live.

    Mexico's Pena Nieto widens poll lead after debate

    The first voter survey by pollster Consulta Mitofsky since the debate showed support for Pena Nieto of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, at 38.5 percent, up 0.5 percentage point from a previous poll published on May 1. That gave him a lead of 17.5 points over Josefina Vazquez Mota of President Felipe Calderon's National Action Party, or PAN. She fell 1 point to 21 percent, her lowest level of support since the presidential campaign began at the end of March. Two points behind her at 19 percent was leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who narrowly lost the 2006 election. The survey polled 1,000 eligible Mexican voters from Monday to Wednesday and had a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points. Pena Nieto's debating skills had been discussed as a potential weak spot before the debate, and he came under sustained fire from Vazquez Mota and Lopez Obrador, who accused him of corruption, lies and being a pawn of the media. However, the 45-year-old PRI candidate, who has led polls to succeed Calderon for more than two years, counter-attacked in the debate, and analysts said he held his own. By law, Calderon cannot seek a second term in office. BOOED AND MOCKED The PRI ruled Mexico for 71 years until it was ousted in 2000 by the PAN, whose support has faded because of its failure to create enough jobs and contain rampant drug-related violence that has killed 50,000 people in the last five years. However, plenty of Mexican voters still have doubts about the prospect of the PRI's return. Allegations of corruption and authoritarianism dogged the party during the latter years of its rule, and Pena Nieto was booed and mocked by students at his appearance at the Ibero-American University in Mexico City on Friday. The same day newspaper Reforma reported that Pena Nieto had paid leading broadcasters to make favorable comments about his administration when he was governor of the State of Mexico, a populous region next to the capital, between 2005 and 2011. Pena Nieto denied the charge on Mexican radio, saying his government had only made legitimate use of advertising space available on the airwaves to promote its work.

    How Jennifer Lopez helped turn pregnancy guidebook 'What to Expect When You're Expecting' into a rom-com

    For at least two generations, the pregnancy guidebook “What to Expect When You’re Expecting” has, informed, educated and, frankly, terrified parents-to-be. So who do you call when you want to turn that book into a rom-com? Jennifer Lopez, you’re wanted in the maternity ward. The actress-singer is a vet of more than 20 movies, with a solid third of them being feel-good chick flicks like “The Wedding Planner,” “Maid in Manhattan” and “Shall We Dance.” If anyone could help turn “Expecting” into a date-night destination movie, it’s the 42-year-old Bronx native and “American Idol” judge. “I’ve always loved romantic comedies,” Lopez said recently while promoting the new film, directed by Kirk Jones. “I’m a bit of a romantic, and — I don’t know if you’ve noticed — I am a little bit funny! I’ve just always been a fan of the genre.” In the film, Lopez’s baby photographer character Holly and her hunky husband Alex (Rodrigo Santoro), in one of five story lines, decide adoption is the best option for them. Lopez essentially anchors the movie, offering a way station between the burping, baby-bump-filled sections. (Cameron Diaz, Elizabeth Banks, Anna Kendrick and Brooklyn Decker round out the cast, in more ways than one.) In real life, Lopez carried her and ex-husband Marc Anthony’s now-4-year-old twins Max and Emme to term. “I think Jennifer was drawn to the role because it was so different than what she had personally experienced,” Jones says. “She was lucky enough to have been able to have children naturally, and she was interested in getting into the head of a character whose [circumstances were different].” Jones says that all of his actresses took on parts that stretched their comfort levels in one way or another. “Elizabeth Banks, who has children through a surrogate, was taking on a role where she would experience all the physical conditions of pregnancy,” Jones continues. “Cameron doesn’t have children, but was also interested in going through that experience and having a prosthetic tummy strapped on her. “Being the father of three kids, I knew that pregnancy is full of absurd and humorous moments.” Read more:

    Healthline The Worst Habits for Your Heart

    Lifestyle factors you can easily change account for more than 90 percent of heart attack risk, a landmark study of about 30,000 people in 52 countries suggests. And making small, positive changes in your everyday habits can have a surprisingly big impact on your heart health—or even save your life. Here’s a look at six of the worst habits for your heart, and how to turn them around. Being Glued to the Tube Spending too much time parked in front of the TV can actually be fatal, according to a 2011 study published in Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The researchers found that people who devoted four or more hours a day to screen-based entertainment—mainly watching the tube--had double the risk of a major cardiac event resulting in hospitalization, death or both, compared to those who spent less than two hours daily on these activities. Another compelling reason to limit TV time: Those who spent the most time on leisure-time screen-based entertainment had a 48 percent higher risk of dying prematurely, even if they also exercised. Recent research also shows that too much sitting can be just as bad for your heart as smoking. The Warning Signs of Heart Attack Having a Negative Attitude While stress and depression have long been linked to higher heart disease risk, a new Harvard review of more than 200 earlier studies, published this month in Psychological Bulletin, highlights the benefits of turning that frown upside-down: An optimistic outlook may cut heart disease and stroke danger by 50 percent. And while you may think that happy people are just healthier, the researchers found that the association between an upbeat attitude and reduced cardiovascular risk held true even when they took the person’s age, weight, smoking status, and other risk factors into account. Research also shows that laughter literally does the heart good, by expanding the linings of blood vessels and boosting blood flow. A fun way to add more joy to your life—and defuse stress--is laughter yoga, an exercise program that combines self-triggered mirth with deep yogic breathing to draw oxygen deeper into the body. Top 10 Simple Ways to Leave Stress Behind Ignoring Snoring Frequent loud snoring can trumpet obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), a dangerous disorder that magnifies heart attack and stroke risk, if untreated. OSA (bouts of interrupted breathing during sleep) frequently goes undiagnosed because people don’t recognize the symptoms, which include waking at night for no apparent reason and unexplained daytime drowsiness. If you fit this profile, ask your doctor to order a sleep study. Because OSA, which affects 18 million Americans, is most common in people who are heavy, treatment typically involves weight loss and in some cases, continuously positive airway pressure (CPAP), a device that blows moist, heated air in your nose and mouth as you sleep.

    ‘UFC 146: Dos Santos vs. Mir Primetime’ Airs Friday at 11 p.m. Eastern on FX

    The UFC's "Primetime" series returns Friday with a three-part special for UFC 146: Dos Santos vs. Mir. UFC heavyweight champion Junior dos Santos and challenger and former champion Frank Mir will be the focus of a three-part "UFC Primetime" special for their main event. The two fight May 26 at UFC 146 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. After the first episode airs, the FX cable network will air the second and third parts on the next two Fridays leading into the event. The first episode will airs Friday at 11 p.m. Eastern, immediately following "The Ultimate Fighter LIVE" on FX. The second and third episodes will air in the same time period on May 18 and May 25, with the conclusion of the three-part special airing the night before dos Santos and Mir fight. Additionally, replays of the episodes will air on Fuel TV as well as select Fox Sports affiliates across the country. The path to the UFC 146 main event has been an interesting one, to say the least. Dos Santos, who won the belt from Cain Velasquez in November, was expected to meet former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Alistair Overeem in his first defense. Overeem beat former champion Brock Lesnar in December in a top contenders bout to earn a shot at the title. But at a March news conference to promote the all-heavyweights main card of UFC 146, Overeem and the five other fighters on the dais at the event were given surprise random drug tests by the Nevada State Athletic Commission. Overeem was the only one of the six who didn't pass, getting red-flagged for an elevated testosterone-to-epitestosterone level that reportedly was 14:1. The NSAC standard is 6:1. Overeem was scheduled for a hearing with the NSAC on April 24 where the commission would decide whether or not to grant him a license to fight, despite the elevated levels – pending his explanation. But on the Friday before his hearing, UFC president Dana White announced that Overeem had been pulled from the main event and Mir would get the title shot. Mir had been scheduled for a co-main event top contenders fight with Velasquez on the same card. So dos Santos went from preparing for a standup specialist in Overeem, perhaps the heavyweight division's best striker, to preparing for arguably the best ground fighter in heavyweight history in Mir. And Mir went from a three-round fight to a five-round title fight with a month's notice.READ MORE CLICK HERE

    Your bra would make a good addition to a landfill PHOTOS

    Sridevi makes special appearance on Aamir's show

    Aamir Khan brought up the issue of child sex abuse in the second episode of "Satyamev Jayate" Sunday. Yesteryears screen diva Sridevi made a special appearance on the show, her first appearance with Bollywood's Mr. Perfectionist. The 48-year-old came to meet Harish Aiyer, one of the victims of child abuse who told Aamir that he was abused by a man for 11 years. He also said that when he tried to tell his mother, she didn't take him seriously. At that time his only support was his dog and Bollywood movies, especially the ones starring Sridevi. And that is why the actress was invited on the show. Harish was excited when he received a gift from his favourite star. On the show, Aamir spoke to several other victims who narrated their horrific experiences of being molested, sodomised and threatened by their tormentors. Cinderella Prakash, another victim, said how she was abused by a 55-year-old man when she was just 12. According to a survey, 53 percent children who went through child sexual abuse were boys. Aamir concluded the show with Good Touch, Bad Touch workshop for children to teach them about the importance of understanding sexual abuse and recognising predators. The actor also appealed to people to press the government to pass the Protection of Children From Sexual Offences Bill in parliament.

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