Selasa, 18 September 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Champagne physicist reveals the secrets of bubbly

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 07:03 PM PDT

Liger-Belair works on a glass of Champagne in his laboratory, on September 13, 2012 in Reims, located in the Champagne region in eastern France. — AFP pic

PARIS, Sept 19 — Gerard Liger-Belair lives in a bubble, and he doesn't care who knows it.

Bubbles are his passion. And they have given the 41-year-old French scientist arguably the best job in all of physics.

In a lab supplied with top-notch champagne, Liger-Belair delves into the secrets of fizz: What gives this legendary wine its sparkle to the eye, its tingle to the tongue?

A bottle of bubbly without the bubbles — all 10 million of them — would be a sad thing indeed, admits Liger-Belair.

"It wouldn't be a very good wine," the scientist said in his lab at the University of Reims.

"The heart of champagne lies in the bubble."

Champagne is made under a two-stage, tightly-regulated process.

First, it is made into a wine from grapes exclusive to the Champagne region east of Paris. Then a tiny quantity of yeast, plus sugar to feed it, is added.

The bottle is stored upside down and rotated daily so that the fermentation deposit slides to the neck, which is then frozen, forming a plug of sediment that is then withdrawn.

The bottle is secured by a cork and wire cage, and allowed to mature.

When you pour a glass of it, you are also releasing a fluid with two million bubbles, which is where the fun science begins.

"We have made discoveries that are really exclusive to champagne, things that have not been observed before," says Liger-Belair.

How bubbles form, rise and cluster in the glass will determine the champagne's visual allure.

As you bring the glass closer to your mouth, the bursting of bubbles at the surface will release tiny droplets to your face and aromatic molecules to your nose, adding a discreet, sensual feel.

And when you take a sip, those bubbles will sculpt the "feel" of the wine — too many are unpleasant, too few are disappointing — and activate carbon-dioxide receptors on the tongue to send tiny signals of excitement to the brain.

"Here's a sequence of high-speed pictures of a bubble that is about to pop on the surface of the wine," says Liger-Belair, pointing to phenomenon called a Worthington jet captured by a 5,000-frames-per-second camera.

"It explodes, making a tiny crater on the surface. The crater closes up and then ejects a thread of liquid, which then breaks up in droplets that can fly up to 10-centimetres."

Using an ultra-high-resolution mass spectrometer in Germany to analyse the chemical structure of samples, Liger-Belair's team found that this effervescence is laden with "tensio-active" molecules, hundreds of them aromatic.

Liger-Belair also figured out why strings of bubbles rise from certain points in glass.

It happens when microscopic fibres — left by a kitchen towel or often just an airborne particle — stick to the side, allowing molecules of dissolved carbon dioxide to coalesce and form bubbles.

The finding is important for champagne fans and the catering industry.

Glasses that are retrieved from a dishwasher, where they have been washed and blown-dry upside down, could be so ultra-clean that — horribly — few bubbles form.

Top-market glassmakers now use lasers to etch a tiny crown of spots at the bottom of the glass, creating flaws to make bubbles form and rise in a pretty ring.

Champagne fans can make a few small scratches of their own —  "no more, otherwise you have a huge degassing," says Liger-Belair — with a spiked tool.

An ancient row resolved

This year, Liger-Belair and colleagues issued a devastating verdict on a debate that had raged for hundreds of years.

Should you drink champagne from a tall, long-stemmed glass, a "flute" in French?

Or should it be a "coupe," the shallow cup that according to legend is moulded on the breast shape of Marie-Antoinette?

Gas chromatography showed a "coupe" loses CO2 at least a third faster than a "flute". So unless you drink very quickly, you lose the precious effervescence.

In similar vein, drinking champagne from a plastic cup can be a drab experience because the sides are hydrophobic, or liquid repelling.

The bubbles adhere to the sides through capillary action and inflate into the size of tiny balls.

Liger-Belair's work has been published in peer-reviewed journals aimed at fluid physicists and beverage specialists who deal with other sparkling wines, beers and sodas.

In the Champagne region, it has been instrumental in helping winegrowers finetune the second stage of fermentation.

The tradition was to add in 24g of sugar per litre of champagne, but the trend now is 18g, the lowest permissible under regulations, he explains.

"People prefer smaller bubbles, possibly because this quality is associated with vintage champagne," the scientist says.

"The easiest way to produce finer bubbles is to reduce the quantity of CO2 which is dissolved in the champagne, and this is linked to the amount of sugar."

Liger-Belair says he has occasionally sparred with traditionalists who say too much physics will kill the myth of champagne.

Champagne portrays itself as a small-scale, artisanal product, a wine of ancient knowledge and "terroir", a French word redolent of the soil.

But Philippe Jamesse, head wine waiter at a five-star Reims chateau, Les Crayeres, says science and wine can go hand in hand.

"When you see Gerard's work, you understand why the 'coupe' is completely out-dated," he says.

"We don't have any here."

So what does the scientist do with all the booze? Once the experiment is over, does he drink it?

"Unfortunately, no," says Liger-Belair.

"By that time, it's warm and undrinkable. I think I must have thrown more champagne down the sink than anyone else on this planet." — AFP-Relaxnews


Chef Korn shares his recipes with the world

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 04:39 PM PDT

Chef Korn believes the most ingredient in every recipe is love.

KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 19 — There was chicken rice, Thai style, waiting for me when I arrived at Erawan Classic Thai & Fusion Restaurant in Kota Damansara to talk to chef Korn Yodsuk about his new cookbook Thai@home.

The lovely aroma of the rice filled the restaurant as it was brought out in a gold bowl, joining the plate of steamed chicken already on the table.

There were also chilli sauces and a soup of radish and fish balls plus fresh coriander and cucumber on the side.

"It's a secret recipe," said Korn when I asked whether he was going to feature it in a future cookbook.

"I'm the only one who has this roasted chilli paste with dark sauce," he said, as he taught me how to eat the rice.

"Take the roasted chilli paste, mix with the rice in one corner and taste, then put the chicken on top and add the other chilli sauce (made of chillies, garlic, taucheo and ginger).

"My father always says my chicken rice is the best."

Indeed it was.

It was a fitting and scrumptious preamble to our chat about Thai@home which was launched on the second day of Raya at Bookfest@Malaysia 2012 at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre.

There, he had a cooking demo, and turned out Pineapple Burgers and Tuna Salad from recipes in the book.

"We sold out the entire supply of 50 books in a short time!"

Korn , who is from Bangkok, learnt how to cook from his mother at age seven. In Thai@home, he relates how his mother was the toughest teacher, always insisting on making everything perfect whether in taste or presentation. The chef has also mastered the art of royal Thai cuisine

There are 50 recipes in the book which was originally meant to be launched next year. But then the people from Seashore Publishing (M) Sdn Bhd came to try the food at Erawan and asked if he could finish the book within a month.

Also in the book is the recipe for Mackerel with Garlic and Pepper.

"I thought, oh my god, 50 recipes! It was very challenging. I couldn't sleep, worrying about this and that for a month!" said Korn.

Four days were allocated for shooting the pictures.

"But one day we made 41 dishes. We worked until the photographer said 'stop!' It had started in the morning and it was already 7pm.  The next day we finished the rest."

All the crockery and cutlery used for the photography are from the award-winning restaurant.

"We did everything ourselves. The food stylist came with her bag of things, but she never needed to bring out anything from it!

"Everything was original from the restaurant; the food was cooked and put on the plate."

The concept for the book was simple and easy.

"We started from the basics. Some of the recipes are for people who don't even have a stove or any electrical equipment.

"For instance, I have recipes for a Tuna Salad and a Sardine Salad. You just take the tuna and the sardines out of the can. Other ingredients you can find easily in your kitchen.

"And if you have eggs, you can make a soup, starter and a main course with them," said the chef.

Hardboiled Eggs with Black Sauce is a dish every Thai child grows up eating.

You can be sure all the recipes work.

"I wanted to give the very correct ingredients and recipes. Most cookbooks on Thai food are done by foreigners, and they get the ingredients wrong. Some use ginger instead of galangal for tomyam. They would use sweet basil, when Thai basil (holy basil) is called for."

He wanted to include in the book original recipes that were easy to follow and take a short time to cook.

"They are also healthy too. People think Thai food is so difficult to cook and that it's so spicy. But it's not. You can play around with the level of hotness.

"If everything is spicy, how can Thai children eat the food? I started with non-spicy food as a child, and the level of spiciness was raised as I grew up. Some children would say they ate their father's curry and had to pour water over their heads!

"I have the Khai Pha Lo – Hard-boiled Egg with Black Sauce – for the children. In Thailand they grow up eating this; it's a suitable dish for them."

He also has recipes for green curry and tomyam.

"It's the same recipes I use for Erawan. I only change the fish. Some of the dishes in the book are served here. Some people bring the book, point and order (which is not advised). Better go to the Erawan website to make your order."

"I have always wanted my own cookbook but not this fast. Like overnight 'boom!' and it's here."

But it has got him started on collecting his own recipes for future books.

"There will be more coming, and the level of cooking will get more advanced."

You will find the recipe for Pineapple Burgers in the book.

Now that the book is out, Korn is happy.

"Even if I die, I will be leaving something behind. It's my property."

Now he is starting to think of very unique recipes for his next book.

"I've always like to try something new. My kitchen is my lab. I have success, I have failure, I have fun! But I must never stop. That's why our food is different.

"Now in the restaurant, everyone orders my Mangosteen Salad. Sometimes it runs out. I buy 10kg of mangosteens a day, choosing the ones with the very small seeds. The season will end soon."

The chef has observed how diners come to the restaurant quiet at first, and then everyone is laughing and enjoying themselves. 

"I cook with love. If you do something with love, you do your best. If the food is lousy, people will be unhappy. There was a couple who did not talk to each other at first, but they did after eating my food. And they came back again, happy!"

Korn's Thai@home is available at all Popular Bookstores. You can get the cookbook at Erawan too, and Korn will autograph it for you.

Erawan is at No. 22-1, Jln PJU 5/16, Dataran Sunway Kota Damansara,Petaling Jaya. Tel: 03-6141 2393.


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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Rangers step up plans for stock market return

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 08:58 AM PDT

LONDON, Sept 18 – Fans of former Scottish soccer champions Rangers will be able to register next month to buy shares in the Glasgow club which is preparing to return to the stock market after collapsing under the weight of its debt.

The new owners of Rangers have appointed Capita Registrars to handle share registration services, the club said today, after hiring Cenkos Securities to advise on raising additional funds earlier this month.

Rangers, Scottish champions a record 54 times, have been demoted to the fourth tier of the game in Scotland after their financial failure, which began with administration in February and their relaunch as a new club in June.

"The Rangers Football Club will make further details available shortly and expects that fans will have an opportunity to register their interest in purchasing shares in The Rangers Football Club in October," Chief Executive Charles Green said in a statement.

Institutional investors have shown limited appetite for owning soccer club stocks, given the high salary costs in the sport and the way setbacks on the field can affect earnings.

Rangers have made a muted start to life in the lowly Scottish Third Division. They are currently fourth in the 10-team league which they had been expected to dominate. – Reuters

La Liga should be more competitive: Barca chief

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 07:47 AM PDT

FC Barcelona President Sandro Rosell (L) is seen with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates (R) at an event in this file photo. Rosell says Barcelona want to seek ways to make La Liga more competitive so that other teams apart from themselves and Real Madrid have a chance of winning the title. – Reuters pic

BRUSSELS, Sept 18 – Barcelona want to seek ways to make La Liga more competitive so that other teams apart from themselves and Real Madrid have a chance of winning the title, president Sandro Rosell said today.

Speaking at an event in Brussels, Rosell agreed that a league in which the big two, the world's richest clubs by income, were not always so dominant would be more compelling.

"No no it's something I fully agree with," Rosell said when asked if it would not be better to follow the English Premier League model, where three or four teams scrap for the title and the top dogs slip up against lesser sides much more regularly.

"We have to sit down with the Spanish teams and look for solutions on that yes, I agree," he added.

One of the reasons for the dominance of Barca and Real in their domestic league is their stranglehold over income from audiovisual rights.

There is no system of collective bargaining and revenue sharing like in other European leagues and they take about half of the total pot of around €600 million (RM2.42 billion).

Clubs like Atletico Madrid, Sevilla and Espanyol have been trying to persuade Barca and Real to share TV money more equitably and have even accused the big two of "stealing".

Rosell suggested Barca might be prepared to accept change, although club officials have made it clear in the past they would not be prepared to see their share of the pot shrink.

They have said they might, however, accept sharing some of the extra money that was negotiated with media companies in future deals.

"This is exactly one of the things we have to discuss with the rest of the clubs," Rosell said when asked about the television revenue issue.

"In fact we had some meetings in the past, last year, and as from 2014-15 we decided a new distribution of TV income for Spain," he added, without elaborating.

"So yes we are improving on that and probably in the future something will change." – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Fat and getting fatter: US obesity rates to soar by 2030

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 08:18 AM PDT

People work out in an outdoor exercise area at Macombs Dam Park in the Bronx section of New York City. The city is testing the first of its kind so-called "Adult Playgrounds" equipped with facilities designed to work out all parts of the body. City officials say there are plans to potentially bring as many as 24 more to neighbourhoods throughout New York City, to combat obesity and promote a healthy lifestyle. — Reuters pic

NEW YORK, Sept 18 — If Americans stick to their eating and exercise habits, future historians will look back on the early 21st century as a golden age of svelte.

The latest in a long string of reports on the obesity epidemic in the United States presents the usual glum picture of the present, when 35.7 per cent of adults and 16.9 per cent of children age 2 to 19 are obese, as the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported earlier this year.

But for the first time, the report from the Trust for America's Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation — the ninth that the groups have issued — also applies a time machine to those data.

A woman works out on one of the Macombs Dam Park equipment. — Reuters pic

Using a model of population and other trends, the report "F as in Fat" projects that, by 2030, unless Americans change their ways, half of US adults will be obese.

Building on the state-by-state obesity data CDC released in August, "F as in Fat" projects obesity rates of at least 44 per cent in every state and over 60 per cent in 13.

Since obesity raises the risk of numerous diseases — from type 2 diabetes to endometrial cancer — that will mean more sick people and higher medical costs, notes the report, released today.

In particular, it projects as many as 7.9 million new cases of diabetes a year, compared with 1.9 million new cases in recent years. There could also be 6.8 million new cases of chronic heart disease and stroke every year, compared with 1.3 million new cases a year now.

The increasing burden of illness will go right to the bottom line, it says: US$66 billion (RM200.3 billion) more in annual obesity-related medical costs over and above today's US$147 billion to US$210 billion (out of total healthcare spending of US$2.7 trillion).

That projection supports a study published earlier this year in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine that found that by 2030, 42 per cent of US adults could be obese, adding US$550 billion to healthcare costs over that period.

'A tale of two futures'

As with all projections, from climate models to Dickens' "A Christmas Carol", human actions can prevent the worst of the scenarios.

"This is a tale of two futures," said Jeffrey Levi of George Washington University and the executive director of Trust for America's Health. "We're at a turning point where if we don't do something now to mitigate these trends, the cost in human health and healthcare spending will be enormous."

Another working out on the bars. — Reuters pic

Obesity is defined as having a body mass index (BMI) above 30. Overweight means a BMI of 25 to 29.9. BMI is calculated by taking weight in pounds and dividing it by the square of height in inches, and multiplying the result by 703. For instance, someone who is 5 ft, 5 in (1.6 metres) tall and weighs 185 pounds (64 kg) has a BMI of 30.8.

The projections emerge from the increase in obesity rates among US adults, which have more than doubled from the 15 per cent of 1980, and children, which have more than tripled since 1980.

Although the percentage of obese children and adults was essentially unchanged between 2008 and 2010, CDC found, the "F as in Fat" model takes a longer view, said mathematician Martin Brown of Britain's National Heart Forum, a nonprofit group, who led development of the model.

"You have to take trends over a number of years," he said. "In the age groups that matter, there just isn't much evidence of a levelling off in obesity rates."

As a result, many states projected to have the most obesity in 2030 do now, too. In 2011, 12 states had an adult-obesity rate above 30 per cent, with Mississippi the highest at 34.9 per cent. Colorado was the lowest at 20.7 per cent.

We're at a turning point where if we don't do something now to mitigate these trends, the cost in human health and healthcare spending will be enormous." — Jeffrey Levi, executive director, Trust for America's Health

The report projects that in 2030 in Mississippi, 66.7 per cent of adults will be obese, as will 44.8 per cent in Colorado, which will still be the thinnest state.

More surprising are projections for states such as Delaware, now the 19th-most obese state with a rate of 28.8 per cent. The model uses 1999 as a baseline, says Brown. "So if a state had a low rate of obesity in 1999 and is fairly high now, that indicates a steep rate of increase, which we believe will not go away." Result: an obesity rate of 64.7 per cent in Delaware in 2030, making it the third-most obese state.

States facing the greatest percentage increase in obesity-related medical costs are now in the middle of the pack.

New Jersey faces the largest increase in costs, 34.5 per cent, as its obesity rate is projected to climb from 23.7 per cent today to 48.6 per cent in 2030. Eight other states could see increases of 20 per cent and 30 per cent, including New Hampshire, Colorado and Alaska.

All is not lost, says Levi. "We have learned that with a concerted effort you can change the culture of a community, including its level of physical activity, eating habits, what foods are offered in schools, and whether families eat together," he said.

In New York City, for instance, obesity in grades K-8 dropped 5.5 per cent from the 2006-07 school year to 2010-11, thanks mostly to healthier school lunches, public health experts said.

If BMI were reduced by 5 per cent — for an adult of average weight, that means losing 11 pounds (5 kg) — in 2030 the obesity rate would not exceed 60 per cent in any state, in contrast to the 13 in the business-as-usual projection. — Reuters

Management tip: Make decisions less stressful

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 07:55 AM PDT

BOSTON, Sept 18 — Many times the antidote for overloaded consumers isn't more options at the store shelf, it's decision simplicity, says Harvard Business Review.

The Management Tip of the Day offers quick, practical management tips and ideas from Harvard Business Review and HBR.org. Any opinions expressed are not endorsed by Reuters.

"When asked, consumers almost always say they want more options. But their purchasing behaviour often indicates otherwise. Consumers are often overwhelmed by the flood of product information and choices available to them. Many report unnecessarily agonising over trivial purchases.

This cognitive overload causes them to make poor decisions, repeatedly change their minds, give up on purchases altogether, or regret the purchases they do make — none of which is good for your brand.

Help your customers simplify their decisions. You can reduce choice by getting rid of less popular products. Or you can simplify their choices by helping them navigate their options and giving them trustworthy information they can use to weigh the alternatives."

* Today's management tip was adapted from If Customers Ask for More Choice, Don't Listen, by Karen Freeman, Patrick Spenner and Anna Bird.

Click here for the full post.  — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


‘Borderlands 2’ launch trailer sets up explosive battle for the planet

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 06:27 AM PDT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]LOS ANGELES, Sept 18 — Heroes old and new combine to take on the might of Handsome Jack’s armies in the launch trailer for “Borderlands 2” (below), out today in North America and from Friday internationally. Where “Borderlands” revolved around the hunt for a vault filled with alien treasures, at the end of the vibrant and explosive rainbow of  ...


Christina Aguilera’s fifth studio album to start shipping in November

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 05:57 AM PDT

"Your Body", the first single from Christina Aguilera's upcoming album "Lotus". ©All rights reserved

LOS ANGELES, Sept 18 — Christina Aguilera's fifth album, "Lotus" (RCA), is coming out in November, and its first single, "Your Body", is now available on iTunes.

The singer announced the month of the release to her Twitter followers and explained how she chose the title: "Album title: Lotus. Representing an unbreakable flower that survives under the hardest conditions and still thrives."

The album's first single was produced by Max Martin and Shellback.

Aguilera also released a video teaser for "Your Body" (see below).

Aguilera's previous album, "Bionic", was released in 2010 and sold 310,000 copies in the US, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Aguilera is now a judge on NBC's "The Voice". — AFP/Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Rushdie memoir tells of life under Iranian fatwa

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 05:08 AM PDT

Director Deepa Mehta (L) and author Salman Rushdie arrive at the gala presentation for the film 'Midnight's Children' during the 37th Toronto International Film Festival, September 9, 2012. – Reuters pic

LONDON, Sept 18 – British author Salman Rushdie's memoir of more than nine years in hiding after Iran's supreme leader issued a death sentence against him hits the shelves today, ending the wait for his account of a furore that has echoes across the world today.

"Joseph Anton: A Memoir" opens with the moment when Rushdie, already a member of London's literary elite, received a call from a journalist asking for his reaction to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's 1989 fatwa, or religious edict, calling for his head.

"It doesn't feel good" was his understated reply, but at the time he recalled thinking to himself: "I'm a dead man."

What followed was nearly a decade of life on the run, fearing for his own safety and that of his family.

The fatwa, in response to the 1988 novel "The Satanic Verses", turned Rushdie into a household name that will forever be linked with the tussle between the right to freedom of expression and the need to respect religious sensitivities.

The topic is back in the headlines after violent protests spread across the Muslim world in response to a US-made video mocking the Prophet Mohammad.

"I always said that what happened to me was a prologue and there will be many, many more episodes like it," Rushdie told the Daily Telegraph at the launch of his memoir.

"Clearly, (the film is) a piece of crap, is very poorly done and is malevolent. To react to it with this kind of violence is just ludicrously inappropriate. People are being attacked who had nothing to do with it and that is not right."

On the weekend, a state-linked Iranian religious foundation increased the bounty on his head to US$3.3 million (RM). Its leader argued that had Rushdie been killed, later cases of Islam being insulted would have been avoided.

English PEN, a branch of the international group promoting free expression in literature, defended Rushdie.

"The film that has caused this round of unrest is an insult to everyone's intelligence, but the means of combatting that is more intelligence, not threats of reinstated fatwas and killings," said author and campaigner Lisa Appignanesi.

'IMPOSSIBLE DREAM'

The 633-page Joseph Anton, written in the third person singular, recalls Rushdie's days as a student at Cambridge and his early literary career, including the day he won the coveted Booker Prize for "Midnight's Children" in 1981.

Seven years later The Satanic Verses appeared, and for a few weeks it was, he fondly remembered, "only a novel".

Then it was banned in India and South Africa, copies were burned in the streets of northern England, fellow authors turned against him, his first wife Clarissa received threatening calls and book stores were firebombed.

Rushdie found himself at the eye of a storm which grew fiercer still on Valentine's Day, 1989, the day the fatwa was issued, forcing on him nearly a decade of fear, frustration and guilt living under armed guard and moving from house to house.

He was asked to change his name for security reasons and Rushdie chose a combination of the first names of two of his favourite authors, Conrad and Chekhov, and, for 11 years, was known as Joseph Anton.

Outside the "prisons" he inhabited with his protection officers, violent protests raged, the novel's Japanese translator was stabbed to death and a Muslim leader in Belgium who criticised the fatwa was slain.

Early reviews posted online today were mixed.

"Joseph Anton demonstrates Mr Rushdie's ability as a stylist and storyteller," wrote Michael C. Moynihan in The Wall Street Journal. "It also serves as an important moral balance sheet."

But in the Guardian, Pankaj Mishra was less impressed with what he called "failures of analysis."

"A peevish righteousness comes to pervade the memoir as Rushdie routinely and often repetitively censures those who criticised or disagreed with him," he said.

Much of the content of the memoir, published by Jonathan Cape of the Random House Group, is deeply personal.

In one passage, Rushdie feared the worst when his son Zafar, whom he was able to see only occasionally, failed to answer the telephone at the appointed time. He also recounted the breakdown of his second marriage to American novelist Marianne Wiggins and the death of Clarissa in 1999.

Rushdie survived by engaging in the literary world – writing novels, newspaper articles and reviews and receiving awards. He travelled where he could and lobbied for his freedom, and ironically became an international celebrity.

But in the dark early days, his frustration was clear and friends who saw him then said he looked "a beaten man".

"I am gagged and imprisoned," he wrote in his journal. "I can't even speak. I want to kick a football in a park with my son. Ordinary, banal life: my impossible dream." – Reuters


Dylan working on more ‘Chronicles’ memoirs

Posted: 17 Sep 2012 06:44 PM PDT

AFP file pic of Bob Dylan

NEW YORK, Sept 18 — There's more to come from the pen of Bob Dylan, following on from "Chronicles: Volume One", as the musician told Rolling Stone that volumes two and three are indeed on the slate.

"I was writing about the Freewheelin' Bob Dylan album, but I didn't use that [in Chronicles: Volume One]... I still have the other piece for Freewheelin' — most of it — and I can definitely make it bigger."

"That's one of the aspects of "Chronicles Two" and "Chronicles Three". It would definitely start with records," he told Rolling Stone in an interview published in the September 27 issue.

The 2004 publication "Chronicles: Volume One" was extremely well received, even becoming one of the National Book Critics' Circle Award nominees in 2005.

Later, internet sleuths pointed out similarities between some of Chronicles' enchanting turns of phrase and those attributed to work by Jack London, Robert Louis Stevenson, Marcel Proust, Carl Sandburg, Mezz Mezzrow & Bernard Wolfe — even Henry Rollins and Time Magazine.

Dylan's response to accusations arising over these sorts of similarities came elsewhere in the Rolling Stone exchange.

"Oh, yeah, in folk and jazz, quotation is a rich and enriching tradition. That certainly is true. It's true for everybody, but me. There are different rules for me. And as far as [Civil War poet] Henry Timrod is concerned, have you even heard of him? Who's been reading him lately? And who's pushed him to the forefront? Who's been making you read him?"

Read the Rolling Stone article: rollingstone.com/music/news/bob-dylan-working-on-a-sequel-to-chronicles-20120914

— AFP-Relaxnews


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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


We are all gay…

Posted: 17 Sep 2012 05:24 PM PDT

SEPT 18 — Let's see.

I often wear fitted, V-necked T-shirts. I can't lay claim to having a muscular body but I am working out at the gym and lifting weights so that's a work in progress. I did have to fight it out with a girl over a really nice bag this one time. 

Ergo according to the Ministry of Education-endorsed (yes, despite their denials) guidelines/awareness material, I must be gay. 

This latest move by the Yayasan Guru Malaysia Bhd (Teachers' Foundation of Malaysia) and the Putrajaya Consultative Council of Parents and Teachers Associations is quite simply steeped in ignorance, bigotry and clearly homophobic. 

Lest we forget, back in April this year, the Jaringan Melayu Malaysia (JMM) had announced a nationwide campaign to 30 schools to campaign against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender minorities utilising an awareness module targetting students. They misused their positions as parent-teacher association members to gain access to schools for this purpose.

Could this recent programme be an insidious reincarnation of that same movement, now clothed in the skin of the Yayasan Guru Malaysia Bhd and the Putrajaya Consultative Council of Parents and Teachers Associations? It seems like it. Quite successfully too as according to the foundation, they have managed to organise 10 seminars thus far which have reached 1,500 people.

I continue to be disturbed by this misuse of our education system to channel and cultivate fear, hate, prejudice and discrimination towards others who do not conform to stereotypical norms and social expectations. Without a doubt, that will basically be the net effect of these simplistic and ignorant guidelines which have been established to create awareness, identify and single out people or, in this case, children.

To what end, I wonder? What is the purpose of such a move to classify and label people? So that they can be dealt with, or in this case, to prevent them from becoming gays and lesbians? Without a doubt the so-called "symptoms" are superficial and reflect a mind-set dependent on pseudo-science, fear and ignorance to get the message across. Painting the programme as multi-religious and multi-cultural doesn't make it right either.

So what happens when a group of students determine that a classmate fits these "symptoms"? When they have determined that this student is a lesbian or gay? Are they going to take matters into their hands and make him or her "straight"? In similar situations which have occurred here in Malaysia and around the world, this has resulted in mental and physical abuse, bullying, torture and even rape.

What happens when that child, depressed and facing abuse, decides to commit suicide or dies because of the physical abuse by self-anointed moral vigilantes?

This is why the Ministry of Women, Family and Community Development has deemed such actions which single out children for discrimination to be in violation of the 2001 Child Act. This is why we need to put a stop to such programmes which target our students, our children because they bring harm and cultivate prejudice and bigotry. These programmes are also illegal under Malaysian laws which protect children.

Who is going to be responsible if a child dies or is abused as a direct result of this awareness raising/prevention programme? Make no mistake, it will happen. Will the Yayasan Guru Malaysia, Putrajaya Consultative Council of Parents and Teachers Associations and Ministry of Education be there to take responsibility? Or will they wash their hands like Pontius Pilate?

This denial of responsibility is already happening.

The Ministry of Education is already wiggling around like a worm on a stick trying to escape the maelstrom. Is this campaign being endorsed and supported by the Ministry of Education? You would be justified in thinking so.

The lame denial by the ministry is precisely that, lame and unconvincing. The deputy minister of education officiated the seminar on "Parenting in addressing the issue of LGBTs (lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgenders)". He was quoted, in defending the "guidelines", as saying that the exposure of "symptoms" of gays and lesbians was the best approach to address the "unhealthy phenomenon" among students. Why is the Ministry of Education allowing for these people to place our teachers in a position to cultivate fear, hatred and prejudice among our children towards others?

Take the time to understand and be compassionate. Do not allow our teachers to be the vehicle and medium for our children to begin their young lives by learning to marginalise, hate, discriminate and harm those who are different and do not conform.

If it is true that the Ministry of Education had nothing to do with these guidelines, does not endorse or support them in any way, I call for the ministry to ban and reject such programmes from our schools. Let our schools be what they are supposed to be — places of learning and not places of discrimination and intolerance.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

Academic streaming in Malaysia

Posted: 17 Sep 2012 04:53 PM PDT

SEPT 18 — I have lived in this country for 20 years. During this time, one thing has remained constant. The country's leaders — its oligarchs and rulers — have deemed an education in mathematics and science as the hallmark of a successful individual. 

Let's be honest. There's no discussion about "arts and social sciences in English", there's no talk about whether art and vocational education are receiving enough emphasis. Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin hasn't said anything about training the economists and artists of the new era, and as it stands, the general consensus is that nothing will change.

In Malaysia, you have an education system that streams students according to their perceived aptitudes, that systemically values science and mathematics over so-called "soft" forms of knowledge. Students who score above a certain cutoff point in the PMR exams are automatically brought into the Science stream, often despite their objections, if any, creating a divide between supposedly "elite" science students and decidedly "non-elite" arts students.

So one might assume, from a qualitative description of how this works, that Malaysia would be a mover and shaker in the global scientific conversation, but it is sadly not. Have a look at how our graduates are distributed — how many of them are involved in careers of mathematics and science? And of these, how many have produced institutionally-challenging, iconoclastic research that has shaken the foundations of modern technology?

The question about whether our students have been successfully educated isn't a question about how well our graduates can regurgitate information in exams, but rather about how well they can perform.

If we gauge the standard of our education system in terms of the quality of research that our national varsities produce, then it is easy to note that we do not do well. I use the example of one of the most commonly cited university rankings in this country, namely the THES-QS world university rankings.

In its methodology, THES-QS cites Academic Peer Review (40 per cent) and Citations Per Faculty (20 per cent) [1] as main factors that determine the position of a university within the ranking system — Universiti Malaya registers in the 156th place [2] this year.

The former factor rewards original and thoughtful research by international evaluation, whereas the latter rewards the saliency of these discoveries towards the international community. Whether it is in the sciences that Malaysian schools have taught us to value so much, or in the social sciences that the ministry of education has such an aversion towards Malaysia's performance does not measure up to the 9 per cent of GDP that it spends on our varsities. It would appear that overall, research has reached a bottleneck in the Malaysian scientific conversation, and this should not be the case.

It is sad that the highest in terms of ranking that Universiti Malaya has held in recent years is 156, to the applause of our politicians, and to the obvious yet commonly unacknowledged discontent of our local academics and research faculties.

In this country, higher education is a game that produces students, but laughably enough does not produce thinkers. Research citations from our faculties are few and far between, and the science so valued by our politicians — as it stands — has yet to progress past the nascent stage of underdevelopment, into the era of strength that transfixed our forefathers.

This isn't the case because our students are weak, or they can't study the syllabi adequately. I am a part of this system, and I note firsthand that it has produced individuals who are qualified to stand amongst the elite as citizens of the world, who can think for themselves.

Are we simply, by design, less capable of producing? I don't think so. Malaysian students are uncreative or that they lack the means to be creative — rather than conveniently blaming ourselves for creativity by design, particularly when it comes to research and innovation. I believe that the entire incentive allocation system by the Malaysian government has been sadly misinformed, and I hope that the focus of the recently announced Malaysian Education Blueprint will serve to address the issues inherent to the system.

I do not presume to be able to pinpoint the issues with Malaysian education, and I do not think that it is a failure, despite the opinions of some interest groups. However, I do feel that there appears to be a massive abdication of responsibility when our education minister can sit back and say that we have a better education system in Malaysia than the United States and Germany despite our mediocre PISA scores, and our relative lack of productive research in recent years compared to other countries.

I feel that it is senseless politicking not to acknowledge the problems with education in this country, then to reveal an educational "road map" to replace that which has been "so successful" all these years.

Look at how the entire system of incentives works within this country. Look at our high achievers. There's a very strong chance that our top students have been involved in science education after their SPM years, for the simple reason that it's perceived to be easier for university admissions. After all, when some knowledge is considered more equal than others at this juncture of our lives, when parents tell their children to do science "just because they can switch over to arts later", there doesn't need to be real interest in maths and science — or indeed, a desire to discover more about the world — for students to gain good results.

But this all falls apart, as our students call themselves "engineers by training" while working in banks. 

Perhaps this is just how society works — how the whole system of incentives is structured, such that the so-called empiricists and engineers-by-training are systematically compensated more than their art history counterparts. 

I go by anecdotal evidence, but for many students, it seems that science and mathematics are not ends in and of themselves, for they have become the means by which university applications are accepted.

Yet, as numerous studies have recorded, the students of generation Y have increasingly tended towards an education that means something, that reflects meaning in shades more adequate than that which the world has imposed upon them.

And doesn't it make sense for government to provide that meaning? To contextualise it? To make it more relevant to society? To make it available, and not decide who should be able to choose a life of science? To me, the government shouldn't be trying to expose students to mathematics and science education in an effort to increase participation.

It should make it an option for all, because it doesn't make sense to conclude that students shouldn't be able to choose a life path simply because they perform poorly at such an early stage of their lives.

Equally, I disagree with the notion that academic "high achievers" should be funnelled into science education blindly, for the simple reason that it is considered better by a single educational board.

Passion can be discovered at any age, and the government should be trying to educate students better as a whole, attempting to create better people and better thinkers who take a genuine interest in their education, rather than systemic regurgitators of information gunning simply for university admissions and a place in the corporate world.

Education doesn't have to purely be a rite of passage. The worth of a field of knowledge lies not only in its capacity to contribute to the world, but also the beauty that it represents.

Let our children discover what they truly love. Let them find out what their hearts burn for, not mislead them from the start with arbitrary guidelines, and don't restrict them from exploring. This is idealistic, but this is what I believe.

As we come to the third quarter of 2012, I think the world isn't going to end in December, and that we have a way to go. There's no excuse for an education system that will create a generation of second-handers, for our world is a tyranny of the innovators, and we must not be left behind.

[1] http://www.topuniversities.com/world-university-rankings/understanding-qs-world-university-rankings-methodology

[2] http://www.topuniversities.com/institution/universiti-malaya-um

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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Tabung Keselamatan 1Wilayah bukti BN gagal cegah jenayah, kata PKR

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 01:21 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 18 Sept — PKR melihat tindakan kementerian Wilayah Persekutuan dan kesejahteraan bandar (KWPKB) mewujudkan Tabung Keselamatan 1Wilayah adalah bukti kerajaan Barisan Nasional (BN) gagal menunaikan tanggungjawab mereka menyelesaikan isu keselamatan dan mencegah kegiatan jenayah.

Naib Presiden parti komponen Pakatan Rakyat (PR) itu, Nurul Izzah Anwar (gambar) menegaskan, langkah itu tidak akan berjaya menyelesaikan isu peningkatan kadar jenayah kerana ia bersifat sementara sedangkan warga kota memerlukan perubahan dasar dan pendekatan tersusun bagi tujuan tersebut.

"Langkah ini hanyalah satu usaha bersifat sementara yang tidak benar-benar menyelesaikan peningkatan kadar jenayah yang dihadapi warga Kuala Lumpur yang memerlukan perubahan dasar dan pendekatan mengatasi kadar jenayah yang lebih tersusun," kata Nurul Izzah dalam satu kenyataan hari ini.

Ahli Parlimen Lembah Pantai ini turut menegaskan, dana itu berpunca daripada "kegagalan kerajaan BN dalam menugaskan semula anggota-anggota PDRM, menempatkan semula Ibu Pejabat Polis Daerah (IPD) Brickfields jauh dari penduduk, dan menangani masalah jenayah secara dasar, sistemik, dan menyeluruh kerana semua sedar bahawa jenayah berkait dengan keadaan ekonomi yang lemah."

Nurul juga mendesak KPWKB untuk mendedahkan sebarang perjanjian yang dibuat di antara pihak kementerian dan semua pihak yang memberi sumbangan kepada tabung ini.

"Tugas dan tanggungjawab keselamatan yang sepatutnya dilaksanakan kerajaan persekutuan sebagai satu khidmat awam asas telah pun diswastakan di dalam bentuk 'perkhidmatan kubu keselamatan' (neighborhood security fortress).

"Di kawasan perumahan oleh syarikat-syarikat keselamatan swasta - di mana kos bayaran perkhidmatan yang ditanggung merupakan satu bentuk 'subsidi' yang bukan sahaja patut dikembalikan kepada penduduk di dalam bentuk rebat cukai (tax rebate) tetapi ia juga berbentuk diskriminasi kerana hanya kawasan penduduk mewah sahaja akan memperolehi perkhidmatan keselamatan swasta yang lebih daripada majoriti penduduk kurang mampu," tegasnya.

Jumaat lalu, menteri Wilayah Persekutuan dan kesejahteraan bandar, Datuk Raja Nong Chik Raja Zainal Abidin mengumumkan kementariannya akan menubuhkan Tabung Keselamatan 1Wilayah Persekutuan untuk membantu penduduk menyedia, mempertingkat dan membaik pulih kemudahan keselamatan di kawasan perumahan.

Menteri berkenaan berkata ia merupakan usaha kerajaan untuk mengatasi masalah jenayah seperti rompak, samun dan pecah rumah.

Raja Nong Chik berkata, dana awal untuk tabung itu ialah sebanyak RM1 juta, namun kementeriannya mensasarkan ia akan meningkat sehingga RM4 juta hasil sumbangan pihak korporat dan swasta.

"Sumber dana untuk tabung itu tidak akan melibatkan kerajaan sebaliknya akan diperoleh melalui sumbangan Tanggungjawab Sosial Korporat pemaju hartanah dan perumahan serta syarikat swasta," katanya.

Justeru, Nurul menggesa kamera litar tertutup (CCTV) segera dipasang dengan dana khas ini mengikut piawaian liputan pantauan (security monitoring coverage) yang mesti ditetapkan dan dimaklumkan kepada umum.

"Kaedah kepolisian yang dibantu peralatan seperti kamera CCTV memerlukan sistem yang lebih mantap dan teratur melebihi apa yang mungkin dapat dipasang.

"Dan sepatutnya sistem kamera CCTV termasuk pemasangan lampu di kawasan gelap wajib disegerakan dan bukan menunggu pengumuman dan pelancaran yang nampak seperti satu kempen publisiti ketika harta dan keselamatan rakyat makin tergugat," tegasnya lagi.

Nurul juga menggesa kerajaan dan pihak yang betanggungjawab memberitahu apa perancangan "segera" dan "berkesan" untuk mengatasi kadar jenayah yang bertambah buruk.

"Sudah tiba masanya pemusatan kuasa dihentikan termasuk perkhidmatan polis serta pilihan raya kerajaan tempatan dikembalikan kepada rakyat setempat.

"Ia adalah kebertanggungjawaban dan ketelusan perkhidmatan awam yang menjadi asas demokrasi dapat menjaminkan aspirasi rakyat ditunaikan dan bukan dipolitikkan melalui perangkaan jenayah Bidang Keberhasilan Utama Negara (NKRA) yang tidak tepat  mahupun usaha 'penswastaan keselamatan' dengan pengumuman dana khas," tegasnya lagi.

Lebih 100,000 pelajar lafaz ikrar serentak memelihara alam sekitar

Posted: 18 Sep 2012 12:51 AM PDT

PUTRAJAYA, 18 Sept — Lebih 100,000 pelajar dari 157 buah sekolah rendah dan menengah terpilih di seluruh negara melafaz ikrar secara serentak pada kira-kira pukul 8 pagi ini untuk lebih bertanggungjawab dalam memelihara kemampanan petempatan manusia dan alam sekitar.

Program itu adalah kesinambungan Program Habitat Moment yang diperkenalkan sejak 2009 dan dilaksanakan dengan kerjasama Kementerian Pelajaran dengan penglibatan sekolah-sekolah rendah dan menengah yang terpilih.

Selain pembacaan ikrar, Program Bank Kitar Semula juga dilaksanakan secara serentak di 46 buah sekolah terpilih di Semanjung Malaysia (kecuali Selangor, Perak dan Pulau Pinang) bermula 8 pagi hingga 4 petang hari ini untuk menerapkan amalan kitar semula khususnya daripada kalangan pelajar supaya sentiasa mengamalkan budaya kitar semula dalam kehidupan harian.

Kedua-dua program sempena sambutan Hari Habitat Sedunia yang bakal disambut pada 1 Okt ini akan diiktiraf sebagai "Penyertaan Terbesar Pelajar-pelajar Sekolah Yang Melafazkan Ikrar 'Aku Janji' Secara Serentak" dan "Pengumpulan Barangan Kitar Semula di 45 Buah Sekolah Secara Serentak" dalam Malaysia Book of Records.

Dalam perutusannya, Menteri Perumahan dan Kerajaan Tempatan Datuk Seri Chor Chee Heung berkata Malaysia adalah antara negara yang paling banyak menghasilkan sisa buangan iaitu kira-kira 17,000 tan metrik setiap hari atau lima juta tan metrik setiap tahun.

Beliau berkata kadar amalan kitar semula di negara ini amat rendah berbanding dengan banyak negara iaitu pada aras 5 peratus setahun sahaja.

"Dijangka menjelang tahun 2020, penduduk negara akan menghasilkan sehingga 30,000 tan metrik sehari... jumlah sisa pepejal yang dijana ini akan memenuhi kawasan seluas kira-kira tiga padang bola sepak.

"Dengan kata lain, sisa-sisa pepejal yang dihasilkan ini sekiranya tidak dihantar ke tapak pelupusan, sisa pepejal selama tiga hari, ia akan memenuhkan keseluruhan bangunan KLCC."

Teks perutusan beliau dibacakan oleh Timbalan Ketua Setiausaha (Dasar dan Pembangunan) kementerian Yong Bun Fou.

Chor berkata amalan kitar semula perlu dipertingkatkan di peringkat nasional, kawasan, komuniti serta individu dan kejayaan program ini bergantung kepada kerjasama yang erat di kalangan semua pihak.

Sehubungan itu, beliau menyaran semua rakyat Malaysia mengurangkan jumlah sisa pepejal yang dijana agar kos mengendalikan sisa-sisa ini dapat dimanfaatkan dengan lebih baik.

Beliau berkata hasil kajian oleh Perbadanan Pengurusan Sisa Pepejal dan Pembersihan Awam (PPSPPA) menunjukkan Program Bank Kitar Semula di Sekolah pada tahun lepas adalah program yang mencatatkan jumlah keseluruhan kutipan kitar semula tertinggi iaitu sebanyak 98,054kg dengan hasil jualan sebanyak RM32,105. — Bernama

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