Oceansat-2 Satellite Successfully Launched By PSLV-C14


The one-day ICC Champions Trophy starts on Tuesday in South Africa with the future of the 50-over format under the microscope.
World stars past and present and officials have joined a fierce debate as the overwhelming success of the Indian Premier League-led Twenty20 version has left many querying the role of the ODI in an overcrowded schedule.
Indian batting superstar Sachin Tendulkar favours a four-innings format of 25 overs each to minimise the advantage of winning the toss and former star Anil Kumble supports a reduction to 40 overs.
Others like Australian bowling legend Shane Warne want the ODI format scrapped, believing it has been rendered extinct by the spectator-friendly glitz and glamour of Twenty20 cricket.
But ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat says reports of the death of ODI have been greatly exaggerated and the Champions Trophy tournament will trigger a rebirth of 50-over cricket.
"It reminds me of a year ago when people were talking about the death of Test cricket, with no crowds being there and so on," Lorgat told the South African media.
"I think we are running ahead of ourselves. We will see at the Champions Trophy in South Africa that there is a place for the ODI format in international cricket."
Lorgat warned against obsessive tinkering, saying a glut of ODI fixtures rather than the format may be the biggest problem, a view backed by South Africa skipper Graeme Smith.
"From an innovations point of view, we are always looking for new, exciting things. The batting powerplay is a good example, but we do not want to do too many things too quickly."
After an 11-year identity crisis, Lorgat believes the ICC have discovered the right formula for the often-criticised Champions Trophy, which Warne has labelled a "joke".
Short and sharp are the buzzwords for a 14-day, 15-match ODI feast featuring the top eight nations in the world, including defending champions Australia, who are on a roll as they lead England 6-0 in a series ending Sunday.
India, Pakistan and the West Indies complete Group A with South Africa, Sri Lanka, England and New Zealand in Group B and only the 'Windies' are given no chance as a contract row has forced officials to send a second-string squad.
Skippers Floyd Reifer of the West Indies, Kumar Sangakkara of Sri Lanka and Daniel Vettori of New Zealand consider Australia favourites to win the October 5 final and collect the two-million-dollar top prize.
Smith acknowledged Australia have been performing well in England, but said the Proteas were confident of regaining the Champions Trophy after winning the inaugural tournament in Bangladesh 11 years ago.
The eight teams are based in Johannesburg with games at the 30,000-capacity Wanderers stadium in a plush northern suburb of the South African financial capital and the 20,000-seat SuperSport Park in Centurion.
BASKETBALL: Sep 7-20 Poland: European Championship Finals
FOOTBALL: Sep 9 World Cup qualifiers
CRICKET: Sep 9 Third ODI, Southampton: England v Australia
GOLF: Sep 10-13 Cologne: Mercedes-Benz Championship
GOLF: Sep 10-13 Illinois: USPGA Tour play-offs
CRICKET: Sep 12 Fourth ODI, Lord's: England v Australia
RUGBY UNION: Sep 12 Tri-Nations Series: New Zealand v S Africa
SPEEDWAY: Sep 12 Krsko: Slovenian Grand Prix
ATHLETICS: Sep 12-13 Salonika: IAAF World Athletics final
GOLF: Sep 12-13 Pennsylvania: Walker Cup
CYCLING: Sep 12-19 Tour of Britain
MOTOR RACING: Sep 13 Italian Grand Prix
MOTOR CYCLING: Sep 13 Croft: British Superbikes
TENNIS: Sep 14-20 Quebec City: ATP Bell Challenge
TENNIS: Sep 14-20 Guangzhou: WTA Guangzhou International Open
TENNIS: Sep 18-20 Davis Cup semi-finals
CRICKET: Sep 15 Fifth ODI, Trent Bridge: England v Australia
CRICKET: Sep 17 Sixth ODI, Trent Bridge: England v Australia
GOLF: Sep 17-20 British Masters
GOLF: Sep 17-20 Georgia: USPGA Tour play-offs
GOLF: Sep 17-20 Samsung World Championship
DARTS: Sep 18-20 Bridlington: BDO British Open
RUGBY UNION: Sep 19 Tri-Nations Series: New Zealand v Australia
ATHLETICS: Sep 19-20 Talence: IAAF combined events
ATHLETICS: Sep 20 BUPA Great North Run
ATHLETICS: Sep 20 Berlin Marathon
CRICKET: Sep 20 Seventh ODI, Chester-le-St: England v Australia
MOTOR RACING: Sep 20 Rockingham: British Touring Cars
MOTOR CYCLING: Sep 20 Hungary: MotoGP
TENNIS: Sep 21-27 Metz: ATP Moselle Open
TENNIS: Sep 21-27 Bucharest: ATP BCR Open
TENNIS: Sep 21-27 Seoul: WTA Hansol Korea Open
TENNIS: Sep 21-27 Tashkent: WTA Tashkent Open
CRICKET: Sep 24-Oct 5 ICC Champions Trophy
GOLF: Sep 24-27 Canal+ Open
GOLF: Sep 24-27 Malaga: Volvo World Match Play Championship
GOLF: Sep 24-27 California: Longs Drugs Challenge
SPEEDWAY: Sep 26 Terenzano: Italian Grand Prix
MOTOR RACING: Sep 27 Singapore Grand Prix
MOTOR CYCLING: Sep 27 Silverstone: British Superbikes
MOTOR CYCLING: Sep 27 Italy: World Superbikes
TENNIS: Sep 27-Oct 3 Tokyo: Toray Pan Pacific Open
TENNIS: Sep 28-Oct 4 Bangkok: ATP Thailand Open
TENNIS: Sep 28-Oct 4 Tokyo: WTA Toray Pan Pacific Open
Key events this month:
GOLF: Aug 13-16 Minnesota: US PGA Championship ATHLETICS: Aug 15-23 Berlin: IAAF World Championships GOLF: Aug 21-23 Illinois: Solheim Cup FOOTBALL: Aug 23-Sep 10 Finland: UEFA Women's Euros ROWING: Aug 23-30 Poznan: World Championships RUGBY LEAGUE: Aug 29 Challenge Cup Final CRICKET: Aug 30 First Twenty20, Old Trafford: England v Australia TENNIS: Aug 31-Sep 13 New York: US Open
The month in full:
BADMINTON: Aug 10-16 Hyderabad: World Championships TENNIS: Aug 10-23 Montreal: ATP Rogers Cup TENNIS: Aug 10-23 Cincinnati: WTA Masters GOLF: Aug 13-16 Minnesota: USPGA Championship GOLF: Aug 13-16 St Mellion: English Open SPEEDWAY: Aug 15 Malilla: Swedish Grand Prix CRICKET: Aug 15-16 Canterbury: Kent v Australia ATHLETICS: Aug 15-23 Berlin: IAAF World Championships MOTOR RACING: Aug 16 Knockhill: British Touring Car Championship MOTOR CYCLING: Aug 16 Czech Republic: MotoGP FOOTBALL: Aug 12 World Cup qualifier: Norway v Scotland CRICKET: Aug 20-24 Fifth Test, The Oval: England v Australia GOLF: Aug 20-23 Zandvoort: KLM Open GOLF: Aug 20-23 North Carolina: Wyndham Championship GOLF: Aug 21-23 Illinois: Solheim Cup RUGBY UNION: Aug 22 Tri-Nations: Australia v New Zealand MOTOR RACING: Aug 23 Valencia: European Grand Prix FOOTBALL: Aug 23-Sep 10 Finland: UEFA Women's Euros ROWING: Aug 23-30 Poznan: World Championships TENNIS: Aug 24-30 New Haven: ATP/WTA Pilot Pen tournament GOLF: Aug 27-30 Gleneagles: Johnnie Walker Championship GOLF: Aug 28-30 Oregon: Safeway LPGA Classic CRICKET: Aug 28 ODI, Edinburgh: Scotland v Australia ATHLETICS: Aug 28 Zurich: IAAF League RUGBY UNION: Aug 28 Tri-Nations: Australia v South Africa SPEEDWAY: Aug 29 Vojens: Danish Grand Prix RUGBY LEAGUE: Aug 29 Challenge Cup Final MOTOR RACING: Aug 30 Belgian Grand Prix CRICKET: Aug 30 First Twenty20, Old Trafford: England v Australia MOTOR RACING: Aug 30 Silverstone: British Touring Cars MOTOR RACING: Aug 30 Germany: World Touring Car Championship MOTOR CYCLING: Aug 30 USA: MotoGP ATHLETICS: Aug 31 Gateshead: AVIVA British Grand Prix MOTOR CYCLING: Aug 31 Cadwell Park: British Superbikes TENNIS: Aug 31-Sep 13 New York: US Open
Magnitude | 7.6 |
Date-Time |
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Location | 14.013°N, 92.923°E |
Depth | 33.1 km (20.6 miles) |
Region | ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION |
Distances | 260 km (160 miles) N of Port Blair, Andaman Islands, India 365 km (225 miles) SSW of Pathein (Bassein), Myanmar 825 km (510 miles) W of BANGKOK, Thailand 2295 km (1420 miles) SE of NEW DELHI, Delhi, India |
Location Uncertainty | horizontal +/- 9.8 km (6.1 miles); depth +/- 5.7 km (3.5 miles) |
Parameters | NST= 64, Nph= 64, Dmin=833.8 km, Rmss=0.86 sec, Gp= 72°, M-type=(unknown type), Version=6 |
Source |
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Event ID | us2009kdb2 |
NEW DELHI: With the World Health Organisation designating swine influenza outbreak as a public health emergency of international concern, India on Monday put on alert all international airports and ports for identifying persons with suspected infection who could be arriving from countries affected.
Those travelling to affected areas have also been advised to defer non-essential journeys. Instructions were issued to track down people who arrived in India from Mexico, the U.S., Canada, New Zealand, Spain, France and the United Kingdom.
“Keeping in view the global scenario, the government is instituting a series of preventive action that includes surveillance at ports and international airports. Surveillance [will be] through the integrated disease surveillance units in the States,” V. M. Katoch, Director-General, Indian Council of Medical Research, told reporters after a meeting of the joint monitoring group here. All passengers coming to India from the affected areas will be mandatorily screened for influenza symptoms while for others it will be voluntary.
All States were advised to review their preparedness to investigate and contain any suspected cluster of influenza-like illness. The Central government would be supporting the States in terms of guidelines, experts, material logistics and laboratory support.
“Since the disease has originated outside India, we have no reason to believe that pigs in India are carrying the disease, hence we are monitoring the movement of the people coming here from the affected countries,” Vineet Chowdhry, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said.
The process of tracking down the passengers who arrived in India from these countries had already started, he said.
It was not difficult since computerised records of travellers were available with the airlines.
Within the next two days, nine international airports — Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kochi and Goa — will have additional medical and paramedical staff. The staff were identified and deployment would start shortly, Mr. Chowdhry said. Delhi international airport alone will have 38 doctors for screening passengers.
The Ministry is drafting guidelines for the airlines to follow, including informing the passengers that they could be screened on arrival in India.
“We have drafted a proforma which will be given to the passengers for voluntary declaration of any flu symptoms like fever, and cough. If he or she develops any symptoms subsequently, it can be reported to the authorities or on telephone no. 23921401 which is a toll-free number at the National Institute of Communicable Diseases,” Dr. Katoch said.
A round-the-clock call centre under the Integrated Disease Surveillance Project (No. 1075) will also be attending calls from the public regarding reporting of influenza-like illness. Any person suspected to have influenza will be isolated at the airport and put on treatment.
Dr. Katoch said a stockpile of one million doses of Tamiflu was available and a request had been made for another one million doses.
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