BTEUP final year pharmacy Results 2010 has been announced today.candidates can see their results in the fallow links given below:
- Click heat to see these results ( Official Site )
- Clickhear to see these results
BTEUP final year pharmacy Results 2010 has been announced today.candidates can see their results in the fallow links given below:
The 45-year-old nursing assistant, who also has two grown-up daughters, is said to have been “systematically killing her babies since 1988″.Her husband Pierre-Marie, 47, a local council handyman, has been questioned but no charges have been made against him for concealing the bodies of the babies, which were all found wrapped in plastic bags.
Investigators said she had confessed to killing ten babies.
The first discoveries were made after the new owners of a house in Villers-au-Tertre found human bones in their garden.
They alerted police on Saturday, who found the remains of two children hidden at around their home and garden.
After tracking the previous occupants to another house just half a mile away, they found the bodies of six more children hidden at that property.
Detectives using sniffer dogs said they had so far found a total of eight bodies of newborn babies wrapped in plastic bags at both houses.
According to Le Figaro newspaper, two of the bodies discovered had been hidden in the first house for more than 20 years.
It said: “According to police sources, the mother had been systematically killing her babies since 1988.
“It appears she had been hiding her pregnancies from her husband.”
Police said the first house belonged to the parents of the babies’ mother.
Eric Vaillant, public prosecutor, said: “We have found eight bodies of newborn babies in different locations in Villers-au Tertre.
“Two people, who are the parents of the children, are in custody.”
A detective working on the investigation said: “We searched the first premises and the garden following information received from the new owners.
“What is certain is that all the newborn babies found had the same parents.
“They were stuffed inside plastic bags and then buried or hidden.
“Our fear is that there are still more bodies to be discovered.”
Police said this morning that two dog handlers and five sniffer dogs were still working at both houses.
Daniel Collignon, the village’s former mayor, said: “I’m still in shock.”
Neighbours also reacted with astonishment to the news. One local man said: “They are normal people, who even have a role in the community. It’s incredible.”
Jean-Henri Martines, who lives in the village, said: “People are speechless at what has occurred.
“We all knew this couple. What has happened is unthinkable. No one knows how to react. We are in shock.”
Another neighbour in his 50s said: “These are attractive, helpful, polite and courteous people.
“They never did anything to suggest that they might be capable of abnormal behaviour.
“The husband was even elected to the town council,” he added.
The couple also have two grown-up daughters and were grandparents, said another local resident.
One teenage girl in the village said: “Their daughters are nice girls and the mother is a simple, quiet woman who wouldn’t hurt a fly.”
Earlier this year French mother Celine Lesage was jailed for 15 years after admitting to killing six of her newborn babies and hiding the bodies in her cellar.
Lesage, 38, has confessed to concealing the pregnancies, then giving birth alone before strangling two infants and suffocating four others.
She told the court that she could not explain why she had killed the babies.
Last June another Frenchwoman, Veronique Courjault, was sentenced to eight years in jail after admitting to killing three of her own babies, burning one corpse and hiding the others in the family freezer.
.
PUC Supplementary Examination 2010: SMS – RESULT
REGISTER AND RECEIVE YOUR RESULTS ON E-MAIL!
Date of Declaration: Jul 30 2010 9:00 AM
A hacker has discovered a way to force ATMs to disgorge their cash by hijacking the computers inside them.
The attacks demonstrated Wednesday targeted standalone ATMs. But they could potentially be used against the ATMs operated by mainstream banks.
Criminals have long known that ATMs aren’t tamperproof.
here are many types of attacks in use today, ranging from sophisticated to foolhardy: installing fake card readers to steal card numbers, hiding tiny surveillance cameras to capture PIN codes, covering the dispensing slot to intercept money and even hauling the ATMs away with trucks in hopes of cracking them open later.
Computer hacker Barnaby Jack spent two years tinkering in his Silicon Valley apartment with ATMs he bought online. These were standalone machines, the type seen in front of convenience stores, rather than the ones in bank branches.
His goal was to find ways to take control of ATMs by exploiting weaknesses in the computers that run the machines.
He showed off his results here at the Black Hat conference, an annual gathering devoted to exposing the latest computer-security vulnerabilities.
His attacks have wide implications because they affect multiple types of ATMs and exploit weaknesses in software and security measures that are used throughout the industry.
His talk was one of the conference’s most widely anticipated, as it had been pulled a year ago over concerns that fixes for the ATMs wouldn’t be in place in time. He used the extra year to craft more dangerous attacks.
Jack, who works as director of security research for Seattle-based IOActive Inc., showed in a theatrical demonstration two ways he can get ATMs to spit out money:
– Jack found that the physical keys that came with his machines were the same for all ATMs of that type made by that manufacturer. He figured this out by ordering three ATMs from different manufacturers for a few thousand dollars each. Then he compared the keys he got to pictures of other keys, found on the Internet.
Instead, he’s promoting himself and his agenda, sitting in the hot seat of the daytime talk show in an effort, once again, to go beyond the traditional media filter and speak directly to the American people, especially women.
Obama’s Thursday appearance was taped today and will be his third on the show. It is his first as president — indeed it is the first appearance of any sitting president on a daytime TV talk show.
In an exclusive preview clip that aired on “World News” tonight, Barbara Walters asked the president what the recent high and low points of his time in office had been.
“In the last month what has been the rose and what has been the thorn?” she asked, referring to an Obama family tradition of taking stock of their lives.
“In the last month the rose has to be a couple of days we took in Maine with Michelle, Sasha and Malia,” he said. “They’re full of opinions and ideas and observations and it’s just a great age … Malia just turned 12 and Sasha 9. Couldn’t been a better couple of days.”
Asked what the “thorn” had been, the president answered with his own question.
“Where do I begin?” he asked, getting a laugh from the audience.
“Obviously the country has gone through a tough stretch. Since I took office when I was sworn in … the last 20 months have been a nonstop effort to restart the economy, to stabilize the financial system, to make sure we are creating jobs and not losing them.”
Obama also cited the BP oil spill and battling the H1N1 swine flu “pandemic” as recent thorns.
So why sit down with “The View’s” feisty and opinionated five hosts in the first place?
“I was trying to find a show that Michelle actually watched, and so I thought this is it, right here,” he said. “All those new shows, she’s like, eh, let me get the clicker.”
On Tuesday, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the decision was made to put the president on “The View” because it provides an opportunity “to talk to people where they are.”
“People have busy lives and it’s best to go where they are,” Gibbs said.
Even with several big-ticket agenda items earning the presidential signature and becoming law, it has been a rough couple of months for the Obama White House, with the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico dominating the agenda and Americans growing more frustrated with the struggling economy.
The president’s approval ratings have hit new lows, according to the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll. Nearly six in 10 Americans say they lack confidence in the president to make the right decisions for the country, and a majority doubts his handling of the economy.
The ABC daytime program is unique because it is hosted by five women and its audience skews heavily female — a voting group that has trended Democrat and went for Obama 56-43 over Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., in the 2008 presidential election.
As Obama’s overall approval ratings have dropped, he also has lost support from women, from a high of 72 percent support in February 2009 when he was still glowing from the presidential campaign and inauguration to an approval of 51 percent today.
Obama’s support among men is in the same range — 49 percent approval today compared to 64 percent in February 2009.
Jessica Coen, editor of Jezebel.com, a popular website aimed at women, sees “The View” appearance as a prime opportunity for Obama to show some personality and “lay on the charm,” which she feels has been in short supply given recent challenges.
“You go on ‘The View’ and you sit Obama down with these women and some of them may fawn on him; some may not. But either way he’s going to be charming,” said Coen. “The target audience for ‘The View’ is going to appreciate and be reminded of Barack Obama’s personality when he goes out here.”
Robert Thompson, the director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University, said given the fact that the show is hosted by five females and has an audience that skews heavily female, the White House may see the appearance as a great opportunity to do an extended sit-down interview on a program that is safe but also perceived as serious.
“It is a women’s program, helmed by Barbara Walters, and the female voice is very much the one that dominates,” he said. “It’s not a news show, but it’s a serious discussion show. I wouldn’t call ‘The View’ frivolous.”
Coen cautioned that while Obama excels in off-the-cuff situations, he might approach the appearance too casually at his own peril.
“Yes, it’s daytime television, but that doesn’t mean it’s light and fluffy,” Coen said. “Obama’s an intelligent man. He’s not going in there thinking he’s sitting down with the knitting circle. He knows what he’s getting into. But the risk would be if he plays it a little too casually, takes it a little too lightly.”
One notable Democrat who does not think it is a good idea for the president to go on “The View” is Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, who implied that it is unpresidential and there may be better uses of the president’s Q-and-A time.
“I wouldn’t put him on ‘Jerry Springer,’ too, right?,” he said on MSNBC on Tuesday. “I think the president of the United States has to go on serious shows. And ‘The View’ is, you can make a case that it’s a serious show, but it also rocks and rolls a little bit. I’m not sure he has to go on ‘The View’ to be open to questions.”
The Obama White House clearly believes that the president’s message is best conveyed straight from the source and has made it a goal to reach as wide an audience as possible when the president wants to address key agenda items.
That generally has meant shunning traditional White House press conferences and photo opportunities in favor of one-on-one interviews aimed at specific audiences.
Gibbs said last year that “gone are the days where one outlet is where everyone gets their news or one medium is where everybody gets their news.”
Thompson agreed and said that politicians, especially those in campaign mode, need to put together what he called “a coalition of audiences” to convey a message effectively.
“There is no mass audience anymore,” he said. “You have to collect it like a patchwork quilt.”
The White House strategy has been to go beyond typical “news junkies” in order to try and reach a broad spectrum of Americans. That effort has included Obama talking about NASCAR and college basketball on ESPN, sitting down with Jay Leno and David Letterman on their late-night comedy shows and even giving an interview from the sidelines of a college basketball game.
Thompson said that while that may be a “fine strategy” during a campaign, it may not be best serving the president now.
“I’m not sure at this point if hearing more Barack Obama is going to be an asset or a liability,” Thompson said. “We kind of know what his response is to this oil spill, we kind of know what he wants to tell us about extending [unemployment] benefits and about medical care — all the things that he is talking about. I’m not sure if he’s in a place right now where he needs to reiterate a message but needing to do things that people will consider moving things along.”
The appearance is part of “The View’s” Red, White & View series, which has featured prominent American politicians and discussions on current political issues. Vice President Joe Biden made a guest appearance in April.