Fauziah Gambus,Wann, Ajai n Nurul,Broery Marantika, Dewa 19, Geisha ,

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Will Gadd Makes Historic Climb Up Frozen Niagara Falls

Will Gadd Makes Historic Climb Up Frozen Niagara Falls












Check Out an Incredible Ice Climb Up
Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada (near Toronto).
Will Gadd makes historic first ice climb
up the world
s most famous waterfall.

Niagara Falls is the most famous waterfall
in the entire world. The falls, which straddle the border of Canada and the
United States, welcome 20 million visitors a year and are a national landmark
for both countries
one of
the world's first tourist attractions, and simply put, a wonder of nature.
See the incredible video of the climb
above


Plenty of people have gone down the falls
over the years but Will Gadd 
recently named a Nat Geo Adventurer of
the Year
is the first person to ever go UP the
falls. How? Well, he's one of the world's best ice climbers, and Niagara Falls
was frozen.

2 pilots break long distance balloon-traveling record | Fox News

2 pilots break long distance balloon-traveling record | Fox News




ALBUQUERQUE,
N.M. –  Two pilots from the U.S. and Russia have traveled farther and
longer in a gas balloon than anyone in history, trying to eliminate any
remaining debate over a century of records in long-distance ballooning.
The Two
Eagles pilots surpassed the distance and duration records that have held since
the 1970s and 1980s, and were aiming Saturday for a safe landing somewhere on a
beach in Mexico's Baja California peninsula.


Troy
Bradley of Albuquerque and Leonid Tiukhtyaev (too-kh-TY'-yev) of Russia lifted
off from Japan Sunday morning, and by Friday, they beat what's considered the
"holy grail" of ballooning achievements, the 137-hour duration record
set in 1978 by the Double Eagle crew of Ben Abruzzo, Maxie Anderson and Larry
Newman in the first balloon flight across the Atlantic.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Boil water advisory issued for Winnipeg after E. coli detected | Globalnews.ca

Boil water advisory issued for Winnipeg after E. coli detected | Globalnews.ca





WINNIPEG — The entire city of Winnipeg
was under a precautionary boil water advisory Tuesday night after testing
showed the presence of E. coli in the water supply.
The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority
issued the  water advisory just before 5:30 p.m. The advisory was
initially for Winnipeg east of the Red River but city
officials widened it to cover all of Winnipeg just before 6 p.m.
“Out of an abundance of caution, we are
issuing (a boil water advisory) citywide,” Mayor Brian Bowman told a news
conference Tuesday evening. “Hopefully we will find out that these were
false positives tomorrow and very soon thereafter we will be able to lift
this notice, but we do need to be cautious.”
The WRHA says it has communicated the
advisory to all hospital staff.
All residents of Winnipeg are being
advised to bring any water to a boil for at least a minute before using it to
drink, make food or infant formula or brushing teeth.
Geoffrey Patton, the acting director
of water and waste for the city, said the boil advisory will remain in
place “until further sampling can prove that the bacteria is not an issue and
was more than likely a sampling error in our procedures.”
“We are confident in the safety of the
water and we are re-sampling to prove this out,” he said. “But what we have in
front of us, we have testing samples that show this low level of bacteria
and it’s on the east side and we’ ve seen it on the west side.”
Patton said tests showed the presence of
choliform bacteria as well as E. coli.
Brian O’ Leary, superintendent with the
Seven Oaks School Division, said schools will be open tomorrow despite the
advisory.
“All schools will be open, parents are
asked to send children to school with bottled or boiled water sufficient for
drinking throughout the day,” said O’Leary.
Staff at Marion Street Eatery
reacted  quickly to hearing there is a boil water advisory.
“We went around to all the tables and told
people to not drink the water,” said Alice Johannesson with the St. Boniface
restaurant.
“We brought in bottled water and bagged
ice,” said Johannesson. “It’s an inconvenience we hope won’t last too long.”
Shelves in most stores were empty an hour
after the advisory was issued as Winnipeggers quickly bought up any water
available. Several people were seen leaving stores with four to five cases in
their carts.
“You take it for granted,” said Doug
Stephen as he left the Shoppers Drug Mart in Osborne Village. “Especially in a
major Canadian city. There’s nothing left inside. It’s concerning.”
In May 2000, seven people died and
thousands became sick in Walkerton, Ont. after E. coli got into the
water system.





Taxes didn’t drive Burger King-Tim Hortons deal: Buffett | Toronto Star

Taxes didn’t drive Burger King-Tim Hortons deal: Buffett | Toronto Star







The
proposed $12.5 billion merger of Tim Hortons and Burger King began in early
March with a phone call to Warren Buffett.
Alexandre
Behring, chairman of Burger King and managing partner of the burger chain’s
majority owner, 3G Capital, called Buffett to see if the American billionaire
would be willing to finance the transaction.
Buffett,
who had previously helped 3G Capital, a Brazilian investment firm, buy H.J.
Heinz Company in 2013, said yes, according to regulatory filings jointly
submitted by the companies on Tuesday as part of the process of winning
shareholders’ approval of the deal.
Tim
Hortons board of directors was not so quick to agree. The coffee and doughnut
chain had just embarked on its own multi-year strategic plan to boost sales and
profits under its relatively new chief executive officer Marc Caira.



NEW YORK — Billionaire investor Warren
Buffett, who agreed to help finance Burger King Worldwide Inc.’s planned
takeover of coffee-and-doughnut chain Tim Hortons Inc., said the deal wasn’t
motivated by taxes.
“The highest amount of federal taxes that
Burger King has paid in any of the last three years has been $30 million
(U.S.),” Buffett said Thursday on MSNBC. That’s a fraction of the more than $11
billion (U.S.) that the Miami-based fast-food chain agreed to pay for Oakville,
Ontario-based Tim Hortons. The combined company will be based in Canada, which
has a lower federal tax rate than the United States.
The Obama administration and Congress have
been weighing how to dissuade U.S. businesses from moving to other nations in
search of lower corporate tax bills. Between mid-June and late July, at least
five large American companies announced plans to make such a shift, known as an
inversion. That includes AbbVie Inc. and Medtronic Inc.
Buffett said that while the Burger King
deal fits the definition of an inversion, it should be distinguished from
transactions in which companies shift valuable intellectual property to other
nations. Inversions can also limit obligations to the U.S. on profits earned
abroad.
“There isn’t a whole lot of intellectual
property to transfer with hamburgers,” Buffett said. “This is not a case of
trapped cash, it’s not a case of intellectual property. It’s a case of the
larger company being in Canada.”
Those assertions could be disputed. While
Canada will be the combined company’s largest market and Tim Hortons generates
more revenue, the U.S. company had a bigger market capitalization before the businesses
announced they were in merger talks. Burger King’s controlling shareholder, 3G
Capital, will also have a majority stake in the combined company.
Mimicking a practice that’s become routine
among pharmaceutical and technology firms, some food-service companies also
have shifted profits to low-tax nations by transferring intangible assets, such
as brand names, to subsidiaries in those countries and then charging royalties
for their use.
Getting a foreign address would increase
the savings generated by such a maneuver, and it also might allow Burger King
to attempt the strategy in the U.S., currently its biggest market. Burger King
already reduces its taxes in countries including Germany through payments to a
Swiss affiliate that owns brand rights, Reuters reported this month, citing a
2012 company statement to the news service.
Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., based
in Omaha, Nebraska, agreed to invest $3 billion (U.S.) for a preferred stake in
the new company paying an annual dividend of 9 per cent.





Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Monday, January 12, 2015

Slash set to rock Malaysians on Valentine's Day - Nation | The Star Online

Slash set to rock Malaysians on Valentine's Day - Nation | The Star Online

PETALING
JAYA: This Valentine’s Day is set to rock as legendary guitarist Slash will be
returning to deliver his red-hot riffs and guitar solos for his Malaysian fans.
The
musician, best known as the former lead guitarist of Guns N’ Roses, will
perform on Feb 14 at the Sunway Lagoon Surf Beach.
It will
be the one and only exclusive show in South-East Asia with his band mates,
Myles Kennedy and the Conspirators, in support of his new album titled World
On Fire.
The
album is the latest offering from Slash featuring Myles Kennedy & the
Conspirators.
Slash,
whose real name is Saul Hudson, was previously in Malaysia was in 2010.
Considered
one of the greatest rock guitarists of all time, he was an original member of
Guns N’ Roses and helped mould its signature sound with songs such as the
band’s smash hit Sweet Child o’ Mine and Welcome To The Jungle.
The
band dominated the 1980s and 1990s music scene, selling more than 100 million
albums worldwide and ushering in a decade of hard charging rock music.
After
leaving the band, Slash went on to receive critical acclaim in his personal
project Slash’s Snakepit, and global success with supergroup Velvet Revolver.
This
time, Slash has formed a team with Alter Bridge vocalist Myles Kennedy.
The
show called “Slash World On Fire Featuring Myles Kennedy and The Conspirators
Live in Malaysia 2015” is organised by the Galaxy Group, which previously
brought heavy metal legends Metallica to our shores last year.
Concert
tickets, which are priced at RM348, RM278 and RM168, will be available at all
Galaxy ticketing counters at Mid Valley and Sg Wang.
They
can also be purchased online via www.buytickets.com.my.
For
details, contact Galaxy Group at 03-2282 2020, or visit www.galaxy.com.my or
the Galaxy Group Facebook page.




Thursday, January 8, 2015

Boxing Day tsunami: Indonesia's miracle Mosque | MuslimVillage.com

Boxing Day tsunami: Indonesia's miracle Mosque | MuslimVillage.com



Today, Baiturrahman Mosque stands as a
testament to Aceh’s survival.
“The mosque is very, very important,” Mr
Suratin said.
“They say the mosque that is still there,
for them it is like a miracle.
“This is the first word if you communicate
with them about [it].”
He said the tragedy had shaped the area.
“The tsunami has really affected the way
[people in] Aceh face life,” he said.
“They realise the limitedness of human
beings … all you have in life can disappear in a second.
“They are the witness of this traumatic
situation … so people have a strong bond with each other with this collective
memory.”
People still going hungry in Aceh,
academic says
Despite rebuilding efforts, concern has
been raised about the effectiveness of reconstruction.
John McCarthy, associate professor at the
Crawford School of Public Policy at Australian
National University
,
said some people living in Aceh at the moment are running out of food.
“We found above 50 per cent of people were
still suffering a hunger season,” he said.
He said this occured in the area where, on
average, there had been about 10 livelihood projects per village in the
post-tsunami period.
“The donors and the NGO community had
spent about $7.5 billion on the post-tsunami intervention,” he said.
“To have such a high-profile and one of
the biggest development interventions in developing countries ever, how were
they able to achieve, from our perspective, such poor livelihood outcomes?
“We were quite surprised by that really.”
Associate Professor McCarthy said many of
the aid projects had short timelines which had contributed to the problem.
“They just had to spend as quickly as they
could. They were all competing with each other,” he said.
“I think these projects could have
achieved a lot more if they weren’t in such a rush, if they wanted to develop
longer-term partnerships, and try and think more carefully through what might
be done to alleviate this vulnerability.”
He said locals talk about “three
tsunamis”.
“The tsunami when the wave struck; the tsunami
that followed, which was the tsunami of aid money and aid agencies; and then
the third tsunami was when they all poured out,” he said.
“The Acehnese don’t blame the aid agencies
but they do see it as a lost opportunity.
“When I was there 10 years earlier [before
the tsunami], things were way, way in front of where they are now. There is no
reason why these villages along the west coast of Aceh should be as food
insecure as they are.”
In response to criticisms, Mr Suratin said
he believed life in the area had improved.
“It is incomparable. In general the
situation in Aceh is better than the situation in other parts of the country,”
he said.