Community
Transcription
Community
P6 Community ‘The Human Creation in Holy Qur’an’ features different specialised check-up points based around each organ. P10 Community Doha College welcomed people from schools across Qatar for the recent CLEAPSS conference. Thursday, June 23, 2016 Ramadan 18, 1437 AH DOHA COVER STORY 33°C—40°C TODAY LIFESTYLE/HOROSCOPE 13 PUZZLES 14 & 15 Think and act green Dr Margarita Pavlova, Director of the UNESCO-UNEVOC Centre in Hong Kong, on how Qatar can best use its resources. P4-5 2 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY ROUND & ABOUT PRAYER TIME Fajr Shorooq (sunrise) Zuhr (noon) Asr (afternoon) Maghreb (sunset) Isha (night) 3.15am 4.45am 11.36am 2.59pm 6.30pm 8.00pm USEFUL NUMBERS Emergency 999 Worldwide Emergency Number 112 Kahramaa – Electricity and Water 991 Local Directory 180 International Calls Enquires 150 Hamad International Airport 40106666 Labor Department 44508111, 44406537 Mowasalat Taxi 44588888 Qatar Airways 44496000 Hamad Medical Corporation 44392222, 44393333 Qatar General Electricity and Water Corporation 44845555, 44845464 Primary Health Care Corporation 44593333 44593363 Qatar Assistive Technology Centre 44594050 Qatar News Agency 44450205 44450333 Q-Post – General Postal Corporation 44464444 EVENTS You might be amongst the winners by participating in the competition every Thursday and Friday after the Tarawih prayers and look for the treasure box to win the QR2,500. You are kindly requested, once you find the box, to go to the kiosk opposite building 15 to know if you’re the lucky winner. Find your treasure competition DATE: Until July 1 TIME: 8pm-11pm VENUE: Katara Humanitarian Services Office (Single window facility for the repatriation of bodies) Ministry of Interior 40253371, 40253372, 40253369 Ministry of Health 40253370, 40253364 Hamad Medical Corporation 40253368, 40253365 Qatar Airways 40253374 ote Unquote u Q Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful. — Albert Schweitzer Community Editor Kamran Rehmat e-mail: community@gulf-times.com Telephone: 44466405 Fax: 44350474 Al Gannas DATE: Until Oct 30 TIME: 9am-11:30am VENUE: Al Gannas Society Al Gannas Association is participating in the ‘Our culture is a school’ programme by organising many activities for Mall Cinema (1): 7 Hours To Go (Hindi) 3pm; Now You See Me 2 (2D) 8:45pm; 7 Hours To Go (Hindi) 11pm. Mall Cinema (2): Tini : The Movie : The New Life Of Violette (2D) 2.15pm; The Call Up (2D) 4pm; Tini : The Movie :The New Life Of Violette (2D) 8.30pm; Raman Raghav 2.0 (Hindi) 10.30pm. Mall Cinema (3): Albert (2D) 2.30pm; Asian Connection (2D) 4pm; The Call Up (2D) 8.30pm; Asian Connection (2D) 10pm; The the students every Monday and Wednesday of the week. These activities include explanations on hunting and related tools, kinds of falcons and preys, in addition to workshop on how to carry a falcon, set a traditional tent (made of goat & camel hair), prepare traditional Arabic coffee, etc. Cain (2D) 11.30pm. Royal Plaza Cinema Palace (3): The Call Up (2D) 2.30pm; Tini : The Movie : The New Life Code Of Cain (2D) 11.30pm. Of Violette (2D) 4pm; Tini : The Royal Plaza Cinema Palace (1): Movie :The New Life Of Violette Raman Raghav 2.0 (Hindi) 3pm; (2D) 9pm; Now You See Me 2 (2D) The Code Of Cain (2D) 8.45pm; 10.45pm. Raman Raghav 2.0 (Hindi) 11pm. Asian Town Cinema: Kammati Royal Plaza Cinema Palace Paadam (Malayalam) 8, 9, 11pm (2): Asian Connection (2D) & 12am; Oka Manasu (Telugu) 2.30pm; Albert (2D) 4pm; Asian 8pm; Raman Raghav 2.0 (Hindi) Connection (2D) 8.30pm; The 10.45pm; Gentleman (Telugu) Call Up (2D) 10pm; The Code Of 7.45pm. Thursday, June 23, 2016 BOOKS 10 1. Suits S2 2. Texas Rising S1 3. Friends S1-10 4. Good Wife S1 5. Grey’s Anatomy S7 6. Remember Me 7. Better Call Saul S1 8. Chicago Fire S3 9. Downton Abbey A Moorland Holiday 10. Flash S1 Aya & Hikaya Ramadan Programme DATE: Until June 25 VENUE: Across mosques in Qatar The Ministry of Education and Higher Education, in collaboration with the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, will organise the fourth edition of the Aya & Hikaya Ramadan programme, with the participation of male and female students aged between six and 12 years. The sessions of boys will be held after the Asr prayer, while the sessions of girls will take place after Taraweeh prayers. Each session will include 30 students, each of them will be awarded a participation certificate and a copy of the story. TCA Science Summer Camp DATE: July 10-Aug 4 TIME: 8:30am-3:15pm VENUE: TCA, C-Ring Road Qatar’s most exciting summer camp is an unique science workshop to introduce young children to the mysteries of science, through hands on make and take projects with interactive experiments. For inquiries, call 66523871. RedBull Kart Fight! DATE: Until July 1 TIME: 9:30pm VENUE: Doha Exhibition & Convention Center Red Bull Kart Fight is at the door! The first ever karting competition to be held in Qatar will establish the fastest amateur kart racer in the country. Kart Fight Qualifiers and National Final will take place between June 23-July 1 (except June 28), at the Doha Exhibition & Convention Center from 9:30pm – 11:30pm. Freej Aspire 2016 DATE: Until July 19 VENUE: Aspire Zone You can come and enjoy fun and entertainment at Freej Aspire in Ramadan. The events include live entertainment shows MOVIES 1. Me Before You by Jojo Moyes 2. Querkles Masterpieces by Thomas Pavitte 3. Username: Evie by Joe Sugg 4. The Bamboo Stalk by Saud al-Sanousi 5. Girl Online: On Tour by Zoe Sugg 6. Qatar Entertainer 2016 by The Entertainer 7. Selp-Helf by Miranda Sings 8. Girl On The Train by Paula Hawkins 9. The Amazing Book Is Not On Fire by Dan Howell and Phil Lester 10. See Me by Nicholas Spark TV-SERIES Futsal Intercontinental Cup Qatar DATE: From tomorrow, until June 29 VENUE: Ali bin Hamad Al Attiya Arena in Al Sadd Qatar Football Association, in collaboration with the Spanish Futsal League, will organise the 15th Futsal Intercontinental Cup Qatar 2016, with the participation of the top eight teams in the world. Qatar will be represented by Al-Rayyan team. 3 COMMUNITY ROUND & ABOUT top GULF TIMES 1. Star Wars Ep VII The Force Awakens 2. Terminator Genisys 3. Revenant 4. Solace 5. Southpaw 6. Daddy’s Home 7. Ride Along 2 8. Blended 9. Descendants 10. Hateful Eight MUSIC 1. Various Artists: Now 93 2. Various Artists: Very Bo 3. Rihanna: Anti 4. Justin Bieber: Purpose Del Ed 5. Various Artists: Now That S What I Call Chilled 6. David Guetta: Listen Again 7. Coldplay: Head Full Of Dreams 8. Green Day: American Idiot +Dvd 9. Various Artists: Sunset Soul Bx3 10. Ludwig Von Beethoven: 50 Best Beethoven Bx3 Courtesy: Virgin Megastores, Landmark and Villaggio Mall suitable for all family members, sports activities for kids, in addition to shopping and food outlets. of food festivities. Barwa Commercial Avenue, opposite Al Watan petrol station from June 30 to July 9, from 8pm-12pm. Ramadan Nights @ Aqua Park TIME: 8pm—2am VENUE: Aqua Park With a special month, comes a special treat from Qatar’s number 1 theme park – Aqua Park. Come spend the beautiful Ramadan nights at Aqua Park and get to also view the 2016 matches on a giant screen. Join other football fans and enjoy the UEFA EURO 2016 feeling in France right here in Qatar. Let the fun & excitement begin! Summer Camp & Clinic DATE: July 3-14 TIME: 9am VENUE: Al Waab, Al Bustan, Doha The camps & clinics are a fantastic opportunity to maintain contact time with your coach, whether that is soccer, basketball or multi-sports. Come along, learn new skills and meet new friends who have the same passion and desire for the game as you do. Blood and Arteries exhibition DATE: Until July 11 TIME: 9am-11:55pm VENUE: Katara, Bldg 18 Creative 4D Exhibition on blood and arteries with verses from the Qur’an and a free blood test. Katara Beach Volleyball Championship DATE: Until June 25 TIME: 9pm- 11:55pm VENUE: Katara Beach Katara announces the launch of Katara Beach Volleyball Tournament 2016 in Ramadan on Katara beach volleyball court. Participants are welcome from all nationalities provided they weren’t in the records of the Qatari Volleyball Association for the season of 2015 – 2016. Sunset Kayaking DATE: Until June 25 TIME: 4pm VENUE: Al Thakhira This is a tour designed for the holy month of Ramadan. Enjoy a great sunset paddling in the beautiful mangroves of Al Thakhira. After Kayaking, we head back to the beach and go for a potluck Iftar where people share their food! There will be a BBQ set up as well. Chinese Food Culture Festival DATE: June 30-July 9 TIME: 8pm- 12pm VENUE: Barwa Commercial Avenue Want to taste Chinese food? Want to watch breath taking Chinese performances? Well now you can enjoy the authentic taste and watch wonderful Chinese performances at the Dragon Mart China Mall. Bringing you 10 days Karting & Mini Moto Track DATE: Until July 1 TIME: 6:30pm VENUE: Losail International Circuit The Karting and Mini Moto Track will be open every Thursday and Friday until July 1 after which the track will close until further notice. QR100 per session of 15 minutes. Helmet mask QR15 – not refundable. QSports Summer Camp DATE: Until Sept 1 TIME: 8am-1pm VENUE: Al Jazeera Academy Registration for QSports Summer Camp 2016 is now open. QSports summer camps are committed to providing a safe, fun and skill-based experience for kids between the ages of four and 14. We have a dedicated team of specialist kid’s coaches and classes and activities are safe, planned, progressive, active, creative, inclusive and designed to maximise participation of all children by offering a variety of activities. Shifting Sands DATE: Until July 7 VENUE: Sheikh Faisal bin Qassim Museum, Alsamariyah MA students of UCL Qatar are organising and curating an exhibition as part of UCLQurates. In the very recent past, Qatar has undergone a significant transformation; through these developments, people have had to adapt to the changing landscape in which they live. Spring Exhibition MIA DATE: Until July 16 TIME: 10:30am- 5pm VENUE: QM Gallery Al Riwaq An exhibition of 15 contemporary Chinese artists, curated by internationally acclaimed Compiled by Nausheen Shaikh. E-mail: gtlisting@gmail.com, Events and timings subject to change New York-based Chinese artist Cai GuoQiang, is on view at the QM Gallery Al Riwaq. The exhibition is the major highlight presented in the context of the Qatar China 2016 Year of Culture. Artworks exemplifying each and every artist’s unique artistic language and methodology are displayed in individual galleries. Qatari Agricultural Product Yards DATE: Until June 30 VENUE: Al Mazrooa, Al Zakheera, Al Khor, Al Wakrah The Ministry of Environment has opened the 4th season of Qatari agricultural product yards for selling locally produced fruits, vegetables, poultry, fish and livestock. Work in these yards will continue for seven months. The yards will operate three days a week on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 7am to 5pm, with livestock vendors in Al Mazrooa operating at the same times throughout the week. FOODIE CHOICE RESTAURANT: Al Hubara LOCATION: Sheraton lobby Every night of Ramadan provides a new opportunity to share memorable Iftar experiences. Join us in our renowned restaurant, where interactive cooking stations come to life celebrating cuisines from all around the world, featuring Qatari traditional cuisine and more! At QR225, per person — 50% for kids aged between 6 to 12 years and kids below the age of six dine for free. 4 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY COVER STORY Green means clean In Qatar, all industry sectors need their operations to go green, Dr Margarita Pavlova, Director of the UNESCO-UNEVOC Centre in Hong Kong, suggests. It is one way the overall economy could get greener within a short timeframe, she tells Umer Nangiana CANDID: For countries like Qatar, issues of climate change, health, and other aspects of personal and social well-being are closely related to the quality of the environment, says Dr Margarita Pavlova. W hen governments plan for sustainable development they need to consider at least two dimensions; human development index and ecological footprint/performance. Qatar ranked 32nd out of 188 countries in 2014 and ranks as one of the top Arab countries for human development. However, the performance on environmental sustainability dimension as measured by World Energy Council (2015) is low as it ranked 101st out of 129 countries overall. Assuredly, the country scored well in terms of energy security and energy equity. For Qatar to achieve high human development within the Earth’s limit, the country requires a particular focus on how to deal with environmental challenges. One of the pillars of Qatar National Vision 2030 is environmental development and the government of Qatar has established a number of projects that highlight the importance of this agenda to the country. “For countries like Qatar, issues of climate change, health, and other aspects of personal and social well-being are closely related to the quality of the environment, and this has become a primary concern for governments,” says Dr Margarita Pavlova, Director of the UNESCOUNEVOC Centre in Hong Kong, while talking to Community. An expert in TVET (Technical and Vocational Education and Training) with special focus in the area of environmental development, she was recently in Qatar to give a talk on ‘Greening of skills and economies for a successful transition to environmentally friendly lowcarbon development’ at College of North Atlantic-Qatar (CNAQ). In addition, she says, Qatar as a very rich country has more resources that can be used to tackle global issues related to climate change; for example, by developing green technologies for the oil and gas industries, or other sectors and helping to transfer these technologies to developing countries. In Qatar, all industry sectors need their operations to go green, Dr Pavlova suggests. It is one way the overall economy could get greener within a short timeframe. At the moment in Qatar, the most obvious sector that needs to go green is construction due to its substantial environmental footprint and its capacity to significantly reduce emissions. “There are so many construction sites in Doha, and the construction sector has a significant impact due to CO2 emissions. For example, buildings take up over 40 percent of global primary energy use, GHG emissions and also waste (UNEP, 2007),” says the expert. They also consume 32 percent of the world’s resources and account for 12 percent of global water use, she adds, quoting ‘Fien & Winfree, 2014.’ The importance of transitioning towards a greener economy has been recognised globally in different regions and countries. Greening of economies contributes to a reduction of waste, pollution, combined with Thursday, June 23, 2016 5 COMMUNITY COVER STORY the responsible use of resources, materials, and energy to revitalise and diversify economies, says Dr Pavlova who is also Associate Professor at Department of International Education and Lifelong Learning at Honk Kong Institute of Education. She is internationally recognised for her high level of scholarship and concrete action and policy-oriented approach to research. Her current research and development projects are in the area of education for sustainability, development and green skills. Challenges associated with the current and future shortage of resources, their inflating prices, technological development and innovation, new markets, and changes in industrial practices as well as consumer demands have led to structural economic changes and the ‘greening’ of business and industry. “In our research, when we are talking about green skills or greening of skills we make a distinction between green industries on the one hand such as waste and water management, renewable energy, eco-tourism, environmental consulting services and the greening of industries across the board on the other,” elaborates Dr Pavlova. For developing occupational skills standards in the first type of skills, occupational and business chain analyses are used. These are no different from the ways other occupational standards are developed. For the second type, a different approach is required, she says. Their research, Dr Pavlova, suggest has identified four types of skills or competencies that are required and should be included in training programs in the context of greening. These include cognitive competencies, interpersonal skills, intrapersonal competencies and technological skills. “Our research in Hong Kong identified that there are two main ways companies are becoming greener. It is by greening their operations by implementing particular management strategies and focusing on green technical innovations and by producing green products such as gas stoves and solar panels,” says the expert. Quoting her research, she says vocational and professional training institutes like CNAQ play a critical role in greening of skills. They play a significant leadership role in meeting the social and economic needs of greening by integrating green concepts and processes into the curricula as well as by greening campuses, thereby preparing workers for new, changed or emerging jobs in greening economies. However, to stimulate the process of greening, current practices in curriculum development, links with industry and patterns of teacher training should be studied to provide targeted support for policy formulation within an institution GULF TIMES TURNING GREEN: Dr Pavlova says that institutes like CNAQ play a pivotal role in greening of skills. and practice development in greening. “A very proactive role on the part of the management of the college is required. A working group of teachers and students should be set up to analyse the current situation and to develop an action plan,” suggests Dr Pavlova, referring to CNAQ’s potential role in the greening of skills in Qatar. To increase general awareness, she adds, the college can provide training for change agents at all levels. People across society at all levels of skills should be involved in the communication or education processes relevant to green growth and green skills development. It is also crucially important to acknowledge the need for continued professional development of TVET staff. “Considering that every single job can become greener, environmental aspects have to be included in all training, not just training for newly emerging occupations. For example, training at the ministerial level is required for stakeholders who are involved in skills development policy formulation and implementation strategies,” suggests the professor. She says the development of on-line training modules for generic green skills and awareness for teachers’ professional development must be prioritised. “Let me also express my hope that we will establish close collaboration between two UNEVOC centres in Hong Kong and Doha to work further on issues of greening skills,” says Dr Pavlova. In addition, she suggests, the college could lead the establishment of consortia, funded by the government, of existing practitioners and researchers to assist with the development and implementation of green skills best practice. EMPHASIS: The TVET expert stressed the need for continued professional development of personnel. Qatar as a very rich country has more resources that can be used to tackle global issues related to climate change; for example, by developing green technologies for the oil and gas industries, or other sectors and helping to transfer these technologies to developing countries Dr Pavlova speaking to the audience at CNAQ. 6 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY Medical check-ups at Katara in light of the Qur’an By Umer Nangiana T he creative 4D imagery of human organs and their anatomy described in the light of the Qur’an, complemented by medical practitioners providing free specialised check-up, in Katara Cultural Village is attracting huge attention of the visitors. Held as part of the Ramadan Festival by Katara Cultural Village Foundation, ‘The Human Creation in Holy Qur’an’ features different specialised check-up points based around each organ in the exhibition. The visitors will discover the wisdom of creating human beings as described in the Qur’an through various events and activities presented by Katara. The building 19 of Katara hosts a physiotherapist and exhibition of the anatomy of body skeleton, bones and joints. A professional physiotherapist from Naseem Al Rabeeh Medical Centre, Muzafar Mahamood is providing free check-up and medical advice to a number of people visiting his booth every night. “We are mainly advising people about their postures and their daily routine postures. We are also giving them tips on how to avoid back or shoulder pains by maintaining certain postures,” Mahamood tells Community at his station, where he has all the necessary equipment including a bed to examine the visitors coming to him. “We also have [the facility for] almost all weight exercises, like dumbbells, stress ball and some pain relieving modalities. We do not treat here. We advise them what exercises they can and cannot do. If they are going to gym then what type of exercises should they do in what form,” says Mahamood. AT WORK: Mahamood advises people on their daily work postures and examines them for any complaints about back or neck pain. Most of the people visiting him have been concerned about their weight. So he would take their weight and height measurements and advise them on how much weight they need to reduce, based on their Body Mass Index (BMI). Some people, he says, have come up to him with complaints about pain in their hands. If the pain is in the elbow region, it can be tennis elbow. Mahamood suggests them taking some safety measures, and to consult an orthopaedic doctor if the measures do not work. Many people have come with the complaints of back pain that goes all the way to their legs. “We just advise them to go meet the doctor The exhibition showcases the anatomy of human body in the light of the Qur’an. and take proper treatment. We cannot advise them any exercises or do any physiotherapy sessions as they need proper medication,” says Mahamood. In Qatar, he says, most complaints they receive are cervical and Lamba strains, usually caused at work. These stresses in the neck and back usually come from the sitting postures of the people at their jobs. They do not take regular breaks and in these cases, the treatment will take time to show results. The results though have been “really good”. There are many handy exercises that you can do during your time at the work station to Photos by Umer Nangiana avoid getting such problems. These include taking regular breaks from sitting in one particular posture and doing some simple neck, hands and finger exercises to relax the muscles. These are small 1-2 minute breaks that can help prevent such pain problems. “These kinds of problems do not occur just all of sudden. They usually build up over a period of time. Once they appear, people take treatment and the problem subsides but as soon as they go back to the same sitting posture, it comes back. So you have to be careful and regular with the exercises,” says Mahamood. In Qatar, and in the entire GCC region in general, he adds it is mandatory to advise people on their sitting postures at work. “We can tell people about some exercises and tips. But if they need treatments, we are suggesting them to get to us at the hospital or any other medical practitioners so that they can be given proper medical attention,” says Mahamood. Many of the people who are advised to go to the doctor say they will do so after Ramadan, said the doctor. Some, however, decided to seek immediate medical attention. The check-up points will remain open from 7pm to 11:30pm every day during Ramadan at Katara. Muzafar Mahamood from Naseem Al Rabeeh Medical Centre. Thursday, June 23, 2016 GULF TIMES COMMUNITY Indian embassy organises yoga for community The second International Day of Yoga event, hosted by the Indian Embassy at Al Gharafa Sports Club Indoor Hall on Tuesday evening, was attended by hundreds of people from various walks of life. The event was organised with the support and co-operation of the Government of Qatar, Indian Cultural Centre and other community organisations. Indian ambassador Sanjiv Arora, several Qatari dignitaries including Sheikha Athba bint Thamer al-Thani, and a large number of yoga enthusiasts took part in the event that included a short film on yoga and a demonstration by yoga experts. The event in Qatar was part of a series of events staged on Tuesday across the capitals of various countries. The First International Day of Yoga was celebrated on June 21, 2015 and a special event was held in Qatar on the occasion. Qatar Post had issued commemorative stamps to mark the occasion. Government of India in 2014 had called on the UN Member States to work towards adopting an International Day of Yoga. India’s resolution at the United Nations General Assembly to declare June 21 as the International Day of Yoga was unanimously adopted on December 11, 2014, with a record co-sponsorship of 177 countries, including Qatar. Photos by Jayan Orma 7 8 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY Starwood Hotels & Resorts celebrate Iftar with cab drivers in Doha Starwood Hotels & Resorts celebrated Iftar with taxi drivers across Doha, Qatar as a part of its seventh annual ‘Iftar for Cabs’ and its ongoing commitment to the holy month of Ramadan. This year’s initiative brought 48 hotels, including the St. Regis Hotel, across the region together for the cause. Individually packed Iftar packs were prepared by hotels, which included a selection of food and beverage items. The Iftar packs were then distributed to cab drivers at the main entrance of each hotel with the help of various members across the different departments of the properties, in celebration of the spirit of Ramadan. Launched in 2010, the Iftar for Cabs initiative has turned into an annual tradition for many cab drivers throughout the region. The initiative has also been widely appreciated by hotel owners, local communities and transport authorities. McDonald’s Qatar brings cheerful Garangao to kids McDonald’s Qatar celebrated the yearly-awaited Garangao festival in a spirit emanating heartfelt energy. Teams at the restaurants inaugurated the festival by welcoming children and their parents at Suhaim bin Hamad, Airport, Markhiya, Landmark, City Center 1, Ras Abu Aboud, Rayyan 1, Muaither, Abu Hamour, Wakrah, Tebah, Umm Salal, Hyatt, Woqood, Al Jazeera, Gharaffa, Lagoona, Barwa Village, Al Meera Quataifiya, Dar Salam, Mesaieed, Barwa City, City Center 2, Jeryan, and Al Meera Wakrah branches. McDonald’s play area and drive thru were amplified with the loud cheers and chanting of Garangao songs by the children, dressed in traditional and colourful Garangao costumes. Children’s also enjoyed a variety of activities while walking with their gift baskets filled with nuts and candies prepared by McDonald’s staff. Garangao, or sometimes called Gir-ga-oon, is a traditional festival celebrated across the Gulf region on the evening of the 14th of Ramadan. Dressed in abayas, veils and different traditional robes, children gather in designated locations around their residential areas and visit their neighbours and families singing Garangao songs on the tunes of the drum beats. Elders greet the kids with tasty candies and nuts which are collected in specially designed cotton bags that are hung around the necks. Thursday, June 23, 2016 GULF TIMES 9 COMMUNITY MES observes International Yoga Day MES Indian School marked the International Yoga Day on Tuesday with the aim of “health for all” and to inculcate the value of discipline in everyone. In the programme, the school staff and students participated with enthusiasm. Shikha Rana, teacher at the Department of Physical Education (Girls’ Section), demonstrated different yoga postures to students, like Thadasana, Vrikasana and Uttanasana and Shahana Abdul Kadar, teacher at Department of Physical Education (Girls’ Section), gave the narration. KPMG in Qatar celebrates Ramadan with a staff Suhoor KPMG in Qatar held a Suhoor celebration last weekend at the Banana Island Resort Doha by Anantara and over 250 staff and their families attended the event. Ahmed Abu-Sharkh, Country Senior Partner, said, “Our staff and their families look forward to this annual event. It is a chance to come together to celebrate Ramadan, regardless of our background and religion. KPMG Qatar is home to over 250 staff from 26 countries around the world, and we value this opportunity to enjoy Suhoor together and learn more about our community.” 10 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY Schools gather for CLEAPSS conference at Doha College D oha College welcomed representatives from schools across Qatar for the recent CLEAPSS conference. Organised by Senior Science Technician Anisa Abdul Gafoor of Doha College, the event brought together science technicians and teachers to share best practices and laboratory skills to engage the students in advanced chemistry. CLEAPSS, first started in the UK in 1963, is an advisory service providing support in science and technology for schools from nursery education through to A-level studies or equivalent, and it is the British standard that overseas practical work around British Curriculum Schools in the UK and abroad. It covers areas of health and safety, chemicals, living organisms, equipment, resources, laboratory design, facilities and fittings, technicians and their jobs, D&T facilities and fittings. Doha College called on the expertise of Robert Worley, a renowned veteran in microscale chemistry, who trained the participants over a two-day course. He demonstrated how a lot can be achieved using very small amounts of chemicals. “In a little, you can see a lot,” was the motto of this conference, which focused on alternative procedures in practical chemistry for chemistry teachers, adding variety, improving safety, reducing cost, improving EXPERIENCED: Robert Worley trained the participants over a two-day course. classroom management and improving student understanding of chemistry. The first day of the course dealt with waste disposal of chemicals, storage and handling, practical glass work skills, organising and managing prep rooms, common myths and efficient alternates, and a tour around the model facilities in the Doha College laboratories and prep rooms. The second day was centred on “Safe and Successful Advanced KEEN: The participants had a positive response to what they learned in the conference. Level Chemistry,” which included practical experiments and an introduction to micro-scale chemistry as an alternative to macro techniques. These activities are designed to add variety to practical work in schools, not to replace the traditional methods. They also offer something extra such as better classroom control, increased safety, quicker procedures and the underpinning of the essential concepts required to improve the understanding of chemical changes at the atomic level, interpreting the visible with the invisible. Emma Bridges of Doha British School said, “It was so worthwhile, and all the effort [put into the event] was really appreciated.” Ann Lourens of Park House said, “We were really impressed with the content, the organisation and preparation, and we will certainly be able to apply what we learnt.” Another participant, Shuchita Chakma of Nord Anglia International School in Al Khor, said, “I enjoyed the science workshop a lot, everything was very well organised. [The organiser was] so co-operative, informative and supportive.” Worley himself was “very impressed” with the outcome of the event. “I loved your faces when you saw the diffusing precipitate. Gets me every time as well! But we need to be thankful to Anisa. I have been blessed with good technicians all through my teaching career, and now at CLEAPSS. Anisa is the tops and a treasure in Qatar,” he said. Part of Worley’s work can be seen in a series of videos on the CLEAPSS YouTube channel. HANDS ON: The conference focused on alternative procedures in practical chemistry for chemistry teachers. Thursday, June 23, 2016 GULF TIMES 11 COMMUNITY OFFBEAT PERFORMERS: Children in the concert hall of Dusseldorf, Germany for the annual Singing Break joint concert, based on twice-weekly singing breaks in their schools. ‘Singing break’ project reinvigorates singing lessons for kids By Dorothea Huelsmeier T here’s a tremendous hullabaloo in the city concert hall as 1,000 primary school children aged between 6 and 10 chatter and laugh. But when the singing teachers step on to the stage and give a signal to each corner of the hall, silence descends in an instant. Moments later the hall resonates with the sound of 1,000 children singing Atte katte nuwa, a folk song from Lapland, followed by Im Fruehtau zu Berge, the German version of a Swedish hiking song, Sumer Is Icumen In from medieval England and a native South American song. This is an educational experiment with global implications. A wealthy businessman is helping it along. The aims: to fix deficits of schooling by teaching a package of life skills that choral singing provides, and to revive Germany’s once mighty reputation as a place where almost everyone could sing, and do it without embarrassment. More than 13,000 children from more than 60 primary schools in the German city of Dusseldorf are coming to this “Singpause,” or break for singing, in the concert hall over several consecutive days. It’s similar to the eisteddfod gatherings of Wales, another nation with a stellar choral tradition. For a whole year at school, the children have been practising for the big day, singing songs in alien languages for 20 minutes twice a week. There’s no huge group rehearsal but when they all get together to give their concerts, every note fits together. “The children were able to sing rounds in six voices,” Manfred Hill, the 72-year-old president of the city’s music association who founded the musical project 10 years ago, says proudly. Hill, who’s also the boss of a company which makes fire extinguishers, says around 80,000 children have taken part in the programme since 2006. They’re taught by professional singers using the so-called Ward method, which aims to teach young children the basics of music theory and note reading through singing. At the end of Grade Four, when German children are aged 10, “the children can read music and sight-sing a simple song,” according to Hill. There are around 1,160 “singing breaks” every week at Dusseldorf’s schools and 42 singers have now been trained as teachers. The programme, which costs around 680,000 euros (770,000 dollars) a year, is funded partly by the state and partly by donations. Another 10 German cities have since launched similar projects and others are interested. Hill’s condition for contributing his expertise is that the singing breaks have to be open and free to all children in a school and that they have to last over the four years of primary school. Refugee children are also integrated straight away. Hill, who has three sons, believes that singing together in foreign languages helps children bond, despite language barriers. “You can sing in all the languages of the world,” he says. He also believes that singing as a form of education is dying out. “If you ask most 30 to 50 year olds whether they can sing, most of them say no,” he says. That’s because most of them find it embarrassing to sing out loud, because they haven’t done so since they were children. “At German schools, singing isn’t necessarily a matter of course anymore,” comments concert hall manager Michael Becker. Ricarda, now in Grade Five, took part in four singing break concerts during her time at a city primary school. “I’ll never forget it,” says the 10-year-old, who can now read music. “We had a real sense of community. It would be nice if singing breaks continued after primary school at upper grades.” Projects like that in Dusseldorf are also aimed at motivating the next generation to take part in choral music. In the SingBach programme in a nearby state, Grade Three children are taught songs, hymns and rearranged arias by Johann Sebastian Bach, one of the greatest composers in the German music tradition, which they then sing in a concert at the end. The German Choral Society (Deutsche Chorverband), which is made up of 22,000 choirs, says it has observed a “renewed interest in singing.” Demographic change has also affected choirs, but a recovery set in a few years ago, according to spokeswoman Nicole Eisinger. However, the structure of choirs is changing, she says. A more fluid scene with small vocal pop ensembles is increasingly popular, because many people are now more mobile and cannot commit long-term to a choir. But as Hill says, “It really doesn’t matter if it’s hip hop or something else, the main thing is that people are making music.” —DPA 12 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY INFOGRAPHIC Thursday, June 23, 2016 GULF TIMES 13 COMMUNITY LIFESTYLE/HOROSCOPE 5 top trends in container gardening G planting succulents for a virtually care-free container garden. Petunias, calibrachoa and pansies also make wonderful additions to hanging baskets. ardening is a peaceful activity that eases tension, reduces overall stress and promotes longevity. One long-term study found that daily gardening reduces the risk for both dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. With all of these benefits, there are ample reasons why people of all ages and lifestyles should start digging in the dirt. You don’t need a big yard or lots of room to enjoy a beautiful garden. With so many options for indoor and outdoor container gardening, there’s no limit on the number of gardens you can have. Container gardening is a great way to colour up a small space, add depth and height to your yard or easily change up the look of your patio. No matter your skill level, enjoy the benefits of gardening with these container trends: Foliage gardens Foliage plants are no longer just accessories for your small space garden. You can create an entire display simply out of rich, colourful foliage plants. Fountain grass, papyrus, vinca and grassy rush are all great additions for adding vibrancy to your container Combination containers Who says your container garden can only have one plant? Get creative and play with different colour and texture combinations of plants and flowers. You can make up your own mix or search online for combo recipes by other inspiring gardeners. Mix foliage with flowers and use a colour scheme to build a balanced and beautiful container. garden. Mix and match with various textures to find a unique display that speaks to you. Petunia tower A petunia tower is a great way to add an unexpected element to your container garden collection. A flower tower is easy to make and sun-loving Tidal Wave Petunias will bloom all ARIES March 21 — April 19 There is no harm in doing some harmless investigation into something or someone today. While others may say it’s stalking...it’s simply checking things out, right? CANCER June 21 — July 22 Unless you feel it’s absolutely necessary, don’t go overboard on something today. Whether it’s spending money or congratulating someone on a job well done, keep a low profile today. LIBRA September 23 — October 22 Unless you really feel like getting involved in someone else’s problems and trying to help solve them, there is wisdom in letting them try to sort things out on their own. CAPRICORN December 22 — January 19 If you aren’t sure about something, ask questions today Capricorns. There is wisdom in not pushing yourself too hard today or this week. Save it for when you are ready to do the heavy grunt work. season long on a patio, deck or pool area. You will need only three Tidal Wave plants. The Red Velour have great colour and texture and make a strong statement. Plant them with good potting soil into a 10 to 12 inch wide plastic nursing pot. Place a three-foot metal tomato cage into the pot. The cage should be as wide at the bottom as it is on the top. Now slip the entire plastic pot into a glazed pot that’s about one to four inches wider, and voila! Hanging baskets Hanging flower baskets bring your plants to eye-level, where everyone can enjoy their wonderful scents and sights. Add beauty to an otherwise dull porch, wall or rafters. Try TAURUS April 20 — May 20 Don’t be difficult today if someone wants to do something you really don’t want to do bulls. Life is never going to always go the way you want it to and it would be super weird if it did. LEO July 23 — August 22 If you feel that you are stuck between a rock and a hard place, work out why today Leos. It might very well be that you have backed yourself into a corner and now need to finagle your way out of it. SCORPIO October 23 — November 21 You like things done a certain way Scorpios and right now, you might be finding that pretty much everyone around you are digging their heels in as much as you are. AQUARIUS January 20 — February 18 Don’t get caught up in what other people say and think today. You’ve got a brilliant mind — use it Aquarius. If you find something objectionable, speak up and have your say. Indoor container gardening Take your favourite hobby inside. Even if you have a small apartment, there’s no need to rule out house plants. Find the best place for each plant, depending on their light requirements. Don’t be afraid to experiment and try different locations until you find the best spot for your indoor containers. For sunloving plants, just be sure to place them on a windowsill for maximum light exposure. © Brandpoint GEMINI May 21 — June 20 Be open to a suggestion today — no matter how far off base you think it is twins. There might just be some validity to the suggestion that will get your mind working. VIRGO August 23 — September 22 Sometimes it’s hard to see the forest for the trees, isn’t it? You get yourself so caught up in drama and what everyone else is doing that you lose sight of the big picture. SAGITTARIUS November 22 — December 21 Be open to a change in plans today Sags. There is nothing like being free and easy going like yourself when it comes to adapting quickly to life around you and being a go with the flow type, you are usually good with changing things around. PISCES February 19 — March 20 There should be absolutely no doubt in your mind that you are making the right choices today. If you feel confused or indecisive, then not making any decision is better than making one that’s wrong. 14 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY Wordsearch Adam Pooch Cafe Mind AWARE BRAIN CONSCIOUS DREAM EMOTION IDEAS INTELLECT LEARNING LOGIC MEMORY NEURONE NEUROSIS PERCEPTION PSYCHE REASON REFLEX SENSE SYNAPSE THOUGHT Codeword Puzzles courtesy: Puzzlechoice.com Every letter of the alphabet is used at least once. Squares with the same number in have the same letter in. Work out which number represents which letter. Garfield Sudoku Bound And Gagged Sudoku is a puzzle based on a 9x9 grid. The grid is also divided into nine (3x3) boxes. You are given a selection of values and to complete the puzzle, you must fill the grid so that every column, every anone is repeated. PUZZLES/CARTOONS Thursday, June 23, 2016 15 COMMUNITY PUZZLES Quick Clues ACROSS 1. Exchange (4) 8. Idle (10) 9. Clergyman (8) 10. Rant (4) 12. Lubricate (6) 14. Eatable (6) 15. Envelop (6) 17. Impractical (6) 18. Surfeit (4) 19. Reserved (8) 21. Revengeful (10) 22. Desire (4) GULF TIMES Colouring DOWN 2. Retreat (10) 3. Light shoe (4) 4. Spin (6) 5. Candlestick (6) 6. Assess (8) 7. Rim (4) 11. Bulky (10) 13. Flair (8) 16. Embellish (6) 17. Item (6) 18. Donate (4) 20. Masticate (4) Cryptic Clues Answers Wordsearch ACROSS 1. A method used on holiday, perhaps (4) 8. Nationality of Laura, Stan and I? (10) 9. Ring in, send aid round where breathing is affected (8) 10. Name backwards in alphabetical order (4) 12. Old woman insane, wandering and found on a boat (6) 14. Drink in close proximity while holding court (6) 15. Students in gliders with special talents (6) 17. Is poem made of force? Of course! (6) 18. Different form of preposition (4) 19. Too tired to bring the record? (8) 21. Julia on bit of a spree with Joy (10) 22. Some people learn on merit (4) DOWN 2. Bird seen out with boring Bill? (10) 3. Sign of boredom from way up north (4) 4. Designate when seeing the evidence (6) 5. Place of confinement, or spin-off (6) 6. Sombre headdress for a bird (8) 7. Appear in concert? Never again! (4) 11. Train Ross to start playing the radio (10) 13. Girl to have a drink with on the farm, perhaps (8) 16. Sovereign gaining admission to consultant’s waiting-room (6) 17. Introduce to the Italian at the end of this month (6) 18. Loud one almost getting Jim in a state (4) 20. Alone in Scotland - on the motorway? (4) Codeword Yesterday’s Solutions QUICK Across: 7 Utter; 8 Diluted; 9 Bandage; 10 Wound; 12 Hysterical; 15 Masquerade; 18 North; 19 Tableau; 21 Exclude; 22 Clown. Down: 1 Husbandman; 2 Stunt; 3 Area; 4 Advent; 5 Flowered; 6 Staunch; 11 Delinquent; 13 Youthful; 14 Ostrich; 16 Rotten; 17 Decoy; 20 Back. CRYPTIC Across: 7 Orlop; 8 Average; 9 Emperor; 10 Therm; 12 Two-wheeler; 15 Generosity; 18 Niger; 19 Cordial; 21 Tremble; 22 Coypu. Down: 1 Copenhagen; 2 Clips; 3 Spar; 4 Jarrow; 5 Vestment; 6 Patella; 11 Marvellous; 13 Wardrobe; 14 Snigger; 16 Sucker; 17 Vinyl; 20 Rock. 16 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY REVIEWS War movie clichés By Michael Phillips FILM: 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi CAST: John Krasinski, Pablo Schreiber, James Badge Dale, David Denman DIRECTION: Michael Bay E verything in director Michael Bay’s cinematic vocabulary — the glamourising slo-mo, the falling bomb pointof-view shots, the low-angle framing of his heroes with blue sky, fireballs or an American flag in the background — suggests not real life, or the way things might have happened, but a Michael Bay movie. It’s true of the Transformers movies and it’s true of 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi. Bay’s latest is a mixed-up blend of truth and distortion. Parts of it deliver a punch, and a jolt, and ripples of earnest (and even complicated) emotion. Then the characters, some of them composites or fabrications, start talking again. The clichés tumble out. And Bay gets preoccupied with delivering audience-baiting “kill shots”, engineered to appease our bloodlust and avenge our enemies. At such moments 13 Hours becomes less convincing in its interpretation of what happened Sept 11-12, 2012, when terrorists attacked two Central Intelligence Agency compounds (one official, one unofficial) in Benghazi, Libya. The key figures here, the men who helped Mitchell Zuckoff write the account on which Bay’s film is based, are members of the CIA’s sub-contracted GRS, or Global Response Staff. Six members of what was known as the Annex Security Team were hired to protect CIA staffers at the compounds. Photographed in Malta, doubling for Libya, 13 Hours begins with the usual introductions of the six GRS security personnel soon to be under siege. John Krasinski plays Jack Silva, the most amiable of the guys, who has left a wife and children behind to make a living, keep the adrenaline going and serve a higher cause in a dangerous place. James Badge Dale portrays the stalwart Tyrone “Rone” Woods, a natural leader and a bullheaded adversary to the snivelling CIA base chief (David Costabile) who symbolises everything wrong with foreign policy, in Bay’s eyes, under the Obama administration. Screenwriter Chuck Hogan leaves nothing to chance, as Costabile’s soft-bellied Ivy League punk looks one of our protectors straight in the eye and says: “You’re not a first responder. You’re the last resort.” Such moments push 13 Hours far, far into movieland. But of course 13 Hours is a movie, and movies owe their subjects and the audience something larger than the facts. The characters refer to other films: Black Hawk Down, The Bourne Identity, Tropic Thunder. At his shrewdest, Bay handles the action swiftly and well. —Chicago Tribune/TNS A loving tribute By Katie Walsh FILM: Hail, Caesar! CAST: George Clooney, Josh Brolin, Scarlett Johansson, Channing Tatum DIRECTION: Joel and Ethan Coen T he Coen Brothers’ latest comedy Hail, Caesar! is a loving tribute to the era of classical Hollywood, meticulously crafted with layers of reference, inside jokes, and tidbits of history that will excite any film buff. Not to fret if you haven’t caught up with every episode of the Hollywood history podcast “You Must Remember This” (although you should), Hail, Caesar! is every bit as fun and entertaining regardless of whether you’re picking up on every true life tale. The Coens have created a film that is at once a meta commentary on Hollywood’s studio system, while also indulging in the pure pleasure of visual spectacle that marked many films of this period. With a star-studded cast, Hail, Caesar! belongs primarily to Josh Brolin, who plays Eddie Mannix, a studio fixer at Capitol Pictures. The real Eddie Mannix was a studio fixer at MGM Studios from the 1920s to 1940s, but that’s where the obvious biographical element ends. The stars with whom Brolin’s Mannix tangles are lightly fictionalised mashups of real celebrities, with scrambled personal histories. Scarlett Johansson’s DeAnna Moran is an Esther Williams-esque swimming superstar, with a Brooklyn accent to beat the best, and a pregnancy pickle to rival Loretta Young’s. The film follows a day in the life of manic Mannix, as he rushes around the lot, putting out fires big and small. The biggest involves Baird Whitlock (George Clooney), the star of the epic Hail, Caesar! who’s been drugged and kidnapped by a shadowy organisation known as the Future (consider the paranoia of the late 40s and early 50s, and you might be able to hazard a guess as to the Future’s motives). The group of nefarious, nebbishy intellectuals are a classic Coen bunch of deadpan delights. While Mannix tries to scare up a ransom for Whitlock, he’s also working on the career trajectory of country-fried cowboy star Hobie Doyle (Alden Ehrenreich), and his love life; battling off the twin terrors of gossip columnists Thora and Thessaly Thacker (Tilda Swinton); and trying to contain DeAnna’s increasingly troubling ambiguous marital status. Hail, Caesar! while poking fun at old Hollywood, pays tribute as well, by yielding to its sheer entertainment. — TNS Focus on the father-son relationship FILM: The Confirmation CAST: Clive Owen, Maria Bello, Patton Oswalt, Spencer Drever DIRECTION: Bob Nelson A down-on-his-luck carpenter (Clive Owen) is forced to take care of his estranged eight-yearold son (Jaeden Lieberher) while his ex-wife (Maria Bello) and her new husband (Matthew Modine) attend a retreat. He does have a job coming up, at least until his specialised tools are stolen from the back of his truck. That means the pair are going to have to spend much of the weekend hunting them down, hoping that the various rogues that occupy the local carpentry community are more eccentric than dangerous. Filmmaker Bob Nelson is making his directorial debut here, although the material isn’t necessarily that far off from the work he’s likely best-known for; shift the fatherson relationship up a generation and make the quest a bit more quixotic, and you’ve got the bones of Nebraska. That path often seems to be between a fairly simple sweetness and occasional pessimism, and the general tendency of the film to lean toward the former is sometimes its greatest weakness. There are few people in it that are even superficially bad, to the extent that situations occasionally deflate because the desire to be helpful seems fairly universal. Jaeden Lieberher and Clive Owen do a nice job of giving the film a strong foundation. -JS DVDs courtesy: Saqr Entertainment Stores, Doha Thursday, June 23, 2016 GULF TIMES 17 COMMUNITY BOLLYWOOD I’ve accomplished what I had set out for: Madhuri R ecalling her struggling days in showbiz, Bollywood’s dancing diva Madhuri DixitNene said that earlier she used to feel that she doesn’t fit in the “perfect” size of heroines. But the actress now believes that she has “accomplished” the goals she had set for herself. The actress got nostalgic during an episode of the popular dance reality show So You Think You Can Dance Ab India ki Baari, which she is co-judging with choreographers Bosco Martis and Terence Lewis. Co-hosted by Rithvik Dhanjani and Mouni Roy, So You Think You Can Dance Ab India ki Baari is an Indian adaptation of the popular international format So You Think You Can Dance. When Mouni quizzed Madhuri about one of her statements where she said that she does not consider herself to be pretty, Madhuri said: “Those were my early struggling days and I used to feel I don’t actually fit into the ‘perfect’ size of heroines back then in Bollywood. “And I used to think that way majorly because of the continuous criticisms I used to face from outsiders. But that didn’t deter my path to success and I worked hard and I think I have accomplished what I had set out for.” Madhuri, who made her acting debut in 1984 with Abodh has remained a prominent part of the entertainment industry for over three decades now. — IANS Bachchan portrays a rural man in ads Dhanuka Agritech Limited, an Indian agrochemical formulation company, has launched a series of TV commercials featuring megastar Amitabh Bachchan. He is seen as a rural man who guides farmers to use the right products on their crops. A series of six commercials, created by PUSH Integrated, depicts the farmers’ belief in astrologers and clairvoyants for predicting future cultivation and dependence on God for protecting their crops from destruction. The commercials portray Amitabh as a rural man who guides the farmers to use products including Dhanzyme Gold, MAX-SOY, Mortar, Sakura and Cover on various crops. Commenting on the new TVC, R GAgarwal, Group Chairman, Dhanuka Agritech Limited, said in a statement: “Since decades, the vision of Dhanuka Agritech Limited has been to bring about progressive change in the lives of Indian farmers through dedicated knowledge-driven and development-related activities. “This new campaign is a further step in educating the farmers on the importance of use of agro-chemicals for a profitable yield.” He also shared that today’s farmers immediately identify with Amitabh as a style icon. “Bachchan is not only a versatile actor, but also has a high degree of credibility and reliability. He was the perfect fit for Dhanuka and the messages the brand conveys.” — IANS NOSTALGIC: Madhuri Dixit-Nene Lost track after Kaminey: Shahid Actor Shahid Kapoor, who was once popular for being Bollywood’s chocolate boy, has come a long way. But he believes that after delivering a powerhouse performance in Kaminey, he lost the track. “After Kaminey, I think I lost the track. So after Haider, I did not want to repeat the same mistake. With due respect to the kind of GREEN CAMPAIGN: Amitabh Bachchan MAKEOVER: Shahid Kapoor Making Oka Manasu was like a spiritual journey: Ramaraju Director Ramaraju describes the process of making Telugu romanticdrama Oka Manasu, which introduces megastar Chiranjeevi’s niece Niharika Konidela, as a spiritual journey which he thoroughly enjoyed. “The way this film has shaped is fascinating. I never tried hard to make the film, but things just fell in place and it happened. I say the process is spiritual because I bonded with the story on an emotional level and deep down I know the film has turned out exactly the way I want it,” Ramaraju told IANS. Calling it a “magical” experience, he said everything that he visualised, somehow made it to the film. “More than what I had written, things that I had visualised became an integral part of the film. It’s a story from the heart, unadulterated, and all I had to do was observe what was happening within me and recreate it as part of the filmmaking process,” he said. Having made a directorial debut with 2013 Telugu romantic-drama Mallela Theeram Lo Sirimalle Puvvu, Ramaraju feels his latest film will be widely accepted. “My first film didn’t get its due, because it released in very less number of screens. I learnt that cinema is not art and everything is linked to commerce. I know Oka Manasu will appeal to everybody, irrespective of the age group, because I’m the first viewer of my story and I felt nostalgic when I wrote it,” he said. The forthcoming film marks the debut of Niharika from the mega clan. Ramaraju feels the young actress is here for the long haul. “The Niharika audiences will get to see will be in a totally different avatar. On television, she’s known to be more bubbly. However, in my film I’ve explored her other dimension, a side which is rarely known to others. She’s a very talented artist,” he said. According to the director, Oka Manasu is a realistic love story. “I haven’t given in to cinematic trappings. Imagine closely studying two intense lovers and everything that unfolds in their relationship is what I’ve captured in my film,” he said. The film, which is set to release in cinemas on Friday, also stars Naga Shourya. — IANS support and appreciation I received for Haider, I wanted to do better roles. I’m happy I didn’t have to wait much and got a chance to perform in Udta Punjab,” Shahid said at the success party of Udta Punjab, which released on June 17 after a tussle with the censor board. “Since I have done Kaminey, one thing I have realised is that the youth wants to watch something different. However, we are scared to experiment with new ideas,” he added. Shahid played a contrasting double role of Charlie and Guddu in Vishal Bhardwaj’s 2009 film Kaminey with ease. And now, his role of a drug addict rockstar named Tommy Singh in Udta Punjab, which got leaked online before its release, has been lauded by many. “We are genuinely upset about the leak. We are thankful for the massive support we got from media and people. Even though the leak happened, it is the biggest opening in my career. However, I feel if the film wasn’t leaked, it could have earned 20 to 25% more,” he said. The Abhishek Chaubey directorial, based on drug abuse in Punjab, minted Rs 33.80 crore in its opening weekend. — IANS 18 GULF TIMES Thursday, June 23, 2016 COMMUNITY HOLLYWOOD Back with a bang 20 years later, Independence Day invading theatres again. By John Anderson W FRESH PERSPECTIVE: Roland Emmerich e knew it would happen again. Yes, the alien attack. Also the movie about the alien attack. When Independence Day: Resurgence lands in theatres tomorrow, carrying wanton, worldwide destruction in its wake, it will be reviving a long-dormant franchise that was never really a franchise: Independence Day — the 1996 blockbuster that rained terror and spectacular explosions on New York, Washington, DC, and Los Angeles — never had a sequel, despite a sequel always seeming like the obvious move. Now, with its cities falling on cities, a giant unmoored Buddha crashing through Big Ben and an alien spaceship occupying most of the Atlantic Ocean, Independence Day is officially a franchise. Thanks to technology. “I always thought of the original as a stand-alone film,” said Roland Emmerich, the prolific producer and director of such disaster/scifi features as Stargate, The Day After Tomorrow and White House Down. He said that the advances in computer-generated imagery were so “radical” it made a second movie all but irresistible. “It was as if, finally, technology had reached the level of my brain,” he said, laughing. “We weren’t limited. Slowly but surely the idea for a second Independence Day grew.” There have been a lot of changes over 20 years, especially among the movie’s characters, most notably former President Thomas Whitmore, the Gulf War vet who took a hands-on approach to defeating the murderous aliens of the first film. “It turns out that everybody who had this telepathic virus put in their brain for contact with the aliens has not ever gotten free of it,” said Bill Pullman, who again plays Whitmore. “For him, as the years have gone on, it’s become more and more manifest, to the point that he’s a liability. The country is really trying to at least present this vision of world order and Whitmore had been a hero. But they can’t really put him out in public because he’s become paranoid.” It sounds like a meatier role than one might expect from apocalyptic sci-fi. “It was really great,” Pullman said. “I couldn’t believe it. I said, ‘I have the best role in this whole thing!’ “ His Independence Day co-star Jeff Goldblum also returns, as David Levinson, who was instrumental in defeating the aliens the first time around. He’s always known they were coming back. “I was the MIT-graduated, underachieving cable technician, not interested in career glory, an environmental activist who got pressed into duty under extraordinary circumstances,” said the loquacious Goldblum of his character. “This time around they promoted me to director of Earth Security Defense and I’ve taken some of that downed technology we found, married it with our own, solved some of our climate change problems, helped rebuild a massively damaged planet — 3bn were lost, if you remember, the first time around — and the family of man is at peace.” Goldblum said he re-bonded with his co-stars from the first film, including Pullman, “my dad” Judd Hirsch and Brent Spiner, and got to know the new people like Sela Ward, who plays America’s first female president. “Liam Hemsworth, I got a big kick out of him, he’s a sweet, talented guy. And Charlotte Gainsbourg — wowwie wowwie, I spent some time with her. She’s terrific.” Pullman said that in the initial drafts of the script, he and Goldblum had no scenes together. Thursday, June 23, 2016 GULF TIMES 19 COMMUNITY HOLLYWOOD JLo cries ‘almost every night’ Singer-actress Jennifer Lopez cries “almost every night” because of her love towards her children. Lopez says she always gets choked up while paying tribute to her eightyear-old twins Max and Emme, whom she has with her former husband Marc Anthony, during every performance she does at Caesars Palace — where she’s currently in residency. “People are like, ‘Is she crying?’ I’m like, ‘Almost every night, thank you,” Lopez told etonline.com. However, although she struggles to hold back the tears when she honours the youngsters, Lopez believes her twins secretly love the attention. “They love it. You know, they go, ‘Why is my face up there?’ My son will be like, ‘Why is my face there? People are laughing at us!’ He gets worried about that stuff. My daughter (just) loves watching it. She just watches me. I don’t know what she’s thinking yet. I’m sure I’ll know soon,” she said. — IANS A still from Independence Day, 20 years ago. ROLE CALL: Bill Pullman “Someone said, ‘There ought to be a scene between Bill and Jeff,’” he said. “So we got one, but the first versions of it were kind of perfunctory, with a lot of dumptrucking exposition and I was thinking, ‘Oh God, I wish they’d never said this.’ But then they kept getting better and then it became an important scene for both our stories, and in the end I think it felt worthwhile.” The key cast member missing in action is Will Smith, for whom the original Independence Day was a career-making movie. (His character has been killed off.) Money, reportedly, was a factor in Smith’s absence, but Emmerich said there were other considerations. “We’re going back like four years ago, and I totally understood why he said no,” Emmerich said. “He was shooting After Earth, which was a father-son story, and our story had a father-son angle, so he More monsters Aliens have been attacking Earth for years — so many years, in fact, you’d think the place would have collapsed by now, beginning with the major cities: Aliens seem drawn to monuments, skyscrapers and eight-lane highways. In fact, over the past decade or so, features like The Avengers (2012), Cloverfield (2008), War of the Worlds (2005) and the various Michael Bay Transformers films (2007, 2011 and 2014) have amounted to architectural apocalypses. But while Independence Day still holds a kind of special status among end-of-the-world-type movies (its attackers blew up the Empire State Building and the White House, viewers may recall), its urban-renewal strategy has a long tradition — the following examples of which aren’t necessarily great, but they’re calamitous, different, and spacemen get to blow stuff up. Earth vs The Flying Saucers (1956) Stop-motion-animation legend Ray Harryhausen did the special effects for this rather rustic predecessor to Independence Day, in which platoons of alien saucers attack Washington, Paris, London and Moscow. Hugh Marlowe, best known as fussy playwright Lloyd Richards in All About Eve, is scientist Russell A Marvin, who discovers that the attacking ETs wear suits made of solidified electricity and has to devise a way to short their circuits. Destroy All Monsters (1968) Godzilla, Rodan and Mothra are among the kaiju — aka monster stars — of this campy Japanese tale of alien destruction and postwar paranoia. The kaiju have been captured and are being confined to islands off Japan, but they are freed by an extraterrestrial felt he would be repeating himself too much.” There was also a point at which the movie wasn’t continuing at all, the director said, “but two years ago, two young writers” — Nicolas Wright and James A Woods — “came along and unlocked for me the whole thing with a very simple trick: ‘You hand it off to the younger generation.’ And I said, ‘That totally works.’ “ Emmerich admitted “I don’t like sequels” and Independence Day: Resurgence is his first. But it won’t be his last: Independence Day 3 has already been announced. “From the very beginning, the deal at the studio was that it’s very risky to do a sequel this late, after 20 years,” Emmerich said, “and I said, ‘If it works, we should do a second one.’ “They liked that idea,” he said. “And you can feel it in the film. That another story’s coming.” – Newsday/TNS female race (Kilaaks) that has seized the minds of Japanese scientists. Earth must surrender or face total annihilation. The Japanese forces destroy the Kilaaks’ lunar base. The monsters switch sides. Then the aliens unleash the threeheaded King Ghidorah. Destroy All Monsters is not exactly a masterpiece, but it was directed by Ishiro Honda, whose original Godzilla (1954), or Gojira, really is a classic. Mars Attacks! (1996) There’s nothing worse than a marauding band of space aliens with a sick sense of humour, but that’s what you got in Tim Burton’s wacky invasion movie, in which humanity basically had no hope of survival. Jack Nicholson was the president, Glenn Close the first lady. Annette Bening, Pierce Brosnan, Danny DeVito and Michael J Fox also star, and Tom Jones plays himself. Attack The Block (2011) The success of this kinetic, independently produced alien-attack movie was as surprising as an alien attack, and it certainly put a new spin on a well-worn genre. Directed by Joe Cornish and produced by the makers of Shaun of the Dead, it pitted a London street gang against an invasion of savage monsters, in a London housing project transformed into a sci-fi battleground. Fresh and fun and definitely not a cookie-cutter space movie. Battle: Los Angeles (2011) It’s one of those “how can mankind possibly survive” scenarios in which the invaders are so ruthless and homicidal the initial sentiment is to give up in favour of enslavement. But no: Humanity will rise to the occasion via the person of Aaron Eckhart as a retiring Marine staff sergeant who leads a raggedy ad hoc team of military specialists against what seem like overwhelming odds. Directed by Jonathan Liebesman, of 2014’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. — Newsday EMOTIONAL: Jennifer Lopez Demi Lovato quits social media Singer Demi Lovato has “quit” social media because she doesn’t think people care about her comments, although she will remain on Snapchat. The 23-year-old has decided to leave Twitter and Instagram because she doesn’t want to see the comments other people make and believes people don’t give a %$** about what she has to say, reports femalefirst.co.uk. “Damn I have got to quit sayin %%!!. Bye Twitter. And Instagram. I like Snapchat because I don’t have to see what some of you all say. Follow me if you want: theddlovato,” Lovato wrote on Twitter. “But why do people actually give a **** what I say?” she added. She also reminded her Twitter followers about the positive things she has done to dispel social media trolls. “That one time I started my own charity providing mental health care for people who can’t afford it and this is what you all talk about,” Lovato said. “And people wonder what’s wrong with the world. Pay more attention to good than bad,” she added. – IANS Kate Winslet to star in Woody Allen’s next film Actress Kate Winslet is reportedly in final talks to star in filmmaker Woody Allen’s latest movie. Allen is writing, directing and producing the untitled film, and like all his recent films, plot details are being heavily guarded, reports variety.com. Letty Aronson and Edward Walson will serve as producers. Though Winslet’s career has spanned more than two decades, the actress has never worked with the auteur prior to this pic. She is coming off her Oscarnominated role in Steve Jobs and was also recently seen in Open Road’s crime drama Triple Nine. She just wrapped production on New Line’s Collateral Beauty opposite Will Smith and recently BIG LEAP: Kate Winslet boarded the Fox drama The Mountain Between Us, co-starring Idris Elba. Meanwhile, Allen’s latest film Cafe Society, starring Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart, bowed at the recently held Cannes Film Festival. — IANS
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