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Posts Tagged ‘Katrina’

Katrina covers Elle’ magazines for august

The sizzling hot covergirl of Elle’ magazine’s seems to be sexy diva Kat on August issue.This has added another featherbin his cap.
Katrina is looking eye-catching in a classic little black dress. The most in style girl of Bollywood has already been published in top film magazine.
ELLE magazine’s August issue is based on women’s life and [...]

Shannyn Moore: Palin’s Last Shot On Wolves & Ashley Judd; Congress Shoots Back

Several days have passed since Sarah Palin’s final stop on the “Quitstock” Tour. I feel like I’ve awoken from a strange, surreal dream. I can’t…

University Of Illinois Trustees Refuse To Resign Over Scandal

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — A day after a central figure in the University of Illinois admissions scandal resigned his position on the school’s governing board, few if any of his fellow trustees are ready to follow. One, in fact, warns against the…

Katrina is a fan of Asin, Deepika, Vidya Balan

Now a day Bollywood beauty katrina is impressed with acting skills of bindas Vidya Balan, Ghajini Girl Asin, and sizzling Deepika Padukone.Being the fact she herself have lots of fans.
Deepika once again ready to sizzle the screen with Love Aaj Kal after ‘Om Shanti Om’.Katrina become fan of Deepika after watching her acting.Katrina’s opinion about [...]

Same name game

By Laura Schocker

A couple with the same name is set to marry this year after meeting on Facebook. It’s an extreme example of people giving in to the curiosity of a "namesake search" on the social networking site. But why do we do it

Kelly Hildebrandt and Kelly Hildebrandt

The two Kelly Hildebrandts met last year after Kelly Katrina sent Kelly Carl a message commenting on their identical names. They then became Facebook friends and later met up. By December they were engaged.

But the Hildebrandts aren’t the only identical monikers out there. Facebook searches of the name John, for instance, combined with some of Britain’s most popular surnames – Smith, Jones, Patel and Singh – all exceed the maximum 500 search results.

And Kelly and Kelly also aren’t the first ones to play the same-name game, with hundreds of groups created to bring together people who share a common name. Countless others seek out their name twins through one-on-one "friending" and messaging.

So why do we feel compelled to type our own names into the Facebook search bar

Pure Quinns

I’ve asked this question myself. Before I joined Facebook in 2004, I had assumed Laura Schocker was a unique name. But it turns out I’m not the only one – a second Laura Schocker in the US became my "friend" a few years ago.

Frequently, more than a couple of people share a name. The "We are Paul Quinn" group has 52 members and is restricted, according to the description, only to "pure" Paul Quinns – no Paulas, Paulines or Paulermos allowed. "It was curiosity more than anything else," says one Paul Quinn, from London, of joining.

"It’s a morbid curiosity really"

Member of David Nelson group

Another Paul Quinn, of Newcastle, agrees. "It’s not like I speak to them, it’s just a funny little thing," he says.

Why, exactly, is it so entertaining One explanation is that people become attached to their names over time and even tend to slightly prefer words, cities, occupations and people who share the same first letters, says Sam Gosling, a professor in the psychology department at the University of Texas.

We also typically tend to associate shared names with family, which can give a sense of connection, even if there isn’t an actual blood bond. "I do feel a certain connection with those other Sam Goslings," he says. "But why should I"

It may come down to a basic case of curiosity, says BJ Fogg, director of the Persuasive Technology Lab at Stanford University in California, where he teaches classes related to social media.

Print searches

"There’s sort of a fascination of, ‘This is my alter ego. This is me living in a parallel universe,’" Mr Fogg says. "What has it been like to have my name and live in a different place and be a different age"

This natural interest is nothing new, he adds. Before the days of online social networks, people often searched print databases, such as phonebooks, looking for shared names.

Some people have taken it even further. In 2000, comedian Dave Gorman set off on a mission to meet others around the world with the same name. His search eventually translated into a stage show and book, both titled Are You Dave Gorman While the original plan was to find 54 Dave Gormans, he ultimately met more than 100.

Paul Quinn

But now things are a bit simpler. With Facebook and other technology, we have the potential to reach out over geographical or language barriers to find others who share one of the key components of identity – a name, says Mr Fogg.

The "Our Name is David Nelson" has 58 members celebrating the David Nelson identity. "It’s a morbid curiosity really," says one David Nelson, a company broker based in south London. "It’s quite amusing to join groups and see what people are up to."

But don’t expect him to follow in the Kelly Hildebrandts’ footsteps: "I’m fairly certain I wouldn’t want to marry any other David Nelsons," he jokes.

A different David Nelson in the group, a property manager from Chelmsford, Essex, says he was invited to join by yet another David Nelson who had added him as a friend about eight months ago. "It’s the ability of Facebook to let a lot of random people be able to get in touch with each other," he says.

Sometimes all these random people can create a case of mistaken identity. About a year ago, he got a message from a woman looking for her long, lost brother: David Nelson.

And there can be a downside, says Keith Campbell, as associate professor in the psychology department at the University of Georgia. "Because we feel special as people, when we find out someone shares your name and they’re an incredible loser, it takes a little bit away form you," he says.

And the Nelsons may just be able to understand – both report hearing about a David Nelson on the anti-terror do-not-fly list in the United States.

This can work in the reverse, though, as well. "If you find out it’s a famous princess from Moldavia, that might be cool," says Mr Campbell. He shares his own name with the man credited with cloning Dolly, the sheep.

So far, though, they’re not Facebook friends.


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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Eric Alterman: Think Again: Why Not the Best?

The position of many health reform opponents in Congress is that America has “the finest health care in the world now.” I decided to look at just how well we are doing health care wise.

No America without God – in Texas

State’s education board to consider adding Christianity’s role in American history to curriculum

The Christian right is making a fresh push to force religion onto the school curriculum in Texas with the state’s education board about to consider recommendations that children be taught that there would be no United States if it had not been for God.

Members of a panel of experts appointed by the board to revise the state’s history curriculum, who include a Christian fundamentalist preacher who says he is fighting a war for America’s moral soul, want lessons to emphasise the part played by Christianity in the founding of the US and that religion is a civic virtue.

Opponents have decried the move as an attempt to insert religious teachings in to the classroom by stealth, similar to the Christian right’s partially successful attempt to limit the teaching of evolution in biology lessons in Texas.

One of the panel, David Barton, founder of a Christian heritage group called WallBuilders, argues that the curriculum should reflect the fact that the US Constitution was written with God in mind including that “there is a fixed moral law derived from God and nature”, that “there is a creator” and “government exists primarily to protect God-given rights to every individual”.

Barton says children should be taught that Christianity is the key to “American exceptionalism” because the structure of its democratic system is a recognition that human beings are fallible, and that religion is at the heart of being a virtuous citizen.

Another of the experts is Reverend Peter Marshall, who heads his own Christian ministry and preaches that Hurricane Katrina and defeat in the Vietnam war were God’s punishment for sexual promiscuity and tolerance of homosexuals. Marshall recommended that children be taught about the “motivational role” of the Bible and Christianity in establishing the original colonies that later became the US.

“In light of the overwhelming historical evidence of the influence of the Christian faith in the founding of America, it is simply not up to acceptable academic standards that throughout the social studies (curriculum standards) I could only find one reference to the role of religion in America’s past,” Marshall wrote in his submission.

Marshall later told the Wall Street Journal that the struggle over the history curriculum is part of a wider battle. “We’re in an all-out moral and spiritual civil war for the soul of America, and the record of American history is right at the heart of it,” he said.

Dan Quinn of the Texas Freedom Network, which describes itself as a “counter to the religious right”, called the recommendations “troubling”.

“I don’t think anyone disputes that faith played a role in our history. But it’s a stretch to say that it played the role described by David Barton and Peter Marshall. They’re absurdly unqualified to be considered experts. It’s a very deceptive and devious way to distort the curriculum in our public schools,” he said.

Quinn says that the issue is likely to lead to a heated political battle similar to the one in which the religious right tried to force creationism onto the curriculum. While it wasn’t able to inject religious theories in to the classroom, the Texas school board did make changes to teaching designed to undermine lessons on evolution such as introducing views that the eye is so complex an organ it must have involved “intelligent design”.

“I think, as there was with science, there’s going to be a big political battle,” he said.
Social studies teachers will meet shortly to consider the panel’s views and make their own recommendations to the board of education which has the final say. The board is dominated by conservatives who appointed Barton and Marshall to the panel.

Other states will be watching what happens in Texas carefully as the religious right campaign seeks new ways to insert God in to the classroom after the courts limited the extent to which creationist theories could intrude on the teaching of biology. But religion is not kept out of schools entirely. Many children recite the pledge of allegiance in class each morning which includes a reference to the US as “one nation under God”.

The panel made other recommendations.

Barton, a former vice-chairman of the state’s Republican party, said that Texas children should no longer be taught about democratic values but republican ones. “We don’t pledge allegiance to the flag and the democracy for which it stands,” he said.

And while God may be in, some of those he influenced are out.

According to a draft of guidelines for the new curriculum, Washington, Lincoln and Stephen Fuller Austin, known as the Father of Texas after helping to lead it to independence from Mexico, have been removed from history lessons for younger children.

There’s no doubt that history education needs a boost in Texas.

According to test results, one-third of students think the Magna Carta was signed by the Pilgrims on the Mayflower and 40% believe Lincoln’s 1863 emancipation proclamation was made nearly 90 years earlier at the constitutional convention.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Andy Ostroy: The Passing of Walter Cronkite

The year was 1983. I was a boy from Queens, NY, in the final leg of earning a Journalism degree. Like so many other…

Cameron Sinclair: National Governors Association: It’s time for a stroll.

Today saw the opening of the 101st National Governors Association meeting in the heart of the Gulf Coast. This pow wow is not only a…

Katrina concerned about global warming

Bollywood actress Katrina Kaif, who is riding high on the success of her recent hit “New York”,
may not be worried about her career graph, but is sure concerned about global warming.
“Global warming is becoming a very serious issue.
It is crippling the world and as individuals it is our responsibility that we make a conscious effort [...]

Identifying The Thousands Of ‘Jumbled Bones’ At Burr Oak Cemetery Nearly Impossible: Experts

CHICAGO — Human remains strewn amid overgrown weeds have deteriorated into jumbled bones. Paper records in a rusted metal cabinet have dissolved into dust.

Days after horrified relatives learned that former workers at a historic black c…

Salman skips girlfriend Katrina’s birthday?

Just few hours back today on Tuesday July 15th we saw Salman Khan at the Mehboob Studios in Bandra, Mumbai. He was doing the shooting for the making video of his forthcoming film, Wanted. Tomorrow is his girlfriend Katrina Kaif’s birthday and she is in London. So we wondered whether he be flying to London [...]

Tom Vander Ark: Making a difference with new schools in New Orleans

When I visited New Orleans before Katrina, I saw third world schools–decrepit physical conditions, corrupt governance, and abysmal academic output. Based on my last few…

Frank Gruber: A Fourth Urbanism, Part 4: More on the “Why” of Cityism

Because the rebuilding of cities is so important, the effort to do so, if that effort is based on recognizable principles, deserves recognition as something special.

Katrina : “a star misses her dad”

Katrina kaif has six sisters out which three are older and another three are younger. Even she has one brother who is professional skier and rock climber.
All the seven kids were raised with her mother who was a Harvard graduate and a successful lawyer but gave it all up in order to join [...]