Meet Australian Lady Leanne Murray …An Ardent Fan of Dhoni and his Team …..

  • Leanne Murray with MS Dhoni, wife Sakshi and Virat Kohli Derek Abraham dna 

Management student Leanne Murray is also friends with others in team and quit job to watch the series Down Under this summer….

You don’t often see an Australian draped in an Indian flag. If you do, it must be Leanne Murray. A proud member of the ‘Swami Army’, the 23-year-old has been following MS Dhoni & Co. throughAustralia and New Zealand since 2007. Today, she is the undisputed No.1 fan of the Indian team in this part of the world. A few thousand selfies, some autographed jerseys and seamless access to the Men in Blue, she is the envy of many a supporter.

“I first saw Dhoni at a training session in Adelaide eight years ago. I had no idea who he was or how big an icon he was. I requested him for a photograph and I have not stopped ever since. I just fell in love with him that day,” she says. A 700-km drive from Adelaide, her hometown, to Melbourne for Sunday’s match is just another journey in Murray’s life. She has even traversed the Tasman Sea to watch the Indian team. “I went to New Zealand last year,” adds the management graduate.

Murray hasn’t gone to work since November. “A year ago, I told my boss that I want to attend each of the four Test matches as well as the World Cup. So I am actually on paid leave,” she gushes.

Murray doesn’t bother about the fact that Australia also have a cricket team. “I don’t really care about Australia,” she says as Dhoni & Co. go through the rigours of a four-hour-long training session at the Junction Oval. “I am not wearing my India shirt today. Otherwise, you’ll always see me in it. I don’t have an Australian shirt. And even if India were to play Australia, I’d be supporting India,” she says without batting an eyelid.

So what makes her love the Indian team so much? “It’s all because of Dhoni. He is just a calm guy and such a great leader. He is an inspiration. He just made me fall in love with the Indian team,” she says. Today, Murray counts the likes of Dhoni, Suresh Raina, R Ashwin, Mohammed Shami, Dinesh Karthik, R Vinay Kumar among her ‘friends’.

And guess what, she also plays the game. Actually, meeting the Indian players inspired me to take up the game. I didn’t know anything about cricket till 2007. About two years ago, I even enrolled myself in a cricket coaching clinic. I am a right-arm fast bowler and a left-handed batsman,” she informs. Within seconds, she rushes to her car, opens the boot and takes out a bat and a tennis ball. “Let’s play,” she says. Mind you, Murray is good at her game. A couple of journalists get a taste of her big hitting and neat bowling.

Murray has also strutted her stuff at the GM Cricket Academy in Delhi’s Najafgarh area. “I have played with the boys there. They really respect me,” she says. She knows Najafgarh is where Virender Sehwag hails from. “I have got a picture with him too. Do you want to see?” she enquires.

A casual look at her iPad confirms it’s a storehouse of collages. From Sachin Tendulkar to Virat Kohli to R Ashwin to Ravindra Jadeja, she has ‘framed’ them all. For the record, she has visited India on five occasions, including for the IPL.

Apart from Dhoni, Mohammed Shami is someone Murray admires a lot. “He is a nice bowler. In fact, he keeps giving me tips on bowling. The first thing he told me was to buy a cricket-specific pair of shoes,” she laughs. “We often talk on Skype,” she adds.

Murray has also met with Anushka Sharma and Sakshi Dhoni in New Zealand last year. “Sakshi was surprised I wanted a picture with her. But she was nice enough to pose for me,” Murray says. So did she tell her she “loves” Dhoni. “No, I didn’t. I am sure she knows of many women who do.”

SOURCE::::: http://www.dnaindia.com

Natarajan

” Excuse Me… There is a Lion Near my Wine …” !!!

A brand-new hotel located in Canberra, Australia’s National Zoo and Aquarium offers an experience unlike another.

The list of strangest hotels in the world has just got a new entrant.

Australia’s Jamala Wildlife Lodge offers you the opportunity to share a room with its four-legged inhabitants.

Situated on the banks of the Molonglo River inside the National Zoo and Aquarium, home to animals, fish and reptiles, the Jamala Wildlife Lodge has some 18 rooms that offer guests a one-of-its-kind experience.

The zoo is home to Bengal tigers, lions, cheetahs, giraffes, Malayan sun bears, black and white colobus monkeys, European brown bears, ring-tailed lemurs, hyenas, and snow leopards.

There are three types of residences all of which are located adjacent to an animal enclosure.

Giraffe Treehouses are exactly what their name suggests, and offer you the opportunity to feed their resident giraffe from the comfort of your balcony.

uShaka Lodge that has seven suites featuring, wait for it, shark tank in your lounge room.

But it’s the jungle bungalows that are for the bravehearts.

With just a glass screen standing between you and a pride of lions or bears, do expect a few peeping toms, you know the usual suspects… 🙂

The hotel opened its doors mid-December and the room tariff is pretty steep starting at $400 per person, per night with the profits going back to the zoo for animal welfare and reproduction programmes.

So, will you book?

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

A Rewind…. When a 41 year old Former Captain came out of Retirement to Lead Australia against India

When the 41-year-old former captain came out of retirement to lead Australia against India…

India’s tour of Australia in 1977-78 was completely overshadowed by the arrival of Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket (WSC), unleashed on the world six months earlier, which left the home side fielding a virtual third XI under Bob Simpson, a 40-something captain who had retired from the game a decade earlier. Despite that, the series proved exciting and Simpson’s comeback triumphant.

Bob Simpson drives on his way to 176 in Perth, in what was his fifth first-class match in a decade

Bob Simpson drives on his way to 176 in Perth, in what was his fifth first-class match in a decade © ESPNcricinfo Ltd 

 

In May 1977, news broke that media mogul Packer, frustrated by his inability to secure TV rights for cricket for his fledgling TV channel, had decided to organise games of his own. Capitalising on the low amounts cricketers were paid, particularly in Australia, he signed up more than 50 players for his enterprise.

With his “circus” – as the establishment and media dismissively labelled the venture – taking place in parallel to the Australian season, it meant that the national selectors sat down in October 1977 with almost two dozen of their more likely choices unavailable.

The Australian Cricket Board (ACB) did all it could to frustrate WSC, barring it from all major cricket grounds, and going to court to prevent it referring to games as Tests or from calling their side Australia.

Packer believed that given the national side was bereft of all the leading players – and most second-string ones as well – the public would turn their backs on the official Test series. The establishment feared the same.

A divided Australian team had lost the Ashes in England in the summer, and few seemed able to predict who they would pick to face the Indians, let alone who would lead them. Craig Serjeant, a 26 year-old batsman who had made his debut that summer, was one of the favourites, if only because he was one of the few established cricketers not to have signed for Packer. The other leading candidate was John Inverarity, a 33-year-old allrounder who had played the last of his six Tests five years earlier.

So the announcement that Simpson, a 41-year-old who had retired from the game in 1968, had been hauled out of retirement to lead the side was met with shock but almost no dissent. Indeed, journalists at the press conference at which the news was made public broke into spontaneous applause.

Among those close to the game there was a general belief Simpson was still good enough. “He has a wonderful batting technique,” Keith Miller said, “and is fitter at the moment than he has been for years.”

Simpson, who had been made the offer the previous month, had been a top player and had led Australia 28 times after taking over the captaincy from Richie Benaud in 1963. He averaged 48 with the bat in his 52 Tests and was a brilliant slip fielder and useful legspinner and had continued to play regularly after retiring and had scored a hundred for grade side Western Suburbs at the start of the season.

The ACB made clear it was not expecting miracles. Praising Simpson’s “experience and technical knowhow” it added: “Irrespective of the runs he may make Simpson will make a significant contribution to Australian cricket in the coming season.”

Simpson was an old-school leader and wasted no time in saying he felt that the Australians had become undisciplined. In England the side had come under fire for their slovenly appearance and attitude. “It starts in getting the players proud to represent their country,” he said. “I’ll be looking to restore some of the lost guidance.”

And whatever the board felt, he had no intention of not pulling his weight in the side. “I wouldn’t have made myself available if I didn’t think I would get runs. I have never surrendered my wicket easily. I have always considered it my obligation to my team, myself and spectators to get runs.

“Undoubtedly the success I have enjoyed in grade cricket in the past, and this year, made easier my decision to come back. If I had not been scoring runs, I would not have considered a return just as a figurehead.”

He admitted he had been approached “almost every year” to resume for his state in the decade since he retired, repeatedly declining as he felt New South Wales were good enough without him. But with Packer players missing from the Sheffield Shield, things had changed. “The special conditions this year have made it necessary for an experienced player to be at the helm.”

At the beginning of November, Simpson returned as captain of New South Wales, the side he led to their last Sheffield Shield title 12 years earlier. He had three matches before the first Test to find his feet.

 

In Perth, NSW lost to Western Australia by four wickets. Simpson made 14 and 5 and took three wickets. He then led his side to a nine-wicket win over South Australia, making 66 in his one outing. His final game was against the Indians, where he scored 58 and 94. He had proved he had not lost his ability with the bat, especially against spin.

India headed into the first Test with wins in all four of their matches against the states; on two previous tours of Australia they had never beaten a state side. But they were aware the opposition they had been facing were weak.

Australia’s squad contained six uncapped players. Simpson aside, they boasted 36 Test appearances between them, of which 22 belonged to Jeff Thomson – he had signed for Packer but subsequently changed his mind. Only Serjeant, named as vice-captain, Thomson and Kim Hughes survived from the XI that had played Australia’s previous Test at The Oval three months earlier.

In the fortnight before the opening Test, WSC had launched to poor attendances and a generally lukewarm response. The first Test between Simpson’s almost unknown Australia and India in Brisbane was nervously watched by both the ACB and WSC, as it directly clashed with Packer’s Supertest in Melbourne. The official Test was a cracker and attracted 32,000 to the Gabba; the Supertest drew a little over 13,000.

In Brisbane, Simpson was dismissed for 7 in the first innings, falling to the spin of Bishan Bedi. In his last Test before this one, in January 1968, he had been dismissed by Bedi, also for 7. Australia gained a slender 13-run lead on the first innings before Simpson made a vital 89 second time round. India, chasing an improbable 341 to win, fell 16 runs short.

The second Test, in Perth, was no less exciting. India took an eight-run first-innings lead – Simpson’s six-and-a-half hour 176 keeping them at bay almost alone – but lost by two wickets as Australia chased down 342 with 22 balls remaining. Again, crowds were larger than expected.

India kept the series alive with comprehensive wins in the third and fourth Tests, but Australia, anchored by Simpson’s 100 and 51, won the decider by 47 runs on the sixth day. Nevertheless, India made 445 in pursuit of 493, the highest losing total in the fourth innings of a Test; when they were 415 for 6, a remarkable win was still on the cards.

Simpson’s return had proved more successful than anyone had dared hope. Not only had he forged a winning side from a batch of youngsters, he had done so by leading from the front with 539 runs at 53.90. Financially, a thrilling Test series had won out over WSC’s garish, hyped Supertests.

But the tide was about to change. Shortly before the final Test, almost 25,000 watched a WSC limited-overs game under floodlights. Packer, with white balls, coloured clothing and a variety of gimmicks, had found what the public wanted. Cricket would never be the same again.

SOURCE:::: MARTIN WILLIAMSON  in http://www.espncricinfo.com

Natarajan

All you need to know about World Cup 2015…

Factbox on the 11th edition of the cricket World Cup, which will be co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand from Feb. 14-March 29.

KEY FACTS

The coveted trophy.The coveted trophy.* The first men’s cricket World Cup was held in England in 1975, four years after the first recognised one-day international had been played in 1971, on the fifth day of a washed out test between Australia and England in Melbourne.

* West Indies won the first two tournaments, beating Australia in 1975 and England in 1979 and then lost the 1983 final to India, but have not reached another final since.

* Allan Border’s Australia won the first of their four titles in 1987, sparking a period of dominance by the side in both one-day and test cricket for the next 20 years.

* India also won the 2011 tournament. Pakistan (1992) and Sri Lanka (1996) are the only other winners.

* New Zealand and Australia will host 21 pool matches each, amongst 14 venues, seven in each country. It is the second time the two countries have co-hosted the tournament, having previously done so in 1992.

* Afghanistan will make their World Cup debut, having played three World Twenty20 tournaments.

* There are two groups of seven teams playing a round robin format, with the top four in each pool making the quarter-finals, which will be straight knockouts.

* New Zealand will host one quarter-final in Wellington and one semi-final in Auckland.

* They can possibly reach the final in Melbourne without having played any of their games in Australia. The two co-hosts are in the same pool and play that match on Feb. 28 in Auckland.

* The final will be at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, only the second venue after Lord’s in London, to host more than one final.

RECORDS

* India’s Sachin Tendulkar is the leading run scorer with 2,278 runs in 45 matches and has scored the most centuries (six). He also holds the record for most runs in one tournament, 673 from 11 matches in 2003.

* Australia’s Glenn McGrath has the most wickets, 71 in 39 matches. McGrath also has the best bowling figures of 7-15 against Namibia in 2003.

* South Africa’s Gary Kirsten has the highest score in a World Cup match, making 188 not out against UAE in 1996.

* The highest score in a World Cup match is 413-5 by India against Bermuda in 2007, while the lowest is 36 by Canada against Sri Lanka in 2003.

* Australian wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist has the most dismissals, 52 from 31 matches (45 catches, seven stumpings), though he could be overtaken by Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara (46) in this tournament.

* Australia’s Ricky Ponting has taken 28 catches, the most by a non-wicketkeeper.

(Compiled by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Sudipto Ganguly)

SOURCE:::: www. cricket.yahoo.com

Natarajan

 

” Invincible ” Morris….Oldest Living Australian Test Cricketer….Still Going Strong … !!!…

Arthur Morris with his wife Judith. Photo: Dinakar
The Hindu

Arthur Morris with his wife Judith. Photo: Dinakar

When Bradman was bowled for nought in his final Test at the Oval in 1948, Arthur Morris was at the other end and made 196 on what he called a ‘wet wicket’ in that innings.

At 92, Arthur Morris is the oldest living Australian Test cricketer. The former left-handed opener was named in Australia’s Test team of the century, and has his place among the golden greats.

On the Invincibles tour of England in 1948, he was incredible, scoring 696 runs . It was the only time in 20 years that the legendary Don Bradman was outscored in a series.

When Bradman was bowled for nought in his final Test at the Oval in 1948, Morris was at the other end. In fact, Morris made 196 on what he called a ‘wet wicket’ in that innings.

In the then world record chase of 404 in the earlier Test at Leeds, Morris (182) and Bradman (173 not out) starred for Australia on the final day.

It was a privilege to meet Morris and his kind wife Judith in their lovely home in Erina, a serene coastal town 85km from Sydney.

In an exclusive conversation with The Hindu, Morris — his memory remarkably sharp — recalled his playing days.

Predictably, the focus was on Australia’s epic 1948 tour of England. And on Bradman’s dismissal in his final Test innings at the Oval. “There was silence in the ground when Eric Hollies bowled Bradman with a wrong ‘un.  He had bowled a couple of leg-spinners earlier. The War was over, and the crowds in that series came to see Bradman play. They were stunned.”

Remembering one of the most gripping moments in cricketing history, Morris said “If it had happened today, if a bowler had got the wicket of such a batsman in his final Test, the fielders would have been all over him. But all that happened was Norman Yardley shouting from mid-on, ‘Jolly-well bowled Hollies.’ That was it.”

Morris said, “After the Test, Bradman gave a farewell speech. He also gave gifts to all his team members. We got cufflinks. It was emotional. There were some who jokingly told me that had I not got all those runs, they would have got to see Bradman bat in the second innings.”

The left-hander — with 3533 runs in 46 Tests — recalled Bradman speaking to him about his rich vein of form during the 1948 series, “He said, ‘I do not know how you do it, but keep doing it.’ Bradman used to play all his shots along the ground. I used to play a lot of lofted shots.”

Morris had fond memories of the Test at Leeds where Australia chased down 404 on the final day, after England had batted in the first session.

“Bradman had some problems against Denis Compton’s Chinaman bowling that day. He came to me and said, ‘Take him on, open him up.’ Then I played a lot of shots against Compton. We won the Test. In the morning, the English papers had said there was no way we could win the Test. This is where we got our satisfaction from,” he said.

On the Invincibles, Morris said, “We had strong batting, good bowling, and great characters. We had Miller, Lindwall, the wicketkeeper Tallon, my opening partner Sid Barnes, and of course, Bradman.”

He came up with some wonderful anecdotes too. “It was getting dark, and Sam Loxton spoke to the umpires to convince them. Then, he said to them, ‘I cannot see you, but can hear you!”

Morris reminisced, “Len Hutton was a fine opening batsman, but it was a tough day with Lindwall nipping the ball around. He got a single, got off strike, and said, ‘Cyril Washbrook (his partner) cannot get the ones!’ Good batsmen rotate the strike.”

A stylish top-order batsman, Morris believed batting was a lot about footwork. “You get back to go forward. You should have that little movement in your back leg to set it up. You cannot get committed on the front foot. Whether it is boxing or tennis, footwork is essential. As a batsman you have to dictate terms to the bowlers with your footwork, not allow them to dominate you.”

It was footwork that enabled Morris to be a terrific player on ‘wet pitches’ during the demanding days of uncovered pitches. A strong back-foot player, he hooked and cut the pacemen. “When you hook, you have to get inside the line of the ball. A lot of batsmen do not do it now.”

He faced several exceptional pace bowlers in his time. “Frank Tyson was fast, Statham was lively too. But Alec Bedser was the toughest. He was accurate and he moved the ball. In fact, Neil Harvey and I spoke about this some time back.”

Morris keeps in touch with Harvey — the only other surviving member of the Invincibles. “He lost his wife some time ago. I went to the funeral. We meet often.”

The Australian made a mention of the modern-day super bats too. “Even the mishits go for six. I had to whack the ball. We have to do with our records now.”

Morris leaves us with a nugget. “It used to take six weeks to England while travelling by sea. In 1948, Bombay was a stopover.  But as Bradman looked out of the ship, he saw about ten thousand people outside wanting to see him. He never got out of the ship.”

Keywords: Australian cricket legendsArthur MorrisInvincibles tour of England 1948

 

SOPURCE:::::S.Dinakar in http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

JAN 13 2015

America to Australia in 6 Hours !!!

 

From America to Australia in Under 6 Hours

Just 100 years ago, getting from America to Europe was a voyage that took several days by ocean liners. With the invention of airplanes, that travel time was significantly shortened to under 24 hours. At the apex of the era of transatlantic flight, the Concorde was able to fly 100 passengers at mach 2.0 speeds from New York to London in just over 3.5 hours.

Now, the European Space Agency (ESA) just greenlighted the next stage of modern transportation – the hypersonic flight. The ESA has approved a new round of funding to project LAPCAT (Long-Term Advanced Propulsion Concepts and Technologies).
Hypersonic Plane

Ignoring its funny name, the new plane will fly at mach 5.0 speeds (that’s five times the speed of sound!), using liquid hydrogen engines. The planes will be able to travel from England to Australia in four hours, carry 300 passengers and even fly to space in just 15 minutes.

The new kind of engine is being developed by the British company Reaction Engines, who is said to invest over 60 million GBP in the development, and are going to start builing a full-scale prototype engine.

Hypersonic Plane

Current jet engines require that airplanes carry liquid oxygen as a coolant because in speeds beyond mach 3.0 the engines cannot use external oxygen for cooling. The new type of engine can use external oxygen freely, allowing it to cool down its engines from over 1,000°c (1,832°f) to -150°c (-328°f) in a fraction of a second.
Hypersonic Plane

Experts are hailing this development as the biggest advancement in aviation since the invention of the jet engine. The cost of a single plane is estimated to be a whopping $1.1 Billion and will have no windows.

 

Hypersonic passenger plane LAPCAT A2 explainer

 

The Long-term Advanced Propulsion Concept and Technologies (LAPCAT) was developed by British company Reaction Engines Limited (REL) and funded by the European Space Agency (ESA). The 139-meter long hypersonic plane has four liquid hydrogen-powered Synergistic Air-Breathing Rocket Engine (SABRE) engines and can carry up to 300 passengers.
It can travel up to 6,100 kilometer per hour – five times faster than the Airbus A380. By using liquid hydrogen as fuel instead of fossil fuel it is also greener and would only produce water vapor and nitrous oxide instead of carbon emissions. SOURCE: Research and Technology Agency, Reaction Engines Limited (REL), Transport Research & Innovation Portal

 

SOURCE:::: http://www.ba-bamail.com and YOU TUBE

Natarajan

Australia has plans for the world’s biggest hotel !!!

The proposed $8.15 billion Aquis Great Barrier Reef Resort planned for Yorkeys Knob in Ca

The proposed $8.15 billion Aquis Great Barrier Reef Resort planned for Yorkeys Knob in Cairns. Source: Supplied

WHEN you think of the world’s biggest hotels, you usually conjure up images of the main strip of Vegas.

However plans for the world’s biggest hotel have been submitted right here in Australia.

The $8.15 billion Aquis project was put forward by Hong Kong billionaire Tony Fung for a six star hotel and casino with 7500 rooms just outside of Cairns.

However the grand plans have come to a grinding halt as Queensland’s Gaming Commission refused to speed up its approval for the takeover bid of Reef Casino Trust, which owns Reef Hotel Casino in Cairns, as part of the project.

The proposed resort is to sit over a lagoon complex.

The proposed resort is to sit over a lagoon complex. Source: Supplied

Proposed design of the casino lobby with an aquarium.

Proposed design of the casino lobby with an aquarium. Source: Supplied

The decision to grant regulatory approval for the proposed takeover expires on November 28 and Aquis says it will not extend meaning the offer will lapse. Plans for the resort are likely to still go ahead.

Caught up in red tape, Far North Queensland civic and business leaders yesterday urged the Newman Government to hasten the process and support tourism.

The resort is planned on a former sugar cane farm in Yorkey’s Knob, 15km north of Cairns, and is to feature an 18 hole golf course and lagoon.

Aboriginal artwork is to decorate its walls.

Aboriginal artwork is to decorate its walls. Source: Supplied

Imagine the housekeeping for 7500 rooms.

Imagine the housekeeping for 7500 rooms. Source: Supplied

The property at Yorkeys Knob which will be the site of the proposed $4.2 billion AQUIS Gr

The property at Yorkeys Knob which will be the site of the proposed $4.2 billion AQUIS Great Barrier Reef Resort. Picture: Mccormack Marc Source: News Corp Australia

Currently the biggest hotel in Australia is the Four Points by Sheraton Sydney with 682 rooms, meaning the proposed resort would be a whopping 11 times bigger.

The Four Points by Sheraton, Sydney takes the gong as Australia’s biggest. Picture: NSW D

The Four Points by Sheraton, Sydney takes the gong as Australia’s biggest. Picture: NSW Department of Planning.Source: Supplied

A look at the world’s biggest hotels

MGM Grand, Las Vegas

Rooms: 6,852

The MGM Grand is one of the hotels / casinos on the Las Vegas strip

The MGM Grand is one of the hotels / casinos on the Las Vegas strip Source: Getty Images

First World Hotel, Malaysia

Rooms: 6,118

Ambassador City, Thailand

Rooms: 4,219

The Venetian, Las Vegas

Rooms: 4,027

The Venetian hotel and casino is like a floating city.

The Venetian hotel and casino is like a floating city. Source: Supplied

Excalibur, Las Vegas

Rooms: 3,981

Which pool should you swim at today?

Which pool should you swim at today? Source: Supplied 

SOURCE::::news.com.au

Natarajan

 

Read About The Countries With Most Effective Health Care Systems …

As we move to a different country to start a new living and career, one of the most concerning issues would be healthcare services in the host country. No matter how big our income is, it is important that the country offers good public and private healthcare systems.

 
Unfortunately, not all countries have well laid systems. But it would be brilliantly useful if all nations take up healthcare initiatives. However if you are looking to move to a different country, specially any first world nation—here is the list of countries that have best healthcare systems compiled by The Richest. They measured the life expectancy, healthcare costs, and overall efficiency in various countries and listed the 10 best countries that have ‘Awesome’ healthcare.

 
#10 Sweden:

 
Sweden is not just a country that has a well laid healthcare system; it is also one of the few safest countries in the world. The country offers best of the public and private healthcare systems. The government funds 97 percent of medical costs for their people and individuals take care of the remaining 3 percent. Sweden is also gifted with beautiful weather which makes staying there a pleasure.

#9 Switzerland:

 
There is something more than Swiss Alps in this country. Average life expectancy of as of 2012 is 80.5 years for men and 85 years for women. Emergency Service in SwitzerlandIt is needless to mention that this life expectancy is impossible to achieve without the country’s comprehensive healthcare system. Swiss citizens are required to get a health insurance to be used when necessary. The government pays major portion of the medical expenses and the individual’s insurance takes care of the remaining. This means people across the world are all the more attracted to this paradise on Earth.

 
#8 South Korea:

 
The world is well aware of the environmental hassles in South Korea. The obvious result of deteriorating fresh air is a constant concern. Therefore, it is ultimately the government that needs to take care of its people. Accordingly, the South Korean government is doing the needful by taking care of almost 100 percent of the medical costs. With an efficiency score of about 65.1 percent, one can very well say that it is generous and thoughtful initiative.
#7 Australia:

 
Australia is gaining a lot of attention like never before. Many are now heading to Australia from all over the world to pursue higher education or to kick-start a bright career. Australia HealthcareWell here is the good news for all those who have set their eyes on Australia; the country has very an excellent healthcare system to compliment its world class lifestyle. So far it was only the picturesque cities and natural beauty that attracted people to Australia. Federal Government’s Universal Healthcare system covers 75 percent of the medical expenses whereas 25 percent is funded by the private health insurance system. This system is reportedly 66 percent efficient. Citizens who are financially weak can get a ‘Low Income Earners’ card on the basis of which, their medical costs are subsidized generously.

 
#6 Italy:

 
The healthcare system here is just as good as Australia. Italy has perfect mix of public-private healthcare structure and it has an average life expectancy rate 82 years. Surgeries and hospitalization charges are free services which both public and private conventional hospitals offer. And the most exciting part is that all emergency cases are completely free for the residents, both legal and undocumented. With such kinds of services who wouldn’t want be in the renaissance nation.

Spain healthcareAside from an excellent state-run healthcare system, Spain is well known for its very competent doctors, well-trained nurses, and top-of-the line hospital facilities. Prescription medicines are paid for via the co-payment system, in which the residents are required to pay for a small portion of their medicines, while the bulk is covered by the state.

 
#4 Israel:

 
Here comes the pleasant surprise you wouldn’t have expected. Ranked fourth in the world in terms of efficiency, Israel’s healthcare is deemed as the fundamental right for its people. This system is universal and requires all Israelis to participate in medical insurance with the option for individuals to purchase their own respective healthcare policies to increase their coverage. This government-run system is one of the most technologically advanced in the world with state-of-the-art facilities and well-trained doctors and nurses. And the exciting thing is, Israel is fast becoming a popular destination for medical tourists!

#3 Japan:

 
West meets the East! Japan has advanced medical technology that is on par with the first world nations. Japan provides universal healthcare coverage, which subsidizes a large portion of the medical expenses. An employed citizen usually gets additional private coverage from his employer, but Japan is greatly considerate of its citizens who are struggling with wages and unemployment. Medical fees are waived for the homeless and low-income households who are receiving government subsidy.

 
#2 Singapore:

 
Singapore’s healthcare system is apparently very difficult to replicate. It’s efficient in terms of financing and benefits, a rare combination that renders the system excellent. Aside from the government’s system, the private healthcare in Singapore is equally efficient, so its citizens get more than adequate care, whether it’s from the public or private sector. This is the only country in the list that gets equal contribution from both private and public sector.

 
#1 Hong Kong:

 
Hong Kong is considered to have the best healthcare in the world, due in part to its well-developed medical system. Its life expectancy rate is one of the highest and infant mortality rates are one of the lowest in the world and this is largely due to the government’s advocacy on good healthcare. Hong Kong has well structured dual-track system, meaning medical services are offered by both the government and private sector.

SOURCE:::www.siliconindia.com

Natarajan

” Parked His Plane Outside Pub…Went in For a Beer…!!!”

He Parked His Plane at a Pub, Went in For a Beer

The two-seater plane was parked at a pub in Australia. Photo courtesy: inside.com

SYDNEY:  A man who taxied his light plane down a street in Australia and parked it at a pub while he went inside for a beer was being questioned on Monday by police, who were not amused.

Locals in Newman, Western Australia, were stunned when they saw the wingless Beechcraft two-seater aircraft chugging down the main drag of the mining town in the Pilbara region, before pulling up at the local watering hole.

“On the way back through town, here’s a plane parked outside the Purple Pub,” Newman resident Beau Woolcock told ABC radio.

“Even more special was seeing one of the local coppers poking his head in the door of the plane looking like he was asking for a licence.”

While the incident quickly became the talk of the town, police did not see the funny side.

“It was a pretty stupid thing to do,” Newman police sergeant Mark McKenzie told reporters, saying the propeller was running and it needed to be steered by foot pedals. It was not clear why it had no wings.

“Kids were coming home from school. It could have been very ugly. All he needed was one gust of wind because without the wings, it’s not stable.

“People think it was a bit of a laugh but it was very dangerous and we’re not very happy with it.”

The West Australian newspaper said staff at the pub had dubbed the man a “legend” for his casual arrival.

Police said they were investigating whether he had committed an offence, given the plane did not leave the ground or cause any traffic accidents and the man passed a breath-test at the scene.

“I need to look at what the appropriate offence would be as it’s a bit of an unusual one,” said police officer Mark Garner.

SOURCE::::www.ndtv.com
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