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Kevin Costner to be Superman's dad - Kevin Costner is being lined up for a role in Superman: Man of Steel

Kevin Costner to be Superman's dad

Kevin Costner is being lined up for a role in Superman: Man of Steel.

The US actor is reportedly the first choice for director Zack Snyder and producer Christopher Nolan to play Clark Kent's adoptive father Jonathan Kent in the new movie.

Kevin is currently working on his World War II directorial project A Little War Of Their Own and will star in Learning Italian later this year.

After much deliberation, it was finally announced last month that British actor Henry Cavill, 27, had been cast in the lead role of Clark and his superhero alter-ego in the 2012 movie.

In a statement, Henry - who follows in the footsteps of Brandon Routh and the late Christopher Reeve by taking on the iconic character - said: "In the pantheon of superheroes, Superman is the most recognised and revered character of all time, and I am honoured to be a part of his return to the big screen."

An executive at Warner Brothers - the studio who will produce the movie - said of Henry's new role: "He's got an amazing quality. He doesn't look too much like Reeve and Routh but he's big and strong and he has a very modern feel to him. We're really going to try and make Superman as contemporary as possible."

Superman: Man of Steel will be released in December 2012.

Source:Bang!Extranet

Published Feb 23 2011



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Swans slaughtered - Eight swans have been found shot dead in the United Kingdom, in what a wildlife rescue group described as 'one of the worst ...

Swans slaughtered

Eight swans have been found shot dead in the United Kingdom, in what a wildlife rescue group described as 'one of the worst incidents' it had ever attended.

They were killed with an airgun and one of the swans must 'have suffered terribly' after it was shot three times, animal charity Secret World said.

The slaughtered animals were found by a passer-by in a field on West Ham road out of Blackford in Somerset.

Source: The Daily Mail

Published Feb 23 2011



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Girl's death mocked on Facebook - A depressed girl who died after being hit by a moving train in the United Kingdom, was ridiculed on her Facebook...

Girl's death mocked on Facebook


A depressed girl who died after being hit by a moving train in the United Kingdom, was ridiculed on her Facebook page, reported The Daily Mail.

Sick postings including one which said, "I caught the train to heaven LOL (laugh out loud)."

"Natasha wasn’t bullied, she was just a whore," another said.

Other users then clicked on ‘like’ to indicate that they agreed with the posts.

The vicious messages were on the site for 11 hours before being removed.

There was also a macabre video put on YouTube– entitled Tasha The Tank Engine.

The video is understood to have featured a spoof version of Thomas the Tank Engine featuring a picture of Natasha MacBryde on the front of a train.

It is believed that MacBryde, 15, was deeply depressed about her parents' break-up, and matters were made worse by unkind comments from fellow pupils.

She died instantly when she was hit by a train at Bromsgrove station on Valentine's Day, hours after sending her brother a text message saying "I’ll miss you."

Source: The Daily Mail

Published Feb 23 2011



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Women loved and left dry by M'sian Casanova - Four women who discovered they were dating the same man, who eventually cheated them of their money...

Women loved and left dry by M'sian Casanova


By Shaun Ho

Four women who discovered they were dating the same man, who eventually cheated them of their money, have banded together to make sure the same fate does not befall other women.

The women had been seeing the 30-year-old Casanova for about a month when he started asking for money.

One victim, who wished to be known only as Ms Tang, 28, said the man she knew as Ken Isaac told her his business was having financial difficulties last year.

He eventually managed to borrow RM26,000, with some of the money coming from funds which Ms Tang had set aside for her mother's surgery.

She lodged a police report last month after learning from Ken's friend that he was duping her as well as other women.

The other victims, who only wanted to be known as Ms Eng, Ms Beh and Ms Lee, all in their late 20s, said Ken had used many aliases - like Isaac Leong and Leong Ken Lee - to trick them.

The four women met MCA Public Services and Complaint Department head Datuk Michael Chong on Tuesday to urge other victims to come forward and lodge complaints.

Published Feb 23 2011



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New Zealand quake toll at 75, damage costs seen $12 bln - New Zealand rescuers pulled survivors out of rubble on Wednesday 24 hours after ...

New Zealand quake toll at 75, damage costs seen $12 bln
By Adrian Bathgate

CHRISTCHURCH (Reuters) - New Zealand rescuers pulled survivors out of rubble on Wednesday 24 hours after a devastating earthquake in Christchurch as the death toll climbed to 75, with many dozens still trapped inside collapsed buildings.

Search crew members look through the rubble of the CTV building which was devastated by a 6.3 magnitude earthquake in central Christchurch February 23, 2011. New Zealand declared a national state of emergency to cope with the effects of the devastating earthquake, Prime Minister John Key said on Wednesday. (REUTERS/Simon Baker)

Rescue teams had to perform amputations to free some of the 120 survivors so far pulled from the wreckage of Tuesday's strong tremor which hit the country's second-biggest city. Up to 300 people are still missing, Mayor Bob Parker said, and Prime

Minister John Key said the death toll will rise.

"We are getting texts (sms messages) and tapping sounds from the living and that's our focus at the moment," police shift commander Russell Gibson said on Radio New Zealand.

Tuesday's 6.3 magnitude quake was the second to hit the historic tourist city in five months. It was New Zealand's most deadly natural disaster for 80 years, and the damage could cost $12 billion.

Early in the afternoon a woman, Ann Bodkin, was rescued from a finance company's destroyed building, having spent a day trapped under a desk. Amid cheers, Bodkin, wrapped in blankets, was put into an ambulance suffering from only cuts and scratches.

"Getting her out is just stupendous. I'm a very happy man," her husband told the New Zealand Herald newspaper.

Hopes all but disappeared of finding survivors in another collapsed building, home to a TV broadcaster and an English language school.

An early report that a group of 15 people had been found there was denied, and among those still unaccounted for at the smouldering ruin site were 10 Japanese students at the school.

Dave Lawrie, police operational commander, said the search at the collapsed Canterbury Television building had been called off to focus on buildings more likely to still have survivors.

Previously, mayor Parker said up to around 100 people could be trapped.

Authorities have identified 55 dead bodies and there are another 20 still to be identified. The toll seems certain to rise further as the frantic search effort focuses on survivors ahead of retrieving and identifying corpses.

Another police official said a temporary mortuary was being set up at an army base near the city to hold bodies.

MASSIVE ECONOMIC IMPACT

Indications of the massive economic impact of the quake are starting to emerge. J.P. Morgan estimated insured losses from the disaster could be $12 billion, according to a source who had seen the research note.

When asked about possible costs, Prime minister Key told reporters: "No one's in a position to actually assess that." He said he hoped Christchurch could still host rugby World Cup matches later this year as planned.

Key said the country could afford to rebuild Christchurch, but reinsurance risk would probably worsen.

In the city centre, roads were buckled, buildings toppled and large pools of water welled up from broken pipes and sewers.

There were fears that one of the city's tallest buildings, the 26-storey Hotel Grand Chancellor, which has sagged in one corner, could collapse and bring down adjoining structures.

The building has been evacuated but rescue teams have been forced to pull back, disrupting nearby searches.

In places, roads had collapsed into a milky, sand-coloured lake beneath the surface, the result of Christchurch's sandy foundations mixing with subterranean water under the force of the quake. Officials call it "liquefaction" of the ground.

STATE OF EMERGENCY

A national state of emergency has been declared, and soldiers in armoured personnel carriers patrolled Christchurch city. Police will impose a curfew from 6.30 p.m. local time (0530 GMT) in the badly hit CBD area.

It is the country's worst natural disaster since a 1931 quake in the North Island city of Napier which killed 256. Christchurch Hospital received an influx of injured residents, with broken limbs, crush injuries and lacerations.

"Some had to have their limbs amputated to get them out, and others have had amputation from the injury itself," said Mike Ardagh, head of Christchurch hospital's emergency department.

Thousands of people were facing a second night in emergency shelters in local schools, community halls and at a racecourse. Fresh water supplies were railed into the city and were being distributed from schools and portable toilets set up around the

city as services were disrupted.

Rescue specialists from the United States, Britain, Taiwan and Japan were en route to New Zealand, with the first of 148 search and rescue specialists from neighbouring Australia already on the streets.

The disaster fuelled talk that central bank might cut interest rates in coming weeks to shore up confidence in the already-fragile national economy, but the bank did not mention monetary policy on Wednesday when it commented on the quake.

The local dollar briefly firmed against the U.S. dollar after the central bank omitted any reference to rates. It had sunk to an eight-week low on Monday on the talk of a cut.

The quake's timing was far worse than last year's tremor, which struck at night when streets were empty. Still, that first quake caused damage estimated at up to around $3.7 billion.

($1 = 1.339 New Zealand Dollars)

(Additional reporting by Mantik Kusjanto and Rob Taylor in Wellington, and Denny Thomas in Hong Kong; Writing by Gyles Beckford and Ed Davies; Editing by Daniel Magnowski)

Copyright © 2011 Reuters



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Tremors in Damansara buildings cause panic - People rushed out of the six-block office buildings in the Damansara Town Centre after mild tremors...

Tremors in Damansara buildings cause panic

PETALING JAYA: People rushed out of the six-block office buildings in the Damansara Town Centre after mild tremors were reportedly felt on the sixth floor of blocks A and E at about 12.45pm.

Kuala Lumpur Fire & Rescue Department Assistant Director of Operations Azizan Ismail said firemen conducted checks but did not detect any damage.

He said the occupants were allowed back into the buildings about an hour later.

A Meteorological Department spokesman said an inspection conducted in the area did not indicate any sign of tremors.

“We conducted an inspection within two hours of the report but did not detect any sign of tremors,” he said, adding that it could have been triggered by construction work nearby and not the earthquake in New Zealand.

Meanwhile, Higher Education Ministry ministry director-general Prof Dr Rujhan Mustafa said the earthquake had not affected Malaysian students in Christchurch.

“This is according to the feedback we got from students in Canterbury and Lincoln,” he said in an SMS to The Star.

“The students’ residential areas were reported to be safe and there was no major damage,” he said.

When asked on the number of Malaysians there, he said a head count will be performed today once Malaysian officials arrive in Christchurch from Wellington.

“The Malaysian Students Depart­ment director together with four embassy officers have taken a ferry from Wellington to Christchurch since the airport is closed,” he said.

Earlier, he told The Star that all forms of communication with Malaysian students have been cut off as phone lines are down.

Dr Rujhan said there were 390 Malaysian students studying in Canterbury, Lincoln and Otago universities.

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