REPORTER POST Last Page Ranchi Lauren Gottlieb to play a photographer in a Punjabi film Mumbai : Actress Lauren Gottlieb, who was last seen in Ashish R. Mohan's directorial venture "Welcome To Karachi", will now be seen playing a photographer in a Punjabi film titled "Ambarsariya". Confirming the news, Lauren said: "Yes, I have a film called 'Ambarsariya' with Tips in which I play a photographer. It will also allow me to be what I am in real life." Produced by Ramesh Taurani, the film will go on floors from March and will be shot in Punjab. The actress, a former contestant on the US reality series "So You Think You Can Dance professional dancer", says dance is love and responsibility for her. "For me, dance is love and responsibility. I have reached the peak because of my dancing capabilities. Dance has given me a lot, whether it is in the US or India. I also bagged a Bollywood film due to my dancing skills and received praise from people," said the actress who made her Bollywood debut with 2013 film "ABCD: Any Body Can Dance". 14 JUNE 2015 8 SUNDAY Richa Chadda's first look from 'Cabaret' revealed Mumbai : Richa Chadha's first look from Pooja Bhatt's upcoming film "Cabaret" has been unveiled. The actress is seen flaunting her toned body in a figure revealing outfit. In the photograhs shared, the "Fukrey" star was seen wearing a black long skirt with thigh high slit revealing her legs. She teamed the skirt with a midriff revealing black top. The look was completed with a big maang tika and smokey eyes. According to sources, Richa, who is currently in Jaipur shooting for "Cabaret", will soon be finishing her first schedule of the film. "Cabaret", as the name suggests, is based on a dance, which Richa has been extensively learning and practicing for a long time. However, speculation is rife that the film is inspired by yesteryear actress and cabaret queen Helen’s life. Richa's character is a dancer from small town who goes has a dream to go big. According to Pooja, this film will give Richa a new image. Sophia Bush, Jesse Dogs shun people unkind Lee Soffer part ways to their owners: Study Tokyo : A team of Japanese scientists have discovered that dogs tend to shun people who are unfriendly or unkind towards their owners, Japanese economic daily Nikkei reported on Friday. The group, led by Kazuo Fujita, a professor at Kyoto University, conducted an experiment involving dogs, their owners and two strang- ers. The scientists used 54 dogs aged between seven months and 14 years who they divided into three groups of 18 each. In one of the trials, the dog's owner pretended to have trouble opening the lid of a box. He then asked one of the other two people for help. This person refused to do so and looked away. After this scene was played out, the Los Angeles : Actress Sophia Bush and her "Chicago P.D." costar Jesse Lee Soffer have split after a year of dating. "Sophia and Jesse just didn't work out. They dated for about a year and then grew apart. They're still friends though," a source told justjared. com, reports femalefirst.co.uk. Bush, who was previously mar- ried to Chad Michael Murray, and Soffer initially kept their romance quiet and it only emerged they were dating last August. A source said at the time: "They've (Bush and Soffer) been secretly dating for over three months, but only their close friends knew. Jesse is super-sweet and they are really cute together." Breathing exercise improves lung function in spinal disease High dietary salt may prevent weight gain! London : Just eight weeks of inspiratory muscle training (IMT) - therapeutic breathing exercises - result in greater improvement in lung function than conventional treatment options in patients with a form of spine arthritis, new research has found. Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a painful and progressive form of arthritis caused by chronic inflammation of the joints in the spine, a condition often associated with breathing difficulties. "We assessed resting pulmonary function and ran cardiopulmonary exercise tests at the start and end of the study and saw significant improvements across all measures of lung function in the group undergoing IMT," said study investigator Razvan Dragoi from the Victor Babes University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania. "When you compare these findings with the conventional exercise group -- which saw small, non-significant improvements -- it is clear that adding IMT to an exercise programme has clear health benefits for patients with AS," Dragoi noted. New York : Turning conventional dietary wisdom on its head, scientists have found that adding high salt to a high-fat diet may actually prevent weight gain. As exciting as this may sound to fast food lovers, the researchers cautioned that very high levels of dietary salt are associated with increased risk for cardiovascular disease in humans. Increased sodium suppresses weight gain by reducing efficiency of the digestive tract to extract calories from food, the study conducted in mice showed. "People focus on how much fat or sugar is in the food they eat, but something that has nothing to do with caloric content - sodium - has an even bigger effect on weight gain," said co-senior author of the study Justin Grobe, assistant professor at University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine in the US. "The findings also suggest that public health efforts to continue lowering sodium intake may have unexpected and unintended consequences," Grobe said in the study published in the journal Scientific Reports. The researchers started the study with the hypothesis that fat and salt, both being tasty to humans, would act together to increase food consumption and promote weight gain. They tested the idea by feeding groups of mice different diets: normal chow or high-fat chow with varying levels of salt (0.25 to four percent). To their surprise, the mice on the high-fat diet with the lowest salt gained the most weight, about 15 grams over 16 weeks, while animals on the high-fat, highest salt diet had low weight gain that was similar to the mice on normal chow diet, about five grams. The researchers found that varying levels of salt had a significant effect on digestive efficiency - the amount of fat from the diet that is absorbed by the body. "This suppression of weight gain with increased sodium was due to a reduced efficiency of the digestive tract to extract calories from the food that was consumed," Grobe said. It is possible that this result explains the wellknown digestive ill effects of certain fast foods that are high in both fat and salt, he said. two unfamiliar people offered food to the dog. Eleven out of the 18 canines refused to take the food. This exercise was done with each of the dogs four times. Fujita explained that the results show that dogs react to people's behaviour towards their owners and that the study could contribute to gaining an understanding into dogs' behaviour, the newspaper said. In the second experiment, the person who was asked for help took the box to open the lid. However, the team explained that it was not possible to confirm whether the dogs preferred the person who cooperated or not. In the third group, none of the people interacted. The team, that now wants to conduct the experiment with cats, told Nikkei that monkeys too exhibit similar behaviour. Rapper YG shot thrice outside recording studio Los Angeles : Rapper YG was shot "three times in the hip" at a recording studio here but is doing fine. The incident took place on Frinday morning at around 1:45 a.m. in Studio City, reports TMZ.com. Somehow the25-year-old rapper was able to get in his car and someone from his group drove him to a nearby hospital. Cops were called and found multiple shell casings and blood on the sidewalk. Police went to the hospital to interview the "Backflip" rapper but, according to the website, he was "very uncooperative." The rapper's representative says that the injuries are not life threatening, and he's doing fine. You can include pork in recipe to lower BP Washington : If you are following a diet to lower blood pressure, you may expand your protein options to include lean, unprocessed pork, new research suggests. The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet is recommended to reduce blood pressure and is focused on the increased consumption of fruits and vegetables, whole-grains, low-fat dairy products, nuts, poultry and fish, while reducing fats, red meats, including pork, and added sugars. "If people have to rely only on fish and chicken their diet choices can be limited and our results support that lean pork may be a viable option for people who are consuming a DASH diet without compromising the effectiveness of the diet plan," said co-author Drew Sayer, doctoral student in nutrition science at Purdue University in the US. The study that appeared in American Jour- nal of Clinical Nutrition compared lean, unprocessed pork with chicken and fish as the predominant protein source in a DASH-style diet. The consumption of these DASH-style diets for six weeks reduced all measures of blood pressure with no differences in responses between DASH with chicken and fish and DASH with pork, the study found. Printer/Publisher/Owner: Nityanand Shukla, B/3 Mukul Kunj, Near BSV School,Niwaranpur, Doranda,Ranchi -834002 (Jharkhand). E mail-rpost2014@gmail.com, Printed at Farooqui Tanzeem, 3rd Floor, Anjuman Plaza, Main Road, Ranchi,834001 Editor: Nityanand Shukla, M-9431169656. RNI Title code: JHAENG00063
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