Artefacts dating to the Harappan era have been excavated in Karanpura
of Hanumangarh district in Rajasthan, the first time remains of the
Indus Valley Civilisation have been found in this part. "The excavation
has brought to light house complexes built of mud bricks of both Early
(3300-2600 Before Common Era) and Mature (2600-1900 BCE) Harappan
periods. Even though scattered remains and fragments of baked bricks are
available,Cheap offerscellphonecases dolls
from your photos. it was not found in any building," said
Archaeological Survey of India superintending archaeologist V.Choose
from the largest selection of turquoisebeads in
the world.S. Prabhakar. "The presence of bichrome ware consisting of
red ware, decorated with black and white-coloured painted motifs, is
also noticed from the Early Harappan period, a few of which continues
during the Mature Harappan period," he added. "Presence of rhinoceros
bones point to the marshy environment the Harappans were accustomed to,"
said Prabhakar.
Harappan pottery along with terracotta bangles,
grinding stone fragments, beads of agate and an animal terracotta
figurine were excavated. Numerous copper artefacts reveal trade ties
people here had with other civilisations.
Rajasthan IAS body
representatives met chief secretary demanding justice for IAS officer
Durga Shakti Nagpal who was suspended by chief minister Akhilesh Yadav
for allegedly demolishing a mosque. The Rajasthan IAS Association has
backed their counterpart in the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh. The
media, though, reported the suspension as a punishment when she took
stern action against the mining mafia in Greater Noida. The Association
representatives met chief secretary CK Mathew on Monday and requested
him to forward a proposal to the Department of Personnel and Training
(DOPT) demanding justice for the officer who was posted as the sub
divisional magistrate in Gautam Budha Nagar.
School teachers in
Rajasthan have opposed the HRD ministrys order directing them to taste
the food prepared for Mid-Day Meal (MDM), before it is served to
students in government schools. The teachers have argued that tasting
food is neither a part of their job nor are they in any way responsible
for substandard food being cooked or served in schools. It was never our
job and we are not responsible if the food is bad in quality. It is the
responsibility of the cook who has to be given training by the
government, said Shashi Bhushan Sharma, additional general secretary,
All Rajasthan Primary and Secondary Teachers Association.
Scores
of activists of Sri Rajput Karni Sena on Tuesday held a protest in
Jaipur demanding the withdrawal of the TV serial "Jodhaa Akbar",
alleging the period drama had "distorted" the history of the Rajputs.
The SRKS activists gathered outside the Pink Square Mall where Bollywood
stars Akshay Kumar and Sonakshi Sinha were present for promotion of
their new film 'Once Upon a Time in Mumbai Dobara', and demanded that
the show should be stopped airing on Zee TV. "The character 'Jodhaa', as
depicted in the serial, had never existed in Rajput history of
Rajasthan nor with Akbar, the outfit's convenor Lokendra Singh Kalvi
said.
Part of the reason for the perceived lackluster
improvements in attractiveness may be that one-third of participants
only had their upper face treated. More dramatic anti-aging effects were
seen among those individuals who had upper and lower facial surgery.
More study is needed to confirm the findings, Zimm notes.
New
York City facial plastic surgeon David Rosenberg, MD says that there is
more to facial plastic surgery than looking younger.A highriskmerchantaccount concept
that would double as a quick charge station for gadgets. "You don't
need to look young to look good," he says. "It's about feeling more like
yourself and getting back what you had.You've probably seen cellphonecases at
some point." Put another way: cosmetic surgery is about how you feel
about yourself, not about how others perceive you. "The new study missed
the effect on the patient," he says. "It's not about what a
non-interested party thinks, it's about making the individual feel
better about their appearance," he says.
"While 3.1 years is not
really a WOW' when you consider the cost, risks, and time out of work
involved with undergoing cosmetic surgery, there are many other benefits
to consider. A lot of patients go under the knife with the desire to
look like a natural and refreshed version of themselves, rather than
having an overpulled, distorted appearance that makes them look like a
different person," says Lewis. So for some, taking a few years off may
be just enough of an improvement to make them happy.
But what
about the self-esteem boost that comes with having successful facial
plastic surgery? "Even if total strangers looking at you in a 2-D
photograph only think you look a few years younger, it's what you see in
the mirror that really counts. When the droopy skin is gone from your
upper eyelids, or there is less flesh to pinch under your chin, you're
going to feel younger and more attractive."
Almost a decade
later, the co-founder and vice-chairman of RAK Pearls is finally seeing
the fruits of his labours with the first auction of cultured pearls from
RAKs oyster farm off the coast of Ras Al Kaimah, one of seven emirates
that make up the United Arab Emirates.We offer the biggest collection of
old masters that can be turned into hand painted cleanersydney on canvas.
Were
seeing today a revival of a culture, a treasure thats been lost to us
for many, many years, al-Suwaidi told Reuters in an interview.
Natural
pearl diving was once the main income of many families in the region.
But it vanished after World War One with the development of vast oil
reserves in the Gulf and the rise of competition from Japanese cultured
pearls.
RAK Pearls, the regions only cultured pearl producer,
now has some 40,000 oysters bedded down in the Gulfs briny waters and in
June the Dubai Multi Commodities Centre Authority (DMCC) held an
exclusive auction for some of its produce.
Dubai has been a
trading centre of pearls for many years but this is the first time that
we auction locally cultivated pearls with a quality that surpasses
anything that youve seen farmed in countries like China and Japan, DMCC
Executive Vice Chairman Ahmed bin Sulayem said.
The value of
traded natural and cultured pearls through nearby Dubai grew by an
average 25% annually between 2003 and 2011 to hit $30mn a year in the
last few years, while volumes have risen 10% annually, according to
Franco Bosoni, director of commodity services at DMCC.
Read the full products at http://www.granitetrade.net/.
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