Bella Thorne Hairstyles is cool

Tuesday, April 27, 2010 | 0 comments

Bella Thorne Hairstyles is cool
Bella Thorne Hairstyles is cool Beautiful woman who loved caring for her hair

Latest Prom Hairstyles For the New Trend in Pictures

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Latest Prom Hairstyles

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Cool Prom Updos For Girls
Cool Prom Updos For Girls

Europe View: Ash cloud dominates Europe's sky

Tuesday, April 20, 2010 | 0 comments

Air travellers were facing at least two days of delays after a huge cloud of ash from an Icelandic volcano provoked the most extensive shutdown of airspace since the September 11 attacks in 2001.

How Stuff Works: Volcanoes


<b>SCREAM:</b> An Icelandic Coast Guard printout of the radar image of the three craters forming the volcano at Eyjafjallajokull.
SCREAM: An Icelandic Coast Guard printout of the radar image of the three craters forming the volcano at Eyjafjallajokull.
Photograph by: INGOLFUR JULIUSSON

Experts warned the fallout from the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in southeast Iceland, which covered the skies of northern Europe Thursday, could take several days to clear.

The eruption has already melted the 250-metre (820-feet) thick glacier around it, causing severe floods.

And with thousands stranded in airports around the world, the European air traffic control group Eurocontrol said planes could stay grounded for at least 48 hours.

It estimated that 5,000 to 6,000 flights were cancelled overall on Thursday as grey ash from the second major eruption in Iceland in less than a month blew across the north Atlantic, closing major airports more than 2,100 kilometres (1,300 miles) away.

And those closures meant that Europe-bound flights were grounded all around the world.

Eurocontrol predicted that at least half of the 600 daily flights between Europe and North America would be cancelled Friday.

Belgium, Britain, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden shut down their airspace because the ash threatened jet engines and visibility.

Finland, France, Germany, Portugal and Spain also experienced major disruption.

(Agencies)
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Kind Regards;
VK Pandey

Nepal watch from Most Visited Blog

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Let's Make final Preparation the Total Freedom!!

Let's make final preparation for the revolution of Nepal, For total freedom of Nepal.
Nepal is going to reach for the clouds. UCPN Maoist is preparing for the next People's war for the total freedom and full revolution.
As Mao said:

I have long aspired to reach for the clouds
And I again ascend Jinggang Mountain.
Coming from afar to view our old haunt,
I find new scenes replacing the old.
Everywhere orioles sing, swallows dart,
Streams babble
And the road mount skyward.
Once Huangyanggai is passed
No other perilous place calls for a glance.

Wind and thunder are stirring,
Flags and banners are flying
Wherever men live.
Thirty-eight years are fled
With a mere snap of the fingers.
We can clasp the moon in the Ninth Heaven
And seize turtles deep down in the Five Seas:
Nothing is hard in this world
If you dare to scale the heights.

Janayuddha Blog Report
Responsibility is ours. So make a total preparation to fight against the Reactionaries. To get training series from the YCL Nepal and PLA Nepal, contact to the local incharge of the UCPN Maoist.

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Kind Regards;
VK Pandey

Messy Short Haircuts Colors For Spring 2010

Monday, April 19, 2010 | 0 comments

Short Hairstyles Trends presents Messy short haircuts styles for spring 2010

Short hairstyles need some maintenance because it have to be cut regularly.But this is a great advantage because hair damages are less and you can experiment with your hair colors.For short hair in 2010 the best hair colors are blonde, red and brown.For blonde hairstyles the best color is the sand blonde and it is great for any type of skin.If you want red hair color here you can chose from an wide range of red colors as you can see in the photos bellow:


Messy short haircuts colors for spring 2010


Messy short haircuts for blonde hair for spring 2010


Messy short red haircuts colors for spring 2010

Latest Cool Beautiful Short Messy Haircuts 2010 - easy to achieve with a little planning

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Here are short haircuts for women - browse the short haircuts photos,messy short and straight haircuts pictures. Learn about the various haircut styles that are easy to achieve with a little planning. You have to chose the best haircuts and colors that will work the best for you.The best haircut for you should highlight your natural features and emphasize your beauty.Here are some haircuts that look beautiful on you and makes you feel great!

Latest Cool Beautiful Short Messy Haircuts 2010 - easy to achieve with a little planning
Latest Cool Beautiful Short Messy Haircuts 2010 - easy to achieve with a little planning
Latest Cool Beautiful Short Messy Haircuts 2010 - easy to achieve with a little planning
Latest Cool Beautiful Short Messy Haircuts 2010

Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010

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Styling short hair requires less time to maintained and you can have a lot of cute short hairaucts like the spikes, layers and waves, short straight hair and other many new trendy hairstyles .Short haircuts on women for this winter 2010 makes it easier for you with less time and products to style your hair. Short sexy hair is the trend and more woman are following after their favorite celebrities with cute short hair as in these pictures bellow of short blonde haircuts for 2010:

Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010
Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010
Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010
Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010
Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010
Cool Feminime Short Blonde Haircuts Hairstyles 2010

Adriana Lima Long Hairstyle

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Adriana Lima Long Hairstyle

Jessica Simpson Long Hairstyle

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Jessica Simpson Long Hairstyle

Alyssa Milano Long Hairstyle

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Alyssa Milano Long Hairstyle

India space program suffers setback as GSLV D3 launch fails

Friday, April 16, 2010 | 0 comments

ISRO GSLV D3: India space program suffers setback as GSLV D3 launch fails. India has been trying to be independent when t came to space technology. It made a great statement less than two years ago when it sent Chandrayan, India's first moon mission.
But yesterday when India believed that it had overcome bottlenecks to be on top of the world in space technology, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) suffered a major loss when its GSLV-D3 failed to lift.

India's dream to become sixth nation to successfully deploy cryogenic technology crashed down when Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-D3) carrying a GSAT4 and GAGAN satellite exploded from the Satish Dhawan space center at Sriharikota on Thursday.

The GSLV-D3 was to put the satellites into orbit, but signals stopped coming from the rocket within 505 seconds of its launch. The rocket had managed to reach 60 km height above sea level before it changed its designated path and crashed into the Bay of Bengal.
Dr. K. Radhakrishnan, chairman of Indian Space Research Organization said: "We are not sure whether the main cryogenic engine did ignite. We have to confirm after analyzing the data which is expected to take two or three days." This was his maiden launch as the head of ISRO and the second GSLV launch to fail in the past six instances. Radhakrishnan said that the launch of next GSLV with Indian made cryogenic engine would take place again within a year after errors are resolved.

This was the first launch using Indian made cryogenic engine, after India failed to import the technology from Russia in 1992, as US opposed the deal.

However, if the mission had been successful then India would have joined the group of countries to deploy cryogenic technology, in addition to US, Russia, China, France and Japan.
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Kind Regards;
VK Pandey

Terror risk is the main issue in Nuclear security summit

Tuesday, April 13, 2010 | 0 comments


The final communique and work plan for the upcoming Nuclear Security Summit are predictably vague and voluntary but are not the main point of the meeting

Nuclear fuel uranium plutonium

Containers holding used nuclear fuel being stored under water for up to five years to allow the fuel to cool down, before the uranium and plutonium is reprocessed. Photograph: Don McPhee

Washington is in the throes of grinding to a halt for the Nuclear Security Summit on Monday and Tuesday, when delegations from 47 countries, 38 of them led by heads of state or government, come to town to talk about locking up the world's "loose" nuclear material.
This is Act III of Barack Obama's nuclear strategy, following the publication of the Nuclear Posture Review and the signing of the New Start treaty with Russia. Act IV will come next month in New York, at the review of the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty.
The common aim is to contain the twin menace of nuclear proliferation and nuclear terrorism, which Obama has identified as the principal threats to his country and to global security. The NPR and Start have both underwhelmed arms control purists, but have generally been welcomed as positive steps towards disarmament given the political environment Obama is operating in.
The Nuclear Security Summit is likely to trigger the same mixed emotions. The copies of the summit's final communique and workplan that I've seen inevitably read like the lowest common denominator documents they are. The communique preamble, reads as follows:
Nuclear terrorism is one of the most challenging threats to international security, and strong nuclear security measures are the most effective means to prevent terrorists, criminals, or other unauthorized actors from acquiring nuclear materials.
In addition to our shared goals of nuclear disarmament, nuclear nonproliferation and peaceful uses of nuclear energy, we also all share the objective of nuclear security. Therefore those gathered here in Washington DC on April 13, 2010 commit to strengthen nuclear security and reduce the threat of nuclear terrorism. Success will require responsible national actions and sustained and effective international cooperation.
We welcome and join President Obama's call to secure all vulnerable nuclear material in four years, as we work together to enhance nuclear security.
That nails down the main formal aim of the exercise - official backing for the Obama deadline to secure the world's stocks of plutonium and highly enriched uranium (HEU). The communique puts "fundamental responsibility" for looking after the stockpiles in the hands of national governments, but asks for more support for the various international conventions on the issue, which mostly languish unratified or ignored, in particular the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material, and the International Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism.
The accompanying work plan goes into more detail, calling itself a political (voluntary) commitment to take concrete actions. But those actions include efforts to bring the two UN conventions into force as legally binding documents. The plan calls for more support for the IAEA so that the agency can help states tighten their own security through an evolving set of guidelines. Rich countries are also urged to help poorer countries to better guard fissile material in the research reactors dotted around the world. Also:
Participating States will consider, where appropriate, the consolidation of national sites where nuclear material is held;
and
Participating States will consider, where appropriate, converting highly-enriched-uranium fueled research reactors, and other nuclear facilitiesusing highly enriched uranium, to use low enriched uranium, where it is technically and economically feasible;

There is to be another summit at a yet-to-be-specified location in 2012, to assess progress, but the bar for that progress is set comfortably low. What is lacking, even in the UN conventions, is any 'gold standard' for what the security on a nuclear site should look like. (Ian Kearns at BASIC has written a paper called "Keeping the lid on", on what ought to come out of the summit) Even the IAEA security guidelines would not provide adequate protection against a determined terrorist assault on a university research reactor.

The main point of the exercise however is to get leaders from over 40 countries together to focus on an issue that is normally paid lip-service to. It sets a benchmark for good global citizenship, and more importantly a new benchmark for getting along well with Washington.
To that end, the world leaders have all been asked to bring something to the party, and that is where the real meat of the summit will be found. Chile shipped its HEU to the US last month, just in time for the summit. Other states, probably including Ukraine and Canada, will promise to convert HEU reactors to more proliferation-proof LEU. And the US and Russia will sign a deal on Monday to each dispose of 34 metric tons of plutonium removed from weapons by using it to generate nuclear power.
The invited leaders will also be feel some pressure to come up with some concrete achievement to bring back in 2012, and so orders will be given and officials chivvied to do something. It is the art of leveraging political capital, and there is no question Obama is putting a lot of capital, time and energy, into what is arguably the world's most serious but neglected security problem.

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Kind Regards;
VK Pandey

Nepal ko durdasa!! Cartoon about MRP!!

Saturday, April 10, 2010 | 0 comments


Nepal's Machine readable passport with the logo of India(Satyameba jayate)
 

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Kind Regards;
VK Pandey

Most visited blog news_-_Maoist rebels ambushed and killed 75 policemen

Friday, April 9, 2010 | 0 comments

A patrol from the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) was attacked at dawn in the state of Chhattisgarh and when reinforcements rushed to the scene they were surrounded by hundreds of heavily armed rebels.
In a hail of automatic gunfire and landmine explosions, 75 officers were killed, seven were injured and a heavily armoured anti-mine vehicle sent to retrieve the wounded was blown up, government officials and police told AFP.
Home Minister P. Chidambaram expressed shock at the bloodbath in the Maoist stronghold of Dantewada district and said the men had "walked into a trap."
"This shows the savage nature of the Maoists -- the brutality and savagery which they are capable of," Chidambaram told reporters in New Delhi.
Home Secretary Gopal Pillai told AFP the death toll was 75 and seven injured. A spokesman for the CRPF said this included 74 paramilitary forces and a local policeman.
The guerrillas have stepped up attacks in response to a government offensive against them that began late last year in the forests of the so-called "Red Corridor" that stretches across north and eastern India.
The insurgency began in the state of West Bengal in 1967 in the name of defending the rights of tribal groups, but attacks have since spread to 20 of India's 28 states.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has labelled the insurgency the biggest internal security threat to India.
Tribal groups and many rural areas have been left behind by the country's economic development, and the poverty and discontent with local government corruption is seen as a major source of Maoist support.
Chidambaram has previously said the government needs to tackle the root causes of the insurgency and he has offered talks with the rebels -- on condition they renounced violence beforehand.
Senior Maoist figures have said they will only talk if the governments puts an end to the national offensive, codenamed Operation Green Hunt, that involves 56,000 paramilitary forces in six states in addition to local police.
Prime Minister Singh expressed "shock and grief over the horrific incident," his spokesman said.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner offered the Indian government and its people "France's unreserved support and determination to remain at their sides in the battle against terrorism".
So far, New Delhi has resisted using the military against the insurgents, though the deaths on Tuesday prompted calls for a larger assault.
The right-wing opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said the attack was an assault on democracy and it urged the government to launch an "all-out offensive."
"There is no scope for discussion or debate anymore. First we have to hit them hard. This must be a fight to the finish," spokesman Rajiv Pratap Rudy told reporters.
Rahul Bedi, an analyst with Jane's Information Group, a specialist defence and intelligence publisher, said India would need to re-think Operation Green Hunt to counter the guerrilla tactics of the Maoists.
"India's police and paramilitary forces fighting the Maoists are under-equipped and they lack training," he told AFP. "India needs more people and more sophisticated weapons."
At the weekend, another 10 policemen were killed in a landmine attack in eastern Orissa state, leading Chidambaram to call the rebels "cowards" and the "first enemy" of the state.
In the previous biggest attack, Maoists killed 55 policemen in Chhattisgarh in March 2007.
Chronology of Maoist attacks in India
Low-level Maoist violence is an almost weekly occurrence in India, with security forces, schools, government offices, train tracks and police stations the usual targets.

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Kind Regards;
VK Pandey
 
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