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People being used**Things being Loved

Monday, June 15, 2009

"A man was polishing his new car; his 4 yr old son picked up a stone & scratched on the side of the car. In anger, the furious Man took his child's hand & hit it many times, not realizing he was using a wrench. At the hospital, the child lost all his fingers due to multiple fractures. When the child saw his father....with painful eyes he asked 'Dad when will my fingers grow back?' The man was so hurt and speechless. He went back to the car and kicked it many times. Devastated by his own actions... sitting in front of the car he looked at the scratches, His son had written 'LOVE YOU DAD'. Â Next day that man committed suicide...Anger and Love have no limits... Always remember..... " Things are to be used and people are to be loved " but
the problem in today's world is.... " People are being USED & Things are being LOVED."

Somebody emailed me the above story. I'm sure you will like it. To me, this story once again reminds how precious people are.

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My Nepal My Pride

Tuesday, June 9, 2009


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Picture Story

Monday, May 4, 2009



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A century off 37 balls with Tendulkar's bat

Saturday, May 2, 2009



Posted by George Binoy in Pakistan cricket

When Shahid Afridi walked out to bat for the first time in a one-day international, against Sri Lanka in Nairobi in 1996, the bat in his hands once belonged to someone who had played many memorable innings, and several of them against Pakistan. It had belonged to Sachin Tendulkar and found its way to Afridi via Waqar Younis, who said “it could prove lucky as it belonged to a great player”. It was lucky indeed for Afridi reeled off the fastest ODI century off 37 balls, a record that still stands.

“Waqar gave me the bat in Nairobi where I made my debut for Pakistan. He told me Tendulkar had given him the bat and asked him to make similar model bats from Sialkot,” Afridi told PTI. “That record [fastest hundred] still stands today and makes me proud. I also got other good scores with this particular bat so it is very valuable for me and I have no intention to auction it off to anyone.”

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Forecaster says recession is almost over

Thursday, April 30, 2009


April 30, 2009

Ali Velshi | Bio
CNN Chief Business Correspondent

One of America’s most reliable economic forecasters says the current recession – the longest in half a century - will end this year, possibly as early as this summer.

Lakshman Achuthan, Managing Director at the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI), was one of the first to declare that the US was in a recession. Now he’s one of the first to say its ending. ECRI, he says, is the research group in the world that studies business cycle recessions and recoveries for a living, and has a near-perfect record of predicting. They do it by crunching various pieces of data and creating “leading indicators” which show where the economy is headed

The indicator that looks the furthest into the future actually started showing signs of future growth as early as last November, as the worst of the credit crisis started to ease. Another indicator, with a shorter lead-time into the future, started pointing toward growth in early December. Both indicators have showed steady growth since then and that, says Achuthan, is enough data for him to say this recession is ending. That’s because, over the last 75 years, when those indicators turn up, the recession ends within four months. No exceptions, says Achuthan.

Achuthan points out that these same indicators predicted the current recession, by turning downward BEFORE the recession began. Specifically, Achuthan notes, his leading indicators turned downward in Early June, 2007; the current recession “officially” began in December of that year. Because of that, Achuthan was able to announce that the US was in recession some NINE MONTHS before the National Bureau of Economic Research, which is the official arbiter of recessions, did.

But don’t buy the party supplies just yet. The end of a recession simply means that things will start becoming “less negative.” A top adviser to President Obama says the economy will again shrink in the 2nd quarter of this year – that’s the period we’re in now. But Achuthan declaration doesn’t really counter that – he doesn’t think recovery will start until the 3rd quarter – sometime after June.

But how do you have a recovery if job losses continue? The Labor Department says 6,300,000 people are now drawing unemployment benefits – that’s a record. And a number greater than that are unemployed but NOT collecting benefits, because their benefits have run out.

Achuthan worries that during a recession, we all become more productive, by working with less (we fill in when our colleagues are laid-off, for instance), and so you don’t need to hire all of those people back for the economy to recover. The danger of that is that many millions of people who have lost their jobs may not get them back in this economy – and that can create great disparity in society – “haves” who have more; “have nots” who have less.
(Source:http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2009/04/30/forecaster-says-recession-is-almost-over/)

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Bikash Parajuli..Inventor of Plane-Danfe In Nepal

Friday, April 24, 2009

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International students face increased challenges in job market

Thursday, April 23, 2009


Published: Tuesday, April 21, 2009

While the economy makes finding an occupation tough for most people, international students may have more difficulties in the job market than their domestic counterparts.


As the job market has shrunk, so have the post-graduation opportunities for international students, said Carla Coppi, interim director of international programs and services. New regulations set by the immigration service have further complicated matters for the job-seeking students.


“The new immigration rules, the bad economy and the downturn in employment possibilities couldn’t come at a worse time for the international scholar,” she said.


One of these rules forces international students to find a job within 90 days of graduation; if they are unable to, they are required to return to their home countries, she said.


Because of the concerns voiced by students, a workshop was organized to focus on how international students can get jobs in the United States.


The workshop will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. today in the University Museum Auditorium in Faner Hall. Three speakers will talk to students about market trends and ways to explore their own strengths and skills, as well as give them tips on how to make themselves more marketable.


Naseem Ahmed, coordinator of educational programs and women and international development, helped plan the event.


“I felt that international students were feeling less confident and had a lot of concerns about whether they could land a job,” she said.


Ahmed said she asked Career Services if a representative could speak at the workshop about the skills needed for jobs, and locations where jobs might now be.


The other two speakers are career counselors in the development and resource clinic of the department of psychology. They will speak about more psychological aspects, she said, such as job stress and how people can sell themselves as a potential employees.


Ahmed said she hopes students can come away from the workshop with an idea of where they can go to ask further questions or set up an appointment to polish their interview skills.


Srilekha Achanta, a graduate student from India studying electrical and computer engineering, said the workshop could be a great help.


Students will leave the workshop with a better understanding of their own minds as well as current figures in the economy, she said.


She said many international students are making the decision to continue their education. They often choose to go to graduate school rather than face a difficult job search and the possibility of being forced to return home, she said.


Coppi said she tries to keep herself and the students optimistic. She said she encourages them to look at the things they have already accomplished, such as being courageous enough to leave their families and homes to attend school in the United States.


She said the job market will eventually improve for all students, but it is hard to know when the change will come.


“I believe that what goes down must come up,” she said. “I sure hope so, for all of our sakes.”


Source:DE, Carbondale,IL

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