01 April 2011

Rosie Huntington-Whiteley – Bikini Photoshoot

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Rosie Huntington-Whiteley – Photoshoot on the beach in Venice, Italy

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Kate Upton Shows Great Apples

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Hot model Kate Upton is in a new ad campaign that really shows off her killer tits and amazing body. This girl is stacked from head to toe and has a body that is to die for and someone realized a good ad campaign would be to push her tits up, make them bigger than normal and show off her great body. Sounds good to me. I have no idea what they are selling, but it makes me want to her blow a load which is a great response until I walk through a store, see the actual product the are selling and then have a strange flashback so before I know it I’m half naked and pulling on my dick in the middle of the store screaming that I want to cum on Kate Upton’s tits.

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Meet The Lovely and Talented: Sarah Jane

The new starlet of Bollywood

Oomph factor

Oomph factor
Sarah Jane Dias makes her debut in Bollywood with 'Game'.
Pics - Publicity stills, Yogen Shah and Text by Riddhi Doshi

Miss India

Miss India
Sarah won the Miss India title in 2007.

TV stint

TV stint
Sarah was a VJ with Channel V.

Bikini babe

Bikini babe
Sarah also featured in the Kingfisher calender.

Sari clad

Sari clad
Sarah has walked the ramp for a few top designers.

Catwalk

Catwalk

Game for movie?

Game for movie?

Bollywood debut

Bollywood debut

Stylish babe

Stylish babe

31 March 2011

Mizoram Literacy At 98.63%

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India's literacy level is 74%: census

New Delhi, Apr 1 : India's literacy level has increased by 9.21% in the past 10 years to reach 74.04%, according to provisional data of the 2011 census released in New Delhi on Thursday. According to the data, literates constitute 74% of the total population aged seven and above and illiterates form 26%. The literacy rate went up from 64.83% in 2001 to 74.04% in 2011 showing an increase of 9.21%.

Interestingly, females literacy level saw a significant jump as compared to males between 2001-2011.

While female literacy in 2001 stood at 53.67%, it has gone up to 65.46% in 2011. The male literacy in comparison rose from 75.26 to 82.14%.

Kerala with 93.91% continues to occupy the top position among states in the field of literacy while Mizoram's Serchhip (98.76%) and Aizawl (98.50%) recorded highest literacy rates among districts.

Lakshadweep followed Kerala with a literacy level of 92.28%, while Bihar remained at the bottom of the ladder with a literacy rate of 63.82% followed by Arunachal Pradesh at 66.95%.

Ten states and UTs viz. Kerala, Lakshadweep, Mizoram, Tripura, Goa, Daman and Diu, Puducherry, Chandigarh, NCT of Delhi and Andaman and Nicobar Islands achieved literacy rate of above 85%, the target set by the Planning Commission to be achieved by 2011-12.

The gap of 21.59 percentage points recorded between male and female literacy rates in 2001 census has reduced to 16.68 percentage points in 2011. Planning Commission has set up target of reducing this gap to 10 percentage points by 2011-12.

Mizoram With Population Of 10 Lakh Has 6 Lakh Mobile Users

t-mobile-g1Aizawl, Mar 31 :  The small northeastern state of Mizoram with a population of around 10 lakh, has over six lakh mobile phone users as of February 2011 against over 5.5 lakh in February 2010.

With the communication revolution having reached even the remotest corners of the state, mobile phone connections increased by 6.98% during the past one year - from 6,01,189 to 5,61,917, according to the latest economic survey, tabled in the assembly by chief minister Lal Thanhawla on Tuesday.

The expenses of the consumers on cellphones in the state would be at least six crore per month, assuming that each consumer paid Rs100 per month, state government sources said.

"Some subscribers pay over Rs2,000 per month," the sources said.

Among the six mobile service providers, Airtel has the largest subscribers at 2,30,000 followed by the BSNL with 1,32,436, the economic survey said.

HPC-D Very Upset with Divisive Attempts Of Mizoram Govt

HPC-D MizoramThe HPC-D slapped back on the some minister in the Mizo Government for the silly design of Mizoram government by way un-necessary propaganda in attempt to thwart the SoO.

The SoO was signed with faith between the Mizoram Government and HPC-D.

Read the Press Release:

Chinese Silk Will Wipe Out Assam Silk, Fears Brinda

By Sushanta Talukdar

Brinda_KaratRangiya,Mar 31 : Communist Party of India (Marxist) Polit Bureau member Brinda Karat on Wednesday expressed apprehension that the unique Muga silk of Assam would be wiped out soon as Chinese silk will come in a big way due to reduction of import duty on raw silk by the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government.

Ms. Karat, who has been in the State campaigning for her party candidates, also flayed the Tarun Gogoi-led Congress-Bodoland People's Front (BPF) coalition government for failing to demand a review of the decision by the Centre.

A member of the Rajya Sabha, Ms. Karat told journalists here that there has been a misconception that this will help the handloom sector. “It is not so. Handlooms are not using imported raw silk. So there should be no misconception on that. Certain powerloom units in Tamil Nadu and, to a certain extent, in Uttar Pradesh, may be benefited. But it will adversely affect the sericulture farmers. Chinese silk will come in a big way due to reduction in import duty on raw silk and our own farmers will suffer.

The unique Muga silk of Assam will be wiped out. There is no quantitative restriction on raw silk and once the Chinese silk starts entering, our raw silk producers, who are poor and small marginal farmers, will simply die. The UPA Government must review the decision. Unfortunately the Congrees-led coalition government in Assam has done nothing even though the State's unique Muga and traditional handloom silk industry will be severely hit,” she added.

Later addressing an election rally at Goreswar to campaign for the sitting party legislator from Rangiya Assembly constituency Ananta Deka, Ms. Karat urged the electorates in Assam to elect more and more representatives of her party to the Assembly to raise stronger voice for the poor and marginalised.

Holding party flags in their hands and sporting red caps, hundreds of CPI(M) workers, dancing to the beats of Bihu dhol and Kham (traditional drums of the Bodo tribe) and tunes of sifung (traditional Bodo flute) escorted Ms. Karat to the rally venue.

The senior CPI(M) leader also flayed the Tarun Gogoi government for not giving patta to traditional forest dwellers in the State under the Forest Rights Act.

Return Of A Prodigal

By Kaushik Deka

Prafulla Mahanta

Asom Gana Parishad leader Prafulla Kumar Mahanta

I can't tell you who my favourite author is as I don't want to offend anyone in Assam and I will not reveal an English name as I would not like be seen as someone who prefers another language over my mother tongue Assamese." This was Prafulla Kumar Mahanta reply when asked to name his favourite writer. This is the kind of political correctness and dogmatic parochialism which has helped the Leader of the Opposition in the Assam Assembly stay relevant in politics for almost four decades. After living in political obscurity for the last 10 years, the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) leader has emerged as the main challenger to the Tarun Gogoi-led Congress Government in the Assembly polls next month.

In 2001, Mahanta, two-time chief minister of Assam, lost power and the post of party president over allegations of two "extras" in his political and personal life-extra-judicial killings of family members of the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), also known as Secret Killings in Assam, and an extra-marital affair. In 2005, he was expelled from the AGP on charges of anti-party activities.

He fought the 2006 elections from Asom Gana Parishad (P) and was the only winning candidate of his party. From becoming the youngest chief minister at 32 in 1985, he became a pariah in Assam politics. Experts wrote the political obituary of the man who was Jyoti Basu's choice to become the prime minister. "In a meeting of the United Front held at Delhi's AssamBhavan in 1996, Jyoti Basu suggested my name as the prime minister. I politely declined as I was more committed to Assam," claims Mahanta, who is now aiming for a third-term as chief minister .

Three years ago, this seemed an impossible dream. The then AGP president, Brindaban Goswami, vowed never to allow Mahanta's return to the party. "It was tough but I took it as an opportunity to connect with people. I travelled across Assam and tried to understand where I went wrong," says the 58-year-old leader.

Goswami failed to connect with grassroots workers and Mahanta's loyalists inside the party forced him to quit as president. Chandra Mohan Patowari, who became agp president in 2008, brought the former chief minister back to the party. "Patowari had no option. Since 1979, politics of Assam has revolved around Mahanta," says a senior journalist.

But for Mahanta, returning to the party was not enough. He persuaded Patowari to vacate the post of Leader of the Opposition for him in September 2010. This was a masterstroke as it projected him as the AGP's chief ministerial candidate. His next move was to snap the alliance with the BJP. The BJP's gain in the last Assembly elections and the fear of losing Muslim votes made Mahanta wary of the saffron party. He denies his role in the split, claiming, "I wanted the agp to grow stronger on its own." He doesn't rule out a post-poll alliance the BJP.

Mahanta is now ready to take on the Congress on corruption charges and construction of big dams on the Brahmaputra and its tributaries. About his letter to former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi demanding big dams in Assam, he says, "We wanted multi-purpose small dams for flood control, irrigation and electricity. They are constructing dams only for generating electricity. Big dams cause havoc during earthquakes."

He does not talk about illegal infiltrators from Bangladesh, an issue which was the core of the Assam agitation. "As a chief minister, I could do little, as deportation of these foreigners needed the co-operation of Bangladesh. Only the Central Government can solve this," he says.

The allegation of his involvement in the Secret Killings still haunts him. "Three inquiry commissions that probed the Secret Killings did not find any evidence against me," he claims. Still, many in his own party don't want him as the next chief minister. "He is vindictive and those who had supported his ouster from the party are afraid that he will settle old scores," says a party leader. Sarbananda Sonowal, who had played a major role in Mahanta's expulsion from the agp has alread left to join the BJP.

Journalists don't have fond memories either, as many of them were jailed during his second term. "He used the state machinery to silence the voice of dissent," says a senior journalist. Mahanta doesn't agree. "I don't mind criticism. I have collected all newspaper cartoons of me and will publish them as a book someday," he says. He says he enjoys the jokes portraying him as a dumb head. "Some of them are really good," he says.

There may be charges of an extra-marital affair, but Mahanta swears by his commitment to his family. "Whatever free time I get, I spend with my family. My daughter complains that I did not give her enough time when I was the chief minister. Now I try to compensate," he says. He always wears white because it helps him stay calm and pure.

He will certainly need to stay calm in this electoral battle. The party faces severe fund crunch, dissidence over tickets and, unlike in the past, he is not the official chief ministerial candidate. But giving him company in the biggest battle of his career is an English book, Living With The Himalayan Masters by Swami Rama.