Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Editorial's buzz : loosing nepal's health like dodhara chandni bridge is loosing its bolts.


Dohara chandni which Links Nepal with the other Nepal. The bridge over Mahakali river that connects Nepal with the two VDCs across the Nepali border of Kanchanpur district, Dodhara and Chandani.
Like the nepal is loosing its health, like the perimeter of the nepal boundary is shrinking day by day and loosing the natural resources which could affect the nepal's economy,Dodhara chandni the Longest suspension bridge of asia is loosing its bolts and parts. The parts are been stolen by the careless people of near villages who use it 60 times (take or give) every day.

editorial's buzz: Few things you can do when you are sick..


So while being stuck in bed because you’ve got the flu, or your foot was operated on, there are always ways of amusing yourself. Some are rather obvious, like taking cold medicine. That’s always an enjoyable experience, right?[1] Here’s a few of the less obvious ways to amuse yourself when you’re sick as a dog:

1. The best way to amuse yourself when you’re sick as a dog is to build a play mountain out of the sheets and bed spread. Look around for items you can use as army men. Now just fill in the rest with your imagination. The really great thing is when your wife comes in and sees you playing like a little kid, she’ll only think you’re delirious from the medication and let you get away with it. Make sure to include plenty of >pyoo pyoo< noises when firing the imaginary guns. You won’t be able to do them any other time.

2. Cell phones are fun. You can play games on them. You can make prank phone calls. However, it’s very hard to dial *67 before making a phone call with a cell phone. So prank phone calls don’t work as well when the person picks up and says “Hi Mike.”


3. Speaking of toys,The stickers won’t stick to it anymore. So now it’s really easy to solve. All of the faces are black. Doesn’t matter how much I mix it up, it’s always solved.


4. Staring at the ceiling and making pictures with the little dots. I found Charlie Brown a couple of days ago. However, he morphed into Arnold Schwarzenegger while looking at him, so that may have been the Nyquil. I don’t know.

5. Again, staring at something can be quite amusing. In this case I was staring at a digital frame. I had it loaded with pictures of the in-laws and pictures of farm animals. After a while the two started merging in my brain. Was rather hilarious to me.

6. Realizing you can sing much lower.

7. Reading is always a great way to pass the time when you’re sick. Of course, you might want to stay away from the fantasy and horror books. With the medicine and the delirium of a fever, you start imagining some of the stories coming true. Can be rather scary. This is one of those few times a guy is allowed to read a romance novel.

8. Write a book. Since you’re just laying there, you might as well make good use of the time. Write a book. Just realize that when you finally get well again you will not be able to read your handwriting. And if you use the “writing it in my head” method, also realize that your “sick” head and “well” head are two different things. Therefore, your “well” head won’t remember anything that your “sick” head did anyway.







What do you like to do to keep yourself amused when you’re sick as a dog?

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Editorial's buzz: Tigers dont brush there teeth!!


Mao Zedong, the Communist leader of China from 1949 until his death in 1976, had strange habits. For one, he never brushed his teeth. In response to his doctor's please to brush, Mao reportedly replied "A Tiger never brushes his teeth".and another similar habits was that he never took bath for his whole life though he was a very good swimmer.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

High Cholesterol is the Secret Behind Mona Lisa's Smile


Mona Lisa's famous smile may have been the result of fatty acids gathered around her eye socket suggesting her high cholesterol levels, according to an Italian medical expert.

Vito Franco, Professor of Pathological Anatomy at the University of Palermo, who has been studying art masterpieces for evidence of disease and illness, alleged some of the world's greatest works of art revealed signs of illness.

"I look at art with a different eye from an art expert, much as a mathematician listens to music in a different way from a music critic," Times Online quoted him as saying.

Professor Franco, who presented his findings at a European congress on human pathology in Florence, said he had found evidence of a range of afflictions in not only aristocrats but also Madonnas, angels and mythical heroes.

The Madonna del Parto by Piero della Francesca appears to have a goitre, or swelling of the thyroid gland, on her neck "typical of people who drank water from a well in certain areas" in medieval times, it was claimed.

Professor Franco also claims that Michelangelo's own ailment, that he diagnoses as kidney stones, seem to come to surface in Raphael's School of Athens where he appears with strangely swollen and knobbly knees.

Hitler still troubling america by his skull!


The controversy surrounding Adolf Hitler's skull fragments is a little embarrassing for the Russian secret services. In 2000 they presented a skull fragment and a piece of jawbone that they claimed were the remains of the Nazi leader. It was an attempt to quash outlandish rumors that he had escaped alive at the end of World War II.

But in October US researchers presented the results of DNA tests on the skull and said it definitely didn't belong to the dictator because it was from a female. Scientists had already harbored doubts about the authenticity of the piece of bone because it was thinner than a male's usually is.

"The bone seemed very thin -- male bone tends to be more robust. It corresponds to a woman between the ages of 20 and 40," said Nick Bellantoni of the University of Connecticut. The position of the exit wound at the back of the skull also made scientists suspicious because eyewitnesses said Hitler had committed suicide by firing into his right temple.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Editorial's buzz : humans are clever?


As we the animals or in a great word "humans" call our self human.Are we ?
I want to put on a question to you, don't panic it is very simple..
Q)who is the smartest animal in the earth?

I am sure you know it and your brain is shouting that we, we the humans are the smartest people in the earth..but please think once that, who declared this thing that we are the smartest one???

if u wanna buzz plz comment.....haha

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Nepal's politics guys you can learn some, by the movie"The Pianist"

The Pianist is an incredible film in many aspects. Roman Polanski's account of the survival of the pianist, Wladyslaw Szpilman, is a document about how one man can overcome the worst possible situations in a world gone completely mad around him.

The only fault one can find with the adaptation of Mr. Szpilman's story by playwright Ronald Harwood, is the fact that we never get to know the real Wladyslaw Szpilman, the man, as some of the comments made to this forum also have indicated.

There is a very interesting point raised by the the pianist's father who upon reading something in the paper, comments about how the Americans have forgotten them. Well, not only the Americans, but the rest of the world would not raise a finger to do anything for the people that were being imprisoned and made to live in the confined area of Warsaw. The exterminating camps will come later.

What is amazing in the film, is the frankness in which director Polanski portrays the duplicity of some Jews in the ghetto. The fact that Jews were used to control other Jews is mind boggling, but it was a fact, and it's treated here matter of factly. Had this been made by an American director, this aspect would have never surfaced at all. Yet, Mr. Polanski and Mr. Harewood show us that all was not as noble and dignified as some other films have treated this ugly side of war.

Wladyslaw Szpilman, as played by Adrien Brody, is puzzling sometimes, in that we never get to know what's in his mind. He's a man intent in not dying, but he's not a fighter. He accepts the kindness extended to him. He never offers to do anything other than keep on hiding, which is a human instinct. He will never fight side by side with the real heroes of the ghetto uprising. His role is simply to witness the battle from his vantage point in one of the safe houses across the street from where the action takes place.

Adrien Brody is an interesting actor to watch. As the pianist of the story he exudes intelligence. There is a scene where Szpilman, in one of the safe houses he is taken, discovers an upright piano. One can see the music in his head and he can't contain himself in moving his fingers outside the closed instrument playing the glorious music from which he can only imagine what it will sound in his mind.

The supporting cast is excellent. Frank Findlay, a magnificent English actor is the father of the pianist and Maureen Lipman, another veteran of the stage, plays the mother with refined dignity.

In watching this film one can only shudder at the thought of another conflict that is currently brewing in front of our eyes. We wonder if the leaders of the different factions could be made to sit through a showing of The Pianist to make them realize that war is hell.