Hundreds take part in ‘Ram Baraat’ in Agra

Agra, Sept 17 (ANI): Hundreds of people here took part in ‘Ram Baraat’, which is a part of the Ramlila celebrations.

Jeetander Chauhan, a worker, who erected the decorations for the celebrations, said that people were happy that god was among them.

“We are feeling that Lord Ram has appeared among us. Hundreds of people have come to witness this famous god’s marriage,” said Chauhan.

Maya Sharma, a devotee, said that women were also excited about this deity marriage.

“I’m really feeling good that ‘Baraat’ procession of Lord Rama and Sita is taking place. We are feeling good that god himself is present here,” said Sharma.

Every year, a new locality is chosen in Agra and festivities last for three days and the area is elaborately decorated with lights and flowers. The area is given a major face-lift befitting the venue for the divine marriage.

The marriage procession sees marriage between saint Shaligram who represents Lord Ram and holy Basil plant, which represents Sita, his wife.

The place is lit up with thousands of lights and non-stop music. The cinema theatres run film shows throughout the night to accommodate the migratory crowd.

These three days are like a carnival when people from all walks of life come together to have a great time.

The history of Ram Baraat is said to be around 125 years old, when Lala Kokamal, a cloth merchant, started the tradition of three-day festivities, revolving around the royal wedding. (ANI)

Oldest-known fiber materials used by humans date back to 34,000 years

Washington, September 11 (ANI): A team of archaeologists and paleobiologists has discovered flax fibers that are more than 34,000 years old, making them the oldest fibers known to have been used by humans.

The fibers were discovered during systematic excavations in a cave in the Republic of Georgia.

The flax, which would have been collected from the wild and not farmed, could have been used to make linen and thread, according to the researchers.

The cloth and thread would then have been used to fashion garments for warmth, sew leather pieces, make cloths, or tie together packs that might have aided the mobility of our ancient ancestors from one camp to another.

“This was a critical invention for early humans. They might have used this fiber to create parts of clothing, ropes, or baskets-for items that were mainly used for domestic activities,” said Ofer Bar-Yosef of the Harvard University, who jointly led the research with George Grant MacCurdy and Janet G. B. MacCurdy.

“We know that this is wild flax that grew in the vicinity of the cave and was exploited intensively or extensively by modern humans,” he added.

The items created with these fibers increased early humans chances of survival and mobility in the harsh conditions of this hilly region.

The flax fibers could have been used to sew hides together for clothing and shoes, to create the warmth necessary to endure cold weather.

They might have also been used to make packs for carrying essentials, which would have increased and eased mobility, offering a great advantage to a hunter-gatherer society.

Some of the fibers were twisted, indicating they were used to make ropes or strings. Others had been dyed.

Early humans used the plants in the area to color the fabric or threads made from the flax.

Today, these fibers are not visible to the eye, because the garments and items sewed together with the flax have long ago disintegrated.

Bar-Yosef, Eliso Kvavadze of the Institute of Paleobiology, and colleagues, discovered the fibers by examining samples of clay retrieved from different layers of the cave under a microscope.

Bar-Yosef and his team used radiocarbon dating to date the layers of the cave as they dug the site, revealing the age of the clay samples in which the fibers were found.

Flax fibers were also found in the layers that dated to about 21,000 and 13,000 years ago. (ANI)

1st century A.D. colossal statue of Greek God Apollo unearthed in Turkey

Washington, September 9 (ANI): Italian archaeologists have unearthed a 1st century A.D. colossal statue of Apollo, the Greek god of the sun, light, music and poetry, from white calcified cliffs in southwestern Turkey.

Colossal statues were very popular in antiquity, as evidenced by the lost giant statues of the Colossus of Rhodes and the Colossus of Nero.

Most of them vanished long ago, with their material re-used in other building projects.

“This colossal statue of Apollo is really a unique finding. Such statues are extremely rare in Asia Minor. Only a dozen still survive,” team leader Francesco D’Andria, director of the Institute of Archaeological Heritage, Monuments and Sites at Italy’s National Research Council in Lecce, told Discovery News.

Split in two huge marble fragments, divided along the bust and the lower part of the sculpture, the 1st century A.D. statue was unearthed at the World Heritage Site of Hierapolis, now called Pamukkale.

Founded around 190 B.C. by Eumenes II, King of Pergamum (197 B.C.-159 B.C.), Hierapolis was given over to Rome in 133 B.C.

The Hellenistic city grew into a flourishing Roman city, with temples, a theatre and popular sacred hot springs, believed to have healing properties.

Standing at more than four meters (13 feet) in height, the newly discovered statue, which is missing the head and the arms, might have been one of the most impressive sights in the city.

“It depicts the Greek god Apollo sitting on a throne and holding the cithara with his left arms. The god wears a wonderfully draped tunic. The cloth has a transparency effect to reveal mighty muscles,” said D’Andria.

Inspired by the great classical masterpieces, the artist did not pay the same peculiar attention to the back of the statue.

“This shows that the sculpture was placed against a wall and was supposed to be seen only frontally,” D’Andria noted.

Standing in all its massive regality, the statue was particularly important for the city, since Apollo was venerated as Hierapolis’ divine founder.

The colossal statue was probably the main sculpture at the sanctuary of Apollo, which was intentionally built over an active fault.

“Hierapolis is a unique site, and archaeologists are bringing to light incredible findings each year. As with all the other ancient buildings, the statue will be virtually reconstructed in full detail,” Francesco Gabellone, an architect at the National Research Council in Lecce, told Discovery News. (ANI)

‘The American’ leading al Qaeda in Somalia awaits terrorism charges back home

Washington, Sep 5 (ANI): The man who grew up in Daphne, Alabama, as Omar Hammami, but is now reported to be a member of al Qaeda-linked Somali terrorist group al-Shabaab under the name Abu Mansour al-Amriki, told a school newspaper after 9/11 attacks that it was “difficult to believe a Muslim could have done this”.

According to FOX News, eight years later he is professing to launch attacks himself and calling on others to join the fight, as terror-related charges await him at home in Alabama.

Abu Mansour al-Amriki or “The American” has become one of the most recognizable and outspoken voices of terrorist propaganda, the report said.

He has been in war-torn Somalia for several years, fighting the secular government there with a group known as al-Shabaab, which has ties to Al Qaeda and was labeled a terrorist organization by the US Government last year, but only recently has he taken on a starring and jarring role in al-Shabaab’s outreach efforts the report added.

The FBI has been looking into him for several years. In fact, a grand jury in Mobile, Alabama., has already indicted him on charges of providing material support to terrorists, a source said.

Al-Amriki first surfaced in October 2007, when Al-Jazeera TV aired a report about the “common goal” of al Qaeda and hard-line militants in Somalia. The report described al-Amriki as a fighter and military instructor, but he concealed his face with a cloth wrap throughout the report.

In April, he showed his face for the first time, during a highly polished, 30-minute recruitment video posted online. It featured anti-American hip-hop and sporadic images of Osama bin Laden.

In the video, he purportedly led a group of al-Shabaab militants in an ambush of pro-government forces in Somalia.

Speaking about one man killed in the fight, he said: “We need more like him, so if you can encourage more of your children and more of your neighbors, anyone around, to send people like him to this jihad, it would be a great asset for us.” (ANI)

Fabric bags are growing popular in Kashmir

Srinagar, Aug 31 (ANI): People are lapping up environment-friendly fabric bags in Srinagar, which they say is reusable and has many benefits.

With the two-month old ban on plastic bags, jute, fabric or recycled paper carrier bags have now become a common sight in the valley.

People can be seen carrying their shopping in jute or other fabric carrier bags.

With the increased demand, sellers are happy to earn a few extra bucks on these eco-friendly bags.

Residents are happy with the government initiative, which is helping to make their picturesque town cleaner and healthier.

“People like fabric bags. Earlier, people used to throw polythene bags anywhere. It used to clog drains forcing and dirty water would flow over. It used to help in spreading diseases.

The government has done a good job by banning it. The demand for plastic bags has decreased a lot,” said Inayatullah Dar, a resident.

The drive has also helped to generate employment for people who are now making these fabric bags from cloth and recycled paper, including newspapers.

“In the process, the cottage industry has started looking up. Now people are stitching cloth bags, which are getting popular. People are now instead of binning their old newspapers reselling them for a little less than their purchase price. This has also helped in the circulation of newspapers,” said Khawaja Farooq Renzu, Commissioner, Municipal Corporation, Srinagar.

The ban has been imposed in the entire state, but tourist places are seeing its stricter implementation to discourage both residents and tourists from using plastic bags. By Afzal Bhat (ANI)

Prime Minister sends “Chadar” at Ajmer Sharif shrine

Ajmer, June 28 (ANI): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh sent a “Chadar” or, the holy cloth as his offering at the revered shrine of Sufi saint Khwaja Moin-ud-din Chisti in Ajmer Sharif on Sunday.

Union Minister for Science and Technology and Earth Sciences Prithviraj Chavan and Minister of State Sachin Pilot presented the sacred cloth on Prime Minister’s behalf on the shrine.

Dr. Singh in a message stated that the teachings of the great Khwaja is more relevant in today’s strife torn world.

“He equated feeding the hungry, redressing the aggrieved and helping the distressed, to prayers…the legacy of the great Khwaja is more relevant in today’s strife torn world, than ever before,” said Chavan read out from PM’s message.

The Dargah of Khwaja Moin-ud-din Chisti is hosting the religious fair or “Urs” marking the 797th death anniversary of the Sufi saint that began on Friday (June 26).

“Urs”, as the congregation is called in Urdu, marks the death anniversary of Moin-ud-din Chisti who is popularly called “Garib Nawaz”, or the “messiah of the poor”.

Millions of devotees from all across the world visit the saint’s shrine during the Urs ceremony. The shrine also attracts devotees from Pakistan.

Moin-ud-din Chisti is believed to have been born in 1142 AD. Since his ancestors belonged to a town named Chisti, people began calling him by that name.

Chisti, who preached tolerance and unity of all religions, died in Ajmer where his tomb has become a shrine for millions of people.

In 1236 AD, the saint entered his cell to pray in seclusion for six days, at the end of which he died. Since then Urs has been celebrated for six days every year.

It is believed that praying at the tomb of the saint fulfils a person’s wishes.

Devotees visiting the shrine offer fresh flowers as a symbol of their devotion. Some even go up to the extent of offering large amounts of money and expensive jewels. (ANI)

Sonia Gandhi sends ‘chadar’ to sacred Ajmer Sharif shrine

Ajmer, June 27(ANI): Union Ministers Salman Khursheed and Sachin Pilot offered a ‘chadar’ or holy cloth at the revered shrine of Sufi saint Khwaja Moin-ud-din Chisti in Ajmer on the occasion of 797 “Urs”, here on Saturday.

Khursheed and Pilot offered the ‘chadar’ on behalf of United Progressive Alliance Chairperson and Congress President Sonia Gandhi at the sacred Ajmer Sharif shrine.

“Everyday she (Sonia Gandhi) is praying for monsoon, in fact all of us are praying for rain. Congress leaders and thousands of other devotees have prayed for rain at this shrine and we hope that by the blessings of Khwaja Sahib (saint Khwaja Moin-ud-din Chisti) it will rain,” said Salman Khursheed.

Meanwhile, over 300 devotees from Pakistan arrived in Rajasthan’s Ajmer district on Saturday to offer prayers at the sacred Ajmer Sharif shrine.
Devotees urged that both India and Pakistan should maintain good relationship.
“India and Pakistan share a close and friendly relationship and both the countries should maintain this relationship as they are dependent on each other, sometimes problem arises but it should be sorted out and by the grace of God the relationship between both countries is improving,” said Naseer Khan, one of the devotees from Pakistan.

Devotees said that they wanted people of both countries to shed their cynical thinking.
“People should leave their cynical mentality, people of both countries should change their mentality and start living in a peaceful manner which would be good for both the countries,” said Zafar Alam, another devotee from Pakistan.

It is believed that praying at the tomb of the saint fulfils a person’s wishes. Devotees visiting the shrine offer fresh flowers as a symbol of their devotion. (ANI)

Manmohan Singh, Sonia Gandhi seek blessings of Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti

New Delhi, June 25 (ANI): Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh and Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Thursday sent a “Chadar” (holy cloth) to the shrine of Sufi saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer on the occasion of annual ‘Urs’.

Senior party leaders who would carry the Chadar arrived at Gandhi’s residence and touched the holy cloth, symbolising their participation in the offering.

“Considering the circumstances prevailing in the country, we pray that our country prospers by the blessings of almighty and may harmony and peace reign in our country,” said Haroon Yousuf, Food And Civil Supplies Minister, Delhi Government.

The Urs is observed to mark the death anniversary of the departed saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti.

The shrine is a symbol of religious convergence as both Hindus and Muslims throng the shrine in large numbers with the belief that all their wishes would be fulfilled once they offer prayers at the shrine.

This gathering for the Urs is considered to be the second largest congregation of Muslims at one place after Mecca. (ANI)

Two killed in Thane chemical factory blast

Thane, May 12 (ANI): Two workers were killed in a massive blast, which gutted down a chemical factory in Ambernath area of western Thane on Tuesday.

The blast, which took place in the morning hours, caused extensive damage to the chemical factory named Thomas Baker Private Limited.

Eyewitnesses rushed to the floor after hearing the sound of the blast.

“I heard the voice of the blast while I was sitting in the office. Our production manager was declared dead at the hospital. A worker, Avinash Vani, was taken to the hospital and his condition was serious,” said Aliyas Satana, who works in the administrative department.

Police sources confirmed that two people were killed in the blast.

“The reality is that there are two dead and a few injured,” said Smita Pathak, Assistant Commisioner of Police, Ambernath.

The blast cause is unknown as of now, the local government has ordered an investigation into the incident.

In another incident, goods worth millions of rupees were destroyed in a fire at a five-storied cloth factory in Dombivali city of Maharashtra state.

Ten fire tenders were rushed to the spot and the fire at Indi Private Limited was brought under control after four hours.

No casualties were reported. (ANI)

Scorching heat in Agra

Agra, May 6 (ANI): Temperature touching close to 47 degrees has reduced the number of foreigners visiting the Taj Mahal in Agra.

Taj Mahal is on the top of their itinerary for international visitors.

They are seen wearing big hats shielding their faces with cloth.

“First of all it is very hot. Because in Switzerland, right now it is 15 degrees, and I think here it is about 47. We have to drink a lot, because we are sweating. What we usually do is we go sight seeing in the morning or evening but rest of the day is too hot,” said Philip, a tourist from Switzerland.

Cold drinks and ice candies have registered record sales as people throng the outlets to beat the heat.

The residents who rely on tourism for their sustenance are facing problems as less number of tourists is taking a toll on their profession.

“The heat is keeping the tourists away. The work is very less. Earlier also, tourists were keeping away because of the Mumbai terror attacks and also because of recession,” said Kadir Khan, a photographer. (ANI)

Assam self-help group generates employment for rural women

Sodial (Jorhat), Apr 28 (ANI): A self-help group (SHG) that mooted a weaving unit in Assam has facilitated a large number of women economically self sufficient by generating employment for them.his self-help group named ‘Bhogdoi’ and based at Sodial village in Jorhat region was the brainchild of Arunima Kachari in 2001.

Ever since its inception, Arunima and her other nine associates have nurtured ‘Bhogdoi’ with utmost dedication.

They started their business with just ten workers by installing only ten looms, but within a period of five years, the number of looms has increased to 45. Now after eight years, they have more than 100 weavers working wonders on 85 looms.

Hundreds of women from this village have benefited from ‘Bhogdoi’.

“I took the initiative of setting up a weaving centre for the womenfolk of my village. Then I started imparting training in weaving to unemployed women of my village. Later, we formed the ‘Bhogdoi’ self-help group. Many have benefited from this weaving business,” Kachari.

“We hardly asked for any assistance from the government. We collected money on our own and started the unit. I never thought we would reach this far. Later, in 2002, we started exhibiting our products. At these exhibitions, we sell our traditional attires like Tongali (waist cloth), Muga (handloom silk), Mekhela Sador (bridal trousseau), gamocha (towel also used to tie around the head),” Kachari added.

The enterprising Arunima motivated scores of girls and even housewives to be a part of the Bhogdoi where she taught them the rudiments of spinning and weaving.

“I am a regular worker in this self-help group. I joined the training after which I was also given a job in this unit. Now, I can send my children to a good school and can provide them good food,” said Dipali Saikia, member-worker.

Since, the products made by this SHG are of high quality and fine finishing, the demand is very high within the district and adjoining areas.

Right from day-one, ‘Bhogdoi ‘has relied only on traditional modes. The spinning wheels are made of bicycle wheel while the looms are bamboo or cane and wood-based.

‘Bhogdoi’ SHG has participated in various handloom exhibitions across the country and bagged a couple of awards conferred by the Government of Assam and also the Central Government.

There are more than 85,000 SHGs functioning in Assam, playing the role of a vital catalyst in the overall socio-economic scenario.

The main spheres in which these SHGs are active happen to be agriculture, handloom, poultry and dairy farming, food processing units in the cottage industry sector, bee keeping, cane and bamboo craft among others.

Jorhat district itself boasts of at least 7000 SHGs.

Interestingly, there are quite a few number of high school students who are members of Bhogdoi and they have experienced ‘earn while you learn’. By Apem (ANI)

Madhya Pradesh girl spearheads drive against polythene bags

Gwalior, Apr 6 (ANI): A girl in Madhya Pradesh is spearheading an awareness drive to discourage use of polythene bags by distributing cloth and jute bags to the people.

What started as a small effort on part of Kamakshi, a resident of Gwalior, has now evolved into a large-scale movement.

She has been spearheading the drive against polythene bags since 2004 and has motivated around 10,000 people from different states to join her in this endeavour.

“I’ve collected more than 5,500 carry bags, which include polythene, jute and cloth bags. I’ve motivated around 10, 000 people in various states, including Maharashtra, MP, UP and Tamil Nadu towards joining me in this campaign,” said Kamakshi.

Apart from asking people not to use polythene bags, Kamakshi also collects different carry bags and has amassed around 5,500 bags so far.

She has been educating people about the hazards of polythene bags since her student days and is hopeful of taking her campaign throughout the country. Her family, friends, neighbours, relatives and even her neighbourhood vendors have all become a part of Kamakshi’s campaign.

“She has made us aware about the hazards of polythene bags and has asked us to abstain from using these bags,” said Manoj Kushwaha, a vegetable vendor.

India banned the use of polythene bags in 2008 across various cities and since then has been propagating the use of paper and jute bags.

According to environmentalists, discarded bags, which pile up on roadside and unused land, spread disease and hurt animals. By Ashok Pal (ANI)

Specially-abled in Ladakh turn waste into wealth

Leh, Mar 29 (ANI): A group of disabled people in Ladakh displayed their creative talents by turning waste material into useful products of daily use.

More then 200 disabled people are involved in turning waste into craft, thanks to the initiative of People’s Action Group for Inclusion and Rights (PAGIR), a voluntary organisation.

“We were given basic training last year in the art of making pillow covers, sweet boxes, file covers and pen stands from waste papers and old clothes,” said Tsering Gurmet, a disabled artisan.

These disabled artisans use waste material to make products like wall-hangings, pen stands, lamp shades, paper bags and also use waste cloth to make pillow covers, table cloth and bags.

“People think that disabled people cannot do anything. Even the society has similar views. So in order to change such views and for the benefit of disabled people, we have initiated this work. We also wish to work for entire Ladakh region by selling these products in the market,” said Mohammed Iqbal, President PAGIR.

PAGIR was founded in 2006 to highlight the issues and rights of the disabled persons in Ladakh region.

As per the 2001 census, over 21 million people in India are suffering from one or the other kind of disability. This is equivalent to 2.1 per cent of the population.

Among the total disabled in the country, 12.6 million are males and 9.3 million are females.

Among the five types of disabilities on which data has been collected, visual disability at 48.5 per cent emerges in the top category. Others in this category are movement of limbs (27.9 per cent), mental (10.3 per cent), speech (7.5 per cent), and hearing (5.8 per cent).

Across the country, the highest number of disabled has been reported from Uttar Pradesh (3.6 million).

The other states with higher concentration of disabled persons are Bihar (1.9 million), West Bengal (1.8million), Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra (1.6 million each). By Jigmet Vangchuk (ANI)

Fashion designers showcase creativity in exuberant fabrics

New Delhi, Mar 19 (ANI): On the second day of the Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week here on Thursday, Indian Fashion designers showcased creativity in various forms of exuberant fabrics and in varied enchanting colours.

Designer Prashant Verma in his collection ‘Meat’ represented aesthetic concepts nurtured by the story of human courage and vitality.

Verma said that his collection put forth a compelling analysis of human aggression. He weaved together the aggression of sports and bodybuilding and the uncontrollable rage of dictators and warlords.

“The main job of making this collection was to be brave enough to address the devil inside you and to sort of get it out. If you look at it, there are politically incorrect or extreme references that I have. There are body builders who inspire me, there are dictators who inspire me and they have been ruthless and savage in their sort of extremities they have put on themselves and on the world. But you can’t forget that when they were a little insecure child. They must have gone through something that formed them into these beasts,” Verma said.

His creations portrayed the complexities of an inner and private artistic battle.

The collections comprised of uniforms of rugby players- the thick shoulder pads, helmets, kneepads, constructed out of patent, leather, prints of football players in silk and the flowing satin robes and glittering belts of boxers.

Meanwhile designer duo Pankaj and Nidhi Ahuja swept grays and blacks away from the ramp with their colourful collection under the title ‘Life in Technicolor’.

Flaming reds and potent blues, plush orchid-plums, purples and violets were used by the designers to give a new resonance to their creations of 2009.

A range of trapunto-quilted jackets (whole cloth quilting technique which produces a raised surface on the quilt), precision geometric embroideries of luscious floral, hexagon diskette-quilt capes and Russian vintage print tunics comprised the duo’s collection.

With 102 designers and around 175 buyers, Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week is India’s premier fashion extravaganza, which brings together the business of fashion and expert designers as well as connoisseurs of lifestyle on a common platform.

This gala event will culminate on March 23. (ANI)

The top 10 ‘inventions’ that changed the world

London, Mar 13 (ANI): Credit cards, trainer shoes, social networking sites, and GPS technology have made it to the list of things that have changed the world.

To mark the National Science and Engineering Week, a panel of 20 experts from the British Science Association have drawn up a list of the top 10 things that have changed the world, reports The Telegraph.

Here is the list in full:

1.GPS Technology

Originally developed as a navigation system by the United States military, the Global Positioning System is now used in cars, aircraft and boats.

2.The Sony Walkman

In 1979 Sony spawned the era of wearable technology with its iconic personal stereo. The Walkman quickly changed listening habits and became hugely popular as jogging culture took the 1980s by storm.

3.The Bar code

The boring sets of black and white lines can now be found on almost every single item bought from a shop. Norman Woodland first developed an early form of the bar code in 1949 by combining ideas from movie soundtracks and Morse code to help him speed up store checkouts. And now stores can instantly access product details, prices and stock levels with a sweep of a laser.

4.TV Dinners

Convenience food really took off in the 1970s and transformed the way families ate meals, the high-street, the countryside and national health. Traditional family dinners around the table disappeared and pre-packaged “ready meals” eaten on the sofa became the norm.

5.PlayStation

Although games consoles had been around for some time, Sony’s PlayStation took gaming out of spotty teenager’s bedrooms and into adult living rooms when it was released in 1994.

6.Social Networking

Everyday, more than three billion minutes are spent by computer users on Facebook. Along with other social networking sites such as MySpace and Twitter, it has completely changed the way we interact and who we interact with.

Millions of people now communicate tiny details of their professional and personal lives by poking, twittering and posting. Online social networking has allowed people to rekindle friendships with friends they lost touch with years ago.

7.Text messages

Text messaging has created a new vocabulary and new grammar that is almost incomprehensible to those who do not use it. LOL and FYI have now passed into everyday English.

8.Electronic Money

Credit cards gave us greater convenience for spending, greater security and the ability to spend money anywhere in the world.

9.Microwaves

Microwaves – electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths ranging between 1 millimetre and one metre – are used by mobile phones, wireless broadband internet and satellite television.

They also gave us a new way of cooking food while the US military has developed a “less-than-lethal” weapon that can blast victims with a heat wave.

10.Trainers

Trainers changed fashion and the feet of generations ever since the Goodyear Metallic Rubber Shoe Company first used a new manufacturing process to meld rubber to cloth in 1892.

With the help of celebrity endorsements by sporting superstars such as basketball legend Michael Jordan, trainers turned from being purely practical clothing for sport into a fashion item. (ANI)

Organic toy manufacturer in Tamil Nadu makes merry as demand grows

Coimbatore, Mar 5 (ANI): What started as a hobby has ultimately grown into a full-fledged business for Padmavathy, a manufacturer of organic toys in Tamil Nadu.

Right from teddy bears, furry rabbits, bubbly mickeys, dolls and famous cartoon characters Padmavathy makes everything with the help of women labourers working with her in Coimbatore.

The business started growing with demand for organic toys particularly after Chinese toys, which had a major share in the global market, were taken off due to non permissible chemicals found in it.

“We started with the business seven years ago in a very small way and later we got good orders and now we are getting more orders. Earlier, Chinese dolls dominated the global market and due to inferior quality and health hazards for children it was taken off. We thought of producing dolls made of organic materials,” Padmavathy said.

Padmavathy makes about 10,000 pieces of organic toys in a month. She receives orders from countries like United States and Canada for the toys.

“When we sent a sample to United States, the response was good and now we are getting enough orders from there. We only use organic materials like organic cotton, organic cloth and organic dyes for making toys. These are totally harmless,” she added.

In 2007, Mattel Inc, the world’s largest toy maker, recalled over 18 million Chinese-made toys because of risks from small magnets that can injure children if swallowed, just two weeks after it recalled 1.5 million toys due to fears over lead paint. By Juhan Samuel(ANI)

Ex- Miss USA’s ‘adult buffet’ treat!

New York, Mar 1 (ANI): A hungry Kelli McCarty was in for an ‘adult buffet’ when she drew the cloth off a table she thought contained food, only to find it filled with condoms and vibrators!

The incident happened when former Miss USA and soap opera actress was shooting for the X-rated ‘Faithless’.

“It was getting towards lunchtime, and I saw a table being wheeled in covered with a white cloth,” The New York Post quoted McCarty as saying.

She added: “I thought, great, I’m really hungry. As soon as I had a break, I announced I was famished and walked over to the table and pulled the cloth off, only to find that it was filled with condoms and vibrators. No snack food at all!” (ANI)

Ex- Miss USA’s ‘adult buffet’ treat!

New York, Mar 1 (ANI): A hungry Kelli McCarty was in for an ‘adult buffet’ when she drew the cloth off a table she thought contained food, only to find it filled with condoms and vibrators!

The incident happened when former Miss USA and soap opera actress was shooting for the X-rated ‘Faithless’.

“It was getting towards lunchtime, and I saw a table being wheeled in covered with a white cloth,” The New York Post quoted McCarty as saying.

She added: “I thought, great, I’m really hungry. As soon as I had a break, I announced I was famished and walked over to the table and pulled the cloth off, only to find that it was filled with condoms and vibrators. No snack food at all!” (ANI)

Inflation slips to 5.07 percent

New Delhi, Feb 5 (ANI): After rising consecutively for two weeks, the inflation figures showed a slip to 5.07 percent.

The inflation rates declined primarily due to falling prices of fruits and vegetables and manufactured goods, encouraging policy rate cuts by the Reserve Bank to boost the industrial sector.

The prices of fruits, vegetables and bajra declined by two percent, while the coffee rates fell by one percent.

Raw rubber, groundnut seed and gingerly seed became cheaper by six percent, three percent and one percent respectively.

The prices of steel ingots, aluminium products and bars and rods also dropped during the period.

The index of manufactured products dipped by 0.5 per cent due to fall in prices of rice bran oil, khandsari and coffee powder.

The index of the textile industries fell by 0.1 percent due to lower prices of woollen cloth, sacking bags and hessian cloth.

However, the fuel index rose by 0.6 percent as the prices of Naphtha increased by fifteen percent, furnace oil by two percent and light diesel oil by two percent.

Inflation has slipped by 0.57 percentage points for the week ended 24th January from 5.64 in the previous week. It was 4.78 per cent a year ago. (ANI)