Return of the flash-dance

New Delhi, June 5 — It’s official, the 80′s are back in vogue. Everyone loves a bit of sex and glamour and when it comes with a pinch of disaster which the 1980′s encapsulated with the saturated neon and the wedge hairdos, its fashion revelry revisited. While the designers love their flirty affair with the 80s and 90s, they are a little cautious when it comes to everyday wear. “Every era has a time in fashion where it really stands out like no other. The 80′s were experimental and fun. But girls and boys need to be selective. The 80′s fashion era was adventurous and therefore should be attempted with caution. It is definitely not everyday wear,” said Payal Jain, designer. When you think of 80′s you think loud colours, big hair, flamboyant silhouettes and rebellious designs. Who can forget the iconic Cyndi Lauper hairdo or the bigger than ever Madonna hair style and leather jumpsuits. “Whether teased into a high pouf, shaved on one side and long on the other a la Cyndi Lauper or thrown up into a side ponytail, the 1980s were a time of playful experimentation and rebellion,” said Dheeraj Harjani, creative director, After Shock. What is interesting is that not just designer stores but even roadside bazaars are flooded with peg leg pants, cow boy boots, bags with leather fringe, grunge check shirts (remember Kurt Cobain in his famous blue check shirt), saturated neons and kitten heels. “I think peg leg pants are a popular style. They are very flattering and leg lengthening. It gives added height when paired with heels. It’s a safe bet,” added Harjani. Not just with heels you can also team them up with a loose-fitting check shirt and coy boy boots to get that edgy cow-girl look. King of Pop MJ’s thriller wardrobe is big this season. Steal your boyfriend’s jeans and team them up with a loose shirt and layer it with a vest with shoulder pads. You can also add a little bling to it with chains and bracelets and you are all set to rock the party.

With the 80′s, fashion decadence is here. Cooler fabrics, lots of drapes and layers, glamour, sex and adventure is here to shock you! Don’t say we didn’t warn you.

Isabella, Jacob most popular baby names for 2009

New York, May 8(ANI): More than 22,000 baby girls were named ‘Isabella’ in 2009.

And ‘Jacob’ won the top spot for the 11th year straight for boys.

The Social Security Administration said that the names, popular from Twilight, the vampire flick, were the top-notch choices for baby girls and boys last year, reports the New York Daily News.

Another Twilight name that gained huge popularity was ‘Cullen’, after the vampire Edward Cullen. The name had the highest jump – from No. 782 to No. 485.

‘Jayden’ at No. 8 and ‘Noah’ at No. 9 joined ‘Jacob’ at the top, while ‘Emma’ slid down to No. 2 behind ‘Isabella’.

The biggest jumps for girl names were Malia – from 296 to 192, and Sasha – which moved up 101 spots to No. 261. (ANI)

Teen girls disclose more than boys to parents about their dating habits

Washington, May 7 (ANI): Teenage girls talk more to parents about their dating habits than boys, according to a new study.

What’s more, both sexes generally prefer to talk to their mothers.

However, the new study found that girls and boys are equally close-mouthed about issues involving sex and what they do with their dates while unsupervised. And in this case, teens were no more eager to talk to their mothers than they were their fathers.

Results showed that the amount of information parents hear from their teenagers about dating depend on a variety of matters, including age, gender, and what aspect of dating the topic involves.

“Many parents become frustrated because they feel that the lack of communication with their teenage children is evidence of increasing distance or diminishing influence,” explained Christopher Daddis, co-author of the study and assistant professor of psychology at Ohio State University at Marion.

“What we found is that adolescents are willing to talk to their parents about some issues, but those issues may change as they grow older and they feel more autonomous.”

The research appeared in a recent issue of the Journal of Adolescence.

The study involved a survey of 222 adolescents in the 9th or 12th grade at a central Ohio high school. (ANI)

Unhealthy habits put Brit teens ”at increased premature death risk”

London, Apr 30 (ANI): Increasing binge drinking and smoking habits are putting British teenage girls at increased risk of premature death, a worldwide study has claimed.

The study claimed that British teenage girls are more likely to die early than those in Slovenia and Albania.

To reach the conclusion, boffins calculated the probability of 15-year-old girls and boys in each country dying before they reach the age of 60.

Such deaths are considered ”premature” as healthier lifestyles, vaccines, improved road safety and modern medicine means more people than ever before are reaching old age, reports The Telegraph.

Published in The Lancet, the study found that girls in Britain were as likely to die before the age of 60 as girls in Slovenia and Albania whilst boys in Britain were as likely to die early as those in Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.

The study was conducted by a team at University of Washington.

Prof Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of Physicians, said: “We really need to be tackling the preventable causes of premature death and that is to do with health inequalities. In the UK the people who are hit by premature death tend to be the most deprived in our communities.” (ANI)

More than 80 pct of disadvantaged preschoolers lack basic motor skills

Washington, April 27 (ANI): A large majority of disadvantaged preschoolers lack basic motor skills, a new American research has found.

According to the study, more than eight out of every ten disadvantaged preschoolers from two urban areas showed significant developmental delays in basic motor skills such as running, jumping, throwing, and catching.

That means that they are at risk of giving up on physical activities and becoming obese teenagers and adults, noted Jackie Goodway, lead author of the study and associate professor of physical activity and educational services at Ohio State University.

Goodway said: “These fundamental motor skills – running and catching and throwing and kicking – are the movement ABCs.

“If children don”t learn the ABCs, they can”t read. And if they don”t learn basic motor skills they won”t participate in sports or exercise. That”s the problem we may be facing with the children in this study.”

Goodway conducted the study with two of her former doctoral students – Leah Robinson, now at Auburn University and Heather Crowe, now at Towson University.

The researchers studied 469 preschool students enrolled in urban, state-funded programs serving disadvantaged youth.

Included were 275 children, mostly African American, from a Midwestern city and 194 children, mostly Hispanic, from a southwestern city.

The children were evaluated using a standardized test of motor skills.

They participated in tests of locomotor skills which included running, jumping, hopping, leaping, sliding and galloping.

They were also evaluated on object control skills through tests of throwing, catching, kicking, striking, dribbling and rolling.

Results showed that 86 percent of the children scored below the 30th percentile of children nationwide, which is considered developmentally delayed.

While girls and boys had similar scores on the locomotor skills, girls did significantly worse than boys on object control activities in which they used an object such as a ball or a bat.

Boys” average scores were at the 22nd percentile on object control, while girls” were at the 11th percentile.

In general, girls of every socioeconomic category perform more poorly than boys do in the object control tests, Goodway said.

However, disadvantaged girls do much worse than do other girls on these tests.

Goodway said the study”s findings may surprise people who believe children don”t need instruction in motor skills.

She said: “Most people, even many educators, believe that motor skills just naturally develop in children, but our study shows that”s clearly not true.

“Like any skill, there needs to be instruction, there needs to be practice, there needs to be feedback. That”s how children master these motor skills.”

The problem is that children from disadvantaged, urban neighbourhoods don”t get the opportunities that other children have to play outside in parks and backyards where they can learn how to run and jump and catch footballs and dribble basketballs.

Goodway said: “Their parks may be full of gangs, they don”t have backyards that are safe, they are often raised by single mothers who are working multiple jobs and don”t have time to supervise them outside.

“These children spend most of their time sitting in school and then going home and sitting in front of the TV.”

While the children in this study were mostly minorities, Goodway said the results would apply to any children from disadvantaged backgrounds.

She said: “Ethnicity doesn”t matter. It”s about poverty.”

The study has been published in the journal Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport. (ANI)

Oz beauty pageant for kids won’t be ‘over the top’, say organisers.

Washington, Apr 7 (ANI): Organisers of a beauty pageant for children in Melbourne have claimed that their competition will not be ‘over the top’ like some controversial US TV shows.

Little Miss Bayside Pageant will see tiny tots model swimwear and be judged on their smile and posture.

Organisers of the contest, which award tiaras to winners, have insisted that it will not be “over the top” like US versions where pre-schoolers are plastered with fake tan, make-up and big hair.

The June pageant, which costs an entry fee of 100 dollars, will judge girls and boys up to 13 on modelling, talent, how they photograph and answers to a series of questions.

Organiser Laura Buik said US shows Toddlers and Tiaras and Baby Beauty Queens had sparked interest here.

But she said make-up was optional at the Miss Bayside pageant and “we’re not encouraging the diamantes and that sort of stuff “.

“When it comes to the formal wear, we’re looking more for like a party dress,” the Courier Mail quoted Buik as saying.

“It’s more about the kids getting up and having a go. They get a tiara . . . but the main prizes are the modelling contract and a three-day workshop,” she added. (ANI)

Indian, Pakistani survivors of forced marriages to pitch for abandoning practice

London, Apr. 7 (ANI): In the first scheme of its kind in Britain, survivors of forced marriages, mostly Indians and Pakistanis, will travel the country next month to describe the ordeals they went through in an attempt to try to persuade communities to abandon the practice.

According to Fox News, men and women who were forced to marry against their wishes, will journey to 12 cities to tell teachers and police officers to be extra vigilant about children going missing during the summer holidays.

Each summer, hundreds of girls and boys, largely from South Asian communities, travel with their families to India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, where they are forced into marriages.

Those working to stop the practice say the period just before the summer holiday is always their busiest time of the year. They hope that prompting survivors to tell their own stories will ncourage children at risk to come forward and local authorities to take those fears seriously when they do. (ANI)

Another Brit boy, 9, turns up as girl at school

London, September 19 (ANI): After a 12-year-old boy recently turned up dressed as a girl at a school in South London, a 9-year-old boy did the same the next day making parents extremely worried.

The child apparently came to school dressed in female uniform, with long hair in a ponytail, tied in pink ribbon.

The classmates of the boy were reportedly told that a girl had replaced the boy, so they should address her as a girl.

A parent revealed: “My son came home from school and asked why one of his friends had become a girl. I thought he was joking, but he kept asking – that’s when alarm bells began ringing.

“The pupil’s classmates were told he had left and that a new girl would be starting in his place this term.”

However, parents are angry at the school administration for not alerting them in advance, as their kids are now coming up with awkward questions.

“It upsets me that staff didn’t mention it to parents before talking to the pupils,” the Sun quoted a mother of a pupil as saying.

“We have had to deal with the fall-out from all this. It’s not a situation I or other parents are comfortable with and we’ve not been given any help from the school about how to handle it.

“My son is too young to really understand the significance of what’s happening. It’s hard to explain to him.

“He doesn’t understand the differences between girls’ and boys’ bodies yet. I’m terrified he’ll ask me if he can become a girl as well,” she added.

The child will be using the girls’ toilet apart from being addressed by a new name as recommended after a special assembly held by the school’s female head, their class teacher and the sex-change pupil’s special needs teacher.

The kid is apparently the youngest child to undergo sex change.

A spokeswoman of The Beaumont Society, the world’s largest transgender organisation, said the nine-year-old gender swap child was the youngest case it had heard of.

She said: “This child is vulnerable to bullying and teasing. They and their family have been seriously misadvised. It is hard enough for an adult to change gender. To go the extent that this nine-year-old has gone is unique.” (ANI)

1 in 3 teenage girls in UK has suffered sexual abuse by their boyfriends

London, Sep 1 (ANI): One in three girls in their teens has been a victim of sexual abuse at the hands of a boyfriend, while one in four has suffered violence in a relationship, according to an in-depth study.

Conducted by the NSPCC and Bristol University, the survey of 1,353 teenage girls and boys questioned across the UK, found that 90 percent of girls in the age group of 13-17 had been in an intimate relationship.

A similar number of boys had also been in relationships.

The research found that 25 percent of girls had suffered physical violence in some form or the other, including being slapped, punched or beaten by their boyfriends.

For the study, the investigators questioned 91 young people at length.

Among the girls, one in six said that they had been pressured into having sex, and one in 16 claimed that they had been raped.

Other participants said that they had been pressured or forced to kiss or intimately touch their boyfriends.

A small minority of the boys – one in 17 – reported being pressured or forced into sexual activity, and almost one in five suffered physical violence in a relationship.

A large number of girls said that they felt they had to put up with the abuse because they felt scared or guilty, or feared they would lose their boyfriend.

According to the NSPCC, having an older boyfriend placed young girls at a higher risk of abuse, with three-quarters of them saying they had been victims.

Even young women from a family where an adult had been violent towards them were also at greater risk.

For boys, having a violent group of friends actually made it more likely that they would become a victim, or be a perpetrator of violence, in a relationship.

“The high rate and harmful impact of violence in teenagers’ intimate relationships, especially for girls, is appalling,” the Guardian quoted Professor David Berridge, of Bristol University, one of the authors of the report, as saying.

“It was shocking to find that exploitation and violence in relationships starts so young. This is a serious issue that must be given higher priority by policymakers and professionals,” he added.

The report reminds schools of the need to raise awareness of relationships where there is harmful, controlling and abusive behaviour.It has also recommended that anti-bullying groups at school should tackle violent relationships and that child protection professionals should consider teenagers who are in intimate relationships, especially girls with older boyfriends.

Diane Sutton, head of policy and public affairs at the NSPCC suggested that parents and schools could perform a vital role in teaching children about loving and safe relationships and what to do if they are suffering from violence or abuse. (ANI)

Girls’ fear of spiders may be genetic

London, Aug 28 (ANI): Even the sight of spiders and snakes makes some people yell and run – and women are more likely to get scared than men. Now, a new study has shown that females are genetically predisposed to fear creepy-crawlies and dangerous animals.

During the study, scientists found that baby girls only 11 months old rapidly start to associate pictures of spiders with fear. However, baby boys remain blithely indifferent to this connection.

In an initial training phase, David Rakison, a developmental psychologist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, showed 10 baby girls and boys a picture of a spider together with a fearful face.

In the following test phase, he let them watch the image of a spider paired with a happy face, and the image of a flower paired with a fearful face.

Despite the spider’s happy companion, the girls looked significantly longer at it than at the flower. The researchers took this to mean that the girls expected spiders to be linked with fear. The boys looked for an equal time at both images.

With a different group of babies, Rakison first showed a spider with a happy face, and a flower with a fearful face. Now the girls too looked at both images for the same length of time – implying that they did not have an inborn fear of spiders.

The results suggest that girls are more inclined than boys to learn to fear dangerous animals.

On the other hand, modern phobias such as fear of flying or injections show no sex difference, Rakison said.

He attributes the difference to behavioral differences between men and women among our hunter-gatherer ancestors. An aversion to spiders may help women avoid dangerous animals, but in men evolution seems to have favoured more risk-taking behaviour for successful hunting.

It makes evolutionary sense to acquire spider fear at a certain age, rather than to be born with it, Rakison said.

“There is little reason for an infant to fear an object unless it can respond to it, for example by crawling away,” New Scientist quoted him as saying.

The study has been published in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior. (ANI)

Kids as young as 10 under constant pressure to have perfect bod

Washington, Aug 27 (ANI): Kids as young as 10 are living under constant pressure to have the perfect body, say researchers.

The study, led by researchers from Harvard University and the University of Alberta, Canada, showed a linear response for girls, who were happiest when thinnest, and a U-shaped response for boys, who were unhappy when they were too skinny or too fat.

To reach the conclusion, the researchers looked at the relationship between size and body satisfaction, as well as the effects of rural/urban residence, parental education and income, and neighborhood household income on kids.

“There is a well-established relationship between poor body satisfaction and increased risk of disordered weight control behaviors, including vomiting, fasting, and use of laxatives and diet pills for weight control. Importantly, body satisfaction appears to be responsive to school-based interventions,” said Bryn Austin, the lead researcher.

“To increase our understanding of body satisfaction and its links with BMI in childhood, we studied the prevalence of poor body satisfaction in prepubescent girls and boys, and its association with body weight and socioeconomic factors,” she added.

The findings revealed that overall, 7.3pct of girls and 7.8pct of boys reported poor body satisfaction.

For normal weight, overweight and obese girls the prevalence of poor body satisfaction was 5.7pct, 10.4pct and 13.1pct, respectively.

For boys this was 7.6pct, 8.4pct, and 8.1pct, respectively. Girls from parents with low educational attainment and residing in rural areas were more likely to report poor body satisfaction.

“Poor body satisfaction among males with a low BMI may reflect the cultural ideal for males to attain both muscularity and leanness; whereas, among females, thinness remains the culturally defined ideal body shape,” said Austin.

The research is published in the open access journal BMC Public Health. (ANI)

In Pakistan, 97 percent of marriages take place to attain foreign nationality

Islamabad, Aug.22 (ANI): A survey conducted in Pakistan on the issue of forced marriages among male dual nationals, reveals that only 3.4 per cent children are consulted before marriage whereas 96.6 per cent marriages take place mainly to attain foreign nationality or helping hand abroad.

The findings make part of the research report of baseline survey on the issue of forced marriages launched by SACH on Friday. The survey was conducted in collaboration with British High Commission.

The target area for the survey were Mirpur, Bhimber and Kotli where the concentration of dual nationals is considerably high and incidents of forced marriages are largely reported. The survey was conducted in order to plan an implementation strategy for intervention, prevention and awareness raising campaigns in the target areas.

Among 870 individuals interviewed during the survey, 61.9 per cent respondents were British nationals and 38.08 per cent were Pakistani nationals who visited UK many times. The study also revealed that only 7.9 per cent among dual nationals had an education up to post-gradation level and 3.6 per cent got UK based education.

The survey shows that majority of such marriages take place within family or ‘baradari’ with only 11 per cent marriages taking place outside the family. Only 19.9 per cent respondents strongly agreed that families and parents have the right to decide.

Majority of respondents (74.4 per cent) termed forced marriages against Islamic teachings whereas 54.1 strongly agreed to the statement that both girls and boys should be given chance to freely marry. Around 51.6 per cent believed that forced marriages may lead to torture and violence in the society and 52.8 per cent said that mostly women are forced-marriage victims as they cannot dare to oppose and they had no other option but to surrender. (ANI)

Indian kids love Indian food: Survey

New Delhi, July 10 (ANI): When it comes to eating habits, Indian kids love Indian food, according to a new survey.

As per Cartoon Network’s ‘Chowder’ survey, the weirdest food Indian children have ever eaten include spicy curry with powdered laddoo, yogurt with chilli powder and dosa with sugar cubes amongst others.

The survey found that Indian kids love Indian cuisine the most and North Indian and South Indian food are the equal top raters in their choice.

The survey revealed that cooking is no longer a girl’s phenomenon. About 68 percent of kids believe that both boys and girls should learn how to cook and this sentiment becomes even more emphatic as 71 percent of the respondents to the survey were boys.

The channel conducted the survey on cartoonnetworkindia.com to explore kids’ eating and cooking habits.ccording to the channel, almost 900 kids responded to the survey from all over India including Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, Ahmedabad, Kolkata and Bangalore.

Bringing out their experimental spirit, 76 per cent of Indian kids enjoy trying new food while 33 per cent of Indian kids prefer going out. 57 per cent of the respondents are keen to learn more about world cuisine.

“As a kids’ entertainment expert, Cartoon Network is ahead of the curve in identifying interesting trends amongst kids. The ‘Chowder’ survey findings reflect the views of India’s next generation and it is clear that both girls and boys believe in the importance of cooking and food,” Turner International India director Krishna Desai as saying. (ANI)

Kids’ physical activity improves when parents back vigorous team sports

Washington, July 6 (ANI): A new study has shown that parents who value strenuous team sports are more likely to influence their kids to join a team or at least participate in some kind of exercise, and spend less time in front of the TV or computer.

For the study, researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and Duke University examined a sample of 681 parents of 433 fourth- and fifth-graders from 12 schools in Houston.

They found that those parents who conveyed the importance of high-intensity team sports to their children had more active children.

Both the boys and girls watched less TV and spent less time on their computers.

However, the study also found that endorsing all types of exercise – both team sports and individual sports – increased boys’ activity levels but not girls’.

“The difference between activity levels in the girls and boys had to do with the parents’ attitudes toward the types of activities. Parents encouraged sons to partake in vigorous- and moderate-intensity team and individual sports, and vigorous-intensity home chores, such as heavy yard work, more than they encouraged these activities for their daughters,” said lead author Cheryl Braselton Anderson, PhD.

“There still is gender bias on encouraging boys to participate in certain sports and strenuous activities more than girls,” Anderson added.

The findings appear in the July issue of Health Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association. (ANI)

Chandigarh, an important fashion destination

Chandigarh, June 26 (ANI): Chandigarh has emerged as an important fashion destination from market as well as promising designers’ perspective.

Fashion has taken centre stage in the region following the setting up of several fashion technology institutes like NIIFT, IIFT and IIFD in and around Chandigarh. These institutes provide talented young designers an opportunity to make their mark in the rapidly growing industry.

Top models recently sashayed down the ramp in Chandigarh in outfits created by budding fashion designers. The show full of style and glamour got an excellent response.

Apparel industry leaders, renowned fashion designers and marketing gurus were all there to pick best out the best designer. There is great enthusiasm in the industry despite the global meltdown.

“Because of the recession that impact is there on garment industry but its not that much that have affect on IT sector because in garment industry, they want fresh / young designers to come and show their talent because now a days new generation is so practical and these designs itself shows that it’s a very practical collections of the industry demands the young designers from us and they want us to send our students from GMT, who have learnt the garment manufacturing techniques, who have learnt the designing section. Students from the apparel merchandising also they want from us,” said Shamir Kaur, Principal of International Institute of Fashion Technology, Mohali.

Punjabis are becoming more fashion conscious. And, the NRI influence has played a major part in triggering this off.

Budding designers are now keep in mind the desires and aspirations of their well-heeled customers in Punjab and across India. From ethnic to contemporary, there is tremendous scope to explore.

Models who have performed in Chandigarh say that the city has arrived on the fashion scene due to high-level of fashion consciousness among girls and boys here.

“Chandigarh has improved a lot in terms of fashion. The young designers who are coming from Chandigarh are simply amazing, the kind of collection that they have got. The shows that I do here for two best institutes, I think their collections are amazing. They are becoming better year after year, so talent in Chandigarh is growing and its world class. I feel that its high time that Chandigarh’s designers should be a part of India Fashion Week and I also suggested last time when I came here that there should be a Chandigarh Fashion Week. If somebody offers me, I will be there to choreograph the show. A Chandigarh Fashion Week showcasing the collection only by Chandigarh and Punjab designers,” said Kaushik Ghosh, Fashion Choreographer.

The upcoming Fashion Technology Park in Mohali displays the rapidly expanding global fashion market.

The boom necessitates a streamlined and synergized organization of talent and resources in the Fashion and Lifestyle sectors. The Indian fashion industry is in the process of building future brands. And Punjab’s contribution in this direction is creditable. By Sunil Sharma (ANI)

Freed of Taliban terror, displaced girl resumes study in a tent school

Mardan (NWFP, Pakistan), May 25 (ANI): Sixtenn-year-old Aleema has restarted her education after it was stopped due to life threats from Taliban bombing of a girls’ schools in Swat valley.

“I was a student of Class 9 at Girls’ Higher Secondary School at Kabal. Taliban first issued threatening letters to our school and then blown it up on September 2008,” Aleema told Daily Times.

Aleema said that she has now come to a tent school set up by Society for Awareness and Relief (STAR), a Swabi-based non-government organisation providing high school level education in relief camps.

“I and thousands of other girls of the valley could not think of completing education under the Taliban rule in the area,” a fully veiled Aleema said.

The brave girl expressed satisfaction with the way of teaching in the tent school but said it was the government responsibility to provide better education to Internally Displaced Persons girls and boys, as hundreds of them wanted to continue their education.

She said more female students would come to tent schools if government and non-government organisations created awareness of education in relief camps.

Three non-government organisations including Muslim Hands, Philanthropist and STAR are providing education to IDPs in Sheikh Yaseen camp. (ANI)

Innovative apparel designs by Sikkim women

Gangtok, May 20 (ANI): Banking on their creative traits, women of Sikkim have emerged in the forefront of apparel designing.

The credit for this could be attributed to the Directorate of Handloom and Handicraft of Sikkim for setting up an Apparel Training and Design Centre (ATDC) where young girls and women undergo extensive training in fashion designing.

The main aim of the training programme conducted by this institute is to upgrade the artistic designers in the garment industry.

Apart from basic skills, the students are taught and given exposure to the apparel manufacturing technology, textile design, knitting garments, embroidery, fashion sampling, patterns and cutting, ornamental creations, sewing machine operation and apparel merchandising among others.

Although this training programme is open for both men and women, it is the eves who have been more enterprising and coming forth to learn and master various aspects of apparel designing.

” I was interested in the fashion designing world. I was waiting for this kind of opportunity,” said Ashwina Lama, a trainee.

Apart from imparting the art of apparel design, the Directorate of Handloom and Handicraft has also set up an apparel unit solely for women at the ATDC.

“By this training we would like to give them employment opportunities not only within the state but outside the state also. Especially, you must have now come to know that placement is guaranteed in this training programme. So, it is not necessary for our young girls and boys after completing this training programme to go and join garment industry available in the other states but now they can start their own unit,” said Namrata Thapa, Director of Handloom and Handicrafts, Sikkim and Director, ATDC.

The women who have ‘graduated’ from ATDC have several vocational options like making uniforms for police, army and different other professions.

Apparel industry in India plays a significant role related to the textile industry. The fashion designing as a profession is maintaining its pace with the new trends and allied techniques. By Tashi Pradhan (ANI)

Kashmiri girls all set to be airhostesses

Srinagar, May 10 (ANI): Many Kashmiri girls have opted to explore career options in aviation industry by undertaking courses in aviation sector to be airhostesses and enjoy travelling across the world.

Several young girls and also boys are now joining courses to get training for flight attendants and other related jobs in the aviation sector to fulfill their dreams.

First airhostess academy named ‘Viinzs’ has recently opened in Srinagar aims to provide quality education in the aviation sector to Kashmiri youth.

Kashmir girls, who had earlier just dreamt of being airhostess and flying High, are now actually seeing their dreams getting fulfilled.

“It’s very nice that air hostess training is being given here. Girls and boys both should forget all the fear from their heart and minds and study this course to make their life. And this was my dream to become an airhostess. I think my dream will be soon fulfilled now,” said Rizwana Akhtar, one of the girl students.

Kashmiri youth also believe that the inauguration of the International Airport in February last year, would open up new opportunities for them.

“An international airport has been made, which means, we are getting an opportunity. And if we are not able to get jobs here we can go outside andork there. So I think I can fulfill my dreams by doing this course,” said Saima Jan, another girl student.

Such facilities were not available in Kashmir following insurgency till recently.

The academy officials now wish to impart quality education to youngsters here.

“They were not in a position to get training because of the turmoil conditions since 1989. Then we decided since…. in Kashmir, progress is going on from all sides. So we decided that we will establish a very good institution here. And the students are getting training outside Kashmir; they are being trained there.

Now we have established an institution here and we will provide them, more sophisticated training than outside,” said Manzoor Ahmad, a trainer at the airhostess academy.

The setting up of the training institution for women and the response from the people marks an important milestone in Kashmir. (ANI)

Kashmiri girls all set to be airhostesses

Srinagar, May 10 (ANI): Many Kashmiri girls have opted to explore career options in aviation industry by undertaking courses in aviation sector to be airhostesses and enjoy travelling across the world.

Several young girls and also boys are now joining courses to get training for flight attendants and other related jobs in the aviation sector to fulfill their dreams.

First airhostess academy named ‘Viinzs’ has recently opened in Srinagar aims to provide quality education in the aviation sector to Kashmiri youth.

Kashmir girls, who had earlier just dreamt of being airhostess and flying High, are now actually seeing their dreams getting fulfilled.

“It’s very nice that air hostess training is being given here. Girls and boys both should forget all the fear from their heart and minds and study this course to make their life. And this was my dream to become an airhostess. I think my dream will be soon fulfilled now,” said Rizwana Akhtar, one of the girl students.

Kashmiri youth also believe that the inauguration of the International Airport in February last year, would open up new opportunities for them.

“An international airport has been made, which means, we are getting an opportunity. And if we are not able to get jobs here we can go outside and work there. So I think I can fulfill my dreams by doing this course,” said Saima Jan, another girl student.

Such facilities were not available in Kashmir following insurgency till recently.

The academy officials now wish to impart quality education to youngsters here.

“They were not in a position to get training because of the turmoil conditions since 1989. Then we decided since…. in Kashmir, progress is going on from all sides. So we decided that we will establish a very good institution here. And the students are getting training outside Kashmir; they are being trained there.

Now we have established an institution here and we will provide them, more sophisticated training than outside,” said Manzoor Ahmad, a trainer at the airhostess academy.

The setting up of the training institution for women and the response from the people marks an important milestone in Kashmir. By Afzal Bhatt (ANI)

Girls will be girls, boys will be boys

Washington, Apr 29 (ANI): Whoever said ‘Men are from Mars and women from Venus’ should give a pat on his or her back, for scientists have found that sex-typed characteristics develop differently in girls and boys.

The new longitudinal study of children’s personality traits and interests, by researchers at The Pennsylvania State University, the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and Purdue University, looked at first- and second-born siblings from nearly 200 mostly White, middle-class American families.

Researchers collected information through home interviews conducted over seven years, activity diaries provided by the children, and saliva samples that measured the children’s testosterone levels.

Quite expected, they found that girls and boys differed in their sex-typed personality qualities and their sex-typed activity interests in early adolescence.

While girls showed higher levels of expressive traits (such as kindness and sensitivity) and interest in “feminine” activities (such as the arts and reading), boys displayed higher levels of instrumental traits (such as independence and adventurousness) and interest in “masculine” activities (such as sports and math).

But, the girls’ stereotypically feminine, expressive traits didn’t change over time.

On the other hand, boys’ sensitivity and warmth lessened substantially across middle childhood but increased in later adolescence so that by about age 19, boys reported about the same levels of sensitivity and warmth as girls.

For stereotypically masculine traits such as independence and adventurousness, girls showed increases only in middle childhood, but in boys, these traits rose across adolescence.

Such a pattern meant that by the end of high school, boys had many more of these characteristics than girls.

The study also found that changes in girls’ and boys’ personality traits and interests were related to how they spent their time.

Generally, girls who spent time with other females developed female personality characteristics, and boys who pursued activities with other males developed male characteristics.

However, the time spent with female peers was the exception-boys and girls who spent time with friends, who were girls, increased in independence and adventurousness.

The research also found that interests and traits developed differently in first-born children than in children born second, and second-born children showed increases in traits like adventurousness and independence across adolescence, unlike in firstborns.

Finally, it was found that children who showed faster rates of increase in the hormone testosterone in early adolescence weren’t as affected by social influences on their personality development.

The study appears in the latest issue of the journal Child Development. (ANI)