Saturday, January 30, 2010

South Asian Games2010

South Asian Games2010




South Asian Games2010




The 2010 South Asian Games is a major multi-sport event, scheduled to take place from January 29 to February 9, 2010 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. This will be the third time that the Bangladeshi capital hosts the Games, thus becoming the 4th city to host the Games multiple times (after Colombo, Kathmandu and Islamabad). It is also expected to be the largest sporting event ever in the history of Bangladesh.
2010 SA Games Medal List
Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
India 1 0 0 1
Pakistan 0 1 0 1
Sri Lanka 0 0 1 1
Afghanistan 0 0 0 0
Bangladesh 0 0 0 0
Bhutan 0 0 0 0
Maldives 0 0 0 0
Nepal 0 0 0 0
SQUASH-WIN FOR MASUD AND SWAPAN
Posted:30/01/2010
SA Games Volleyball has openned Bangladesh makes winning start Bangladesh women’s team beat Pakistan in Badminto Flag raising ceremony held Posted:29/01/2010 i""train" men in relationships.


The 2010 South Asian Games is a major multi-sport event, scheduled to take place from January 29 to February 9, 2010 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. This will be the third time that the Bangladeshi capital hosts the Games, thus becoming the 4th city to host the Games multiple times (after Colombo, Kathmandu and Islamabad). It is also expected to be the largest sporting event ever in the history of Bangladesh.
2010 SA Games Medal List
Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
India 1 0 0 1
Pakistan 0 1 0 1
Sri Lanka 0 0 1 1
Afghanistan 0 0 0 0
Bangladesh 0 0 0 0
Bhutan 0 0 0 0
Maldives 0 0 0 0
Nepal 0 0 0 0
SQUASH-WIN FOR MASUD AND SWAPAN

BEAUTY QUEEN OF MISS AMERICA 2010



BEAUTY QUEEN OF MISS AMERICA 2010







LAS VEGAS – A group of 53



beauty queens picked from around the country for their smiles, struts and interview savvy were set to woo a panel of judges in hopes of winning the Miss America 2010 crown.

The young women from all 50 states plus the District of Columbia, Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico will cap a week of preliminary competition with the scheduled crowning of a winner Saturday night in Las Vegas.

The winner, crowned by reigning Miss America Katie Stam, gets a $50,000 scholarship and embarks on a yearlong run with the title to represent the organization and raise awareness for her chosen platform.
their ballots will be used to pick the winner.

Miss Virginia Caressa Cameron, Miss California Kristy Cavinder and Miss Michigan Nicole Blaszczyk each won $2,000 this week for winning talent competitions among three split fields of contestants. Miss Oregon CC Barber, Miss New York Alyse Zwick and Miss Puerto Rico Mimi Pabon each won $1,000 in nightly swimsuit competitions.

Miss Oklahoma Taylor Treat won the $6,000 Quality of Life award, given to the contestant judged to excel most in volunteerism and community service.

In all, the Miss America Organization planned to award $340,000 in scholarships at the national level. The organization says its national, state and local chapters gave more than $45 million last year in cash and scholarships.

The pageant at the Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino was preceded by a one-hour television special on TLC, "Miss America: Behind the Curtain." The Kelly-hosted special will reveal 12 women — picked by the contestants themselves — who will be part of an online public vote for a spot among the 15 finalists.

Stam, a Seymour, Ind., native, was one of four finalists chosen by viewers last year. This year, the public will pick three finalists to move onto the swimsuit competition.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

The victorian age

The victorian age










Queen victoria


The Victorian period


This age is named after Queen Victoria who reigned over England from1837 to1901.The Victorian periodUnited Kingdom was the period of Queen Victoria's reign from June 1837 until her death on the 22nd of January 1901. [1] The reign was a long period of prosperity for the British people, as profits gained from the overseas British Empire, as well as from industrial improvements at home, allowed an educated middle class to develop. Some scholars extend the beginning of the period—as defined by a variety of sensibilities and political games that have come to be associated with the Victorians—back five years to the passage of the Reform Act 1832.

The era was preceded by the Georgian period and succeeded by the Edwardian period. The latter half of the Victorian era roughly coincided with the first portion of the Belle Époque era of continental Europe and the Gilded Age of the United States.

The era is often characterized as a long period of peace, known as the Pax Britannica, and economic, colonial, and industrial consolidation, temporarily disrupted by the Crimean War, although Britain was at war every year during this time. Towards the end of the century, the policies of New Imperialism led to increasing colonial conflicts and eventually the Anglo-Zanzibar War and the Boer War. Domestically, the agenda was increasingly liberal with a number of shifts in the direction of gradual political reform and the widening of the voting franchise.

The population of England had almost doubled from 16.8 million in 1851 to 30.5 million in 1901.[2] Ireland’s population decreased rapidly, from 8.2 million in 1841 to less than 4.5 million in 1901.[3] At the same time, around 15 million emigrants left the United Kingdom in the Victorian era and settled mostly in the United States, Canada, and Australia.[4]


The important events of this age were: 1.The first Reformation Act in 1832 The second Reformation Act and The Third Reformation Act in gave voting rights to every male.

2.In 1833 slaves were declared free.
3.There are a significant progress of women during this time.
4.Mechanism of Railways and ships was improved which helped develop commerce and industry.
he
TheVictorian age

[Click on image to enlarge] In 1897 Mark Twain was visiting London during the Diamond Jubilee celebrations honoring the sixtieth anniversary of Queen Victoria's coming to the throne. "British history is two thousand years old," Twain observed, "and yet in a good many ways the world has moved farther ahead since the Queen was born than it moved in all the rest of the two thousand put together." Twain's comment captures the sense of dizzying change that characterized the Victorian period. Perhaps most important was the shift from a way of life based on ownership of land to a modern urban economy based on trade and manufacturing. By the beginning of the Victorian period, the Industrial Revolution, as this shift was called, had created profound economic and social changes, including a mass migration of workers to industrial towns, where they lived in new urban slums. But the changes arising out of the Industrial Revolution were just one subset of the radical changes taking place in mid- and late-nineteenth-century Britain — among others were the democratization resulting from extension of the franchise; challenges to religious faith, in part based on the advances of scientific knowledge, particularly of evolution; and changes in the role of women.

[Click on image to enlarge] All of these issues, and the controversies attending them, informed Victorian literature. In part because of the expansion of newspapers and the periodical press, debate about political and social issues played an important role in the experience of the reading public. The Victorian novel, with its emphasis on the realistic portrayal of social life, represented many Victorian issues in the stories of its characters. Moreover, debates about political representation involved in expansion both of the franchise and of the rights of women affected literary representation, as writers gave voice to those who had been voiceless.

[Click on image to enlarge] The section in The Norton Anthology of English Literature entitled "Victorian Issues" (NAEL 8, 2.1538–1606) contains texts dealing with four controversies that concerned the Victorians: evolution, industrialism, what the Victorians called "The Woman Question", and Great Britain's identity as an imperial power. Norton Topics Online provides further texts on three of these topics: the debate about the benefits and evils of the Industrial Revolution, the debate about the nature and role of women, and the myriad issues that arose as British forces worked to expand their global influence. The debates on both industrialization and women's roles in society reflected profound social change: the formation of a new class of workers — men, women, and children — who had migrated to cities, particularly in the industrial North, in huge numbers, to take jobs in factories, and the growing demand for expanded liberties for women. The changes were related; the hardships that the Industrial Revolution and all its attendant social developments created put women into roles that challenged traditional ideas about women's nature. Moreover, the rate of change the Victorians experienced, caused to a large degree by advances in manufacturing, created new opportunities and challenges for women. They became writers, teachers, and social reformers, and they claimed an expanded set of rights.

[Click on image to enlarge] In the debates about industrialism and about the Woman Question, voices came into print that had not been heard before. Not only did women writers play a major role in shaping the terms of the debate about the Woman Question, but also women from the working classes found opportunities to describe the conditions of their lives. Similarly, factory workers described their working and living conditions, in reports to parliamentary commissions, in the encyclopedic set of interviews journalist Henry Mayhew later collected as London Labor and the London Poor, and in letters to the editor that workers themselves wrote. The world of print became more inclusive and democratic. At the same time, novelists and even poets sought ways of representing these new voices. The novelist Elizabeth Gaskell wrote her first novel, Mary Barton, in order to give voice to Manchester's poor, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning tried to find ways in poetry of giving voice to the poor and oppressed.

The third section of this Web site, "The Painterly Image in Victorian Poetry," investigates the rich connection in the Victorian period between visual art and literature. Much Victorian aesthetic theory makes the eye the most authoritative sense and the clearest indicator of truth. Victorian poetry and the Victorian novel both value visual description as a way of portraying their subjects. This emphasis on the visual creates a particularly close connection between poetry and painting. Books of fiction and poetry were illustrated, and the illustrations amplified and intensified the effects of the text. The texts, engravings, and paintings collected here provide insight into the connection between the verbal and the visual so central to Victorian aesthetics.

Britain’s identity as an imperial power with considerable global influence is explored more comprehensively in the fourth topic section. For Britain, the Victorian period witnessed a renewed interest in the empire’s overseas holdings. British opinions on the methods and justification of imperialist missions overseas varied, with some like author Joseph Conrad throwing into sharp relief the brutal tactics and cold calculations involved in these missions, while others like politician Joseph Chamberlain considered the British to be the “great governing race” with a moral obligation to expand its influence around the globe. Social evolutionists, such as Benjamin Kidd, likewise supported the British dominion through their beliefs about the inherent developmental inferiority of the subject peoples, thus suggesting that Europeans had a greater capacity for ruling—a suggestion that many took as complete justification of British actions overseas. Regardless of dissenting voices, British expansion pushed forward at an unprecedented rate, ushering in a new era of cultural exchange that irreversibly altered the British worldview.

Major writers and Their works:Alfred Lord Tennyson(1809-92)Robert Browning(1812-89) Matthew Arnold (1822-88)Emily Bronte(1818-48)Thomas Hardy(1840-1928)Karl Marx(1801-1890)

Monday, January 18, 2010

The Romantic poets

THE Romantic poets of English Literature


  1. Major works:Don juan,
  2. The vision of judgement,



Lyrical Ballads






HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE







The history of English Literature is a very closely related to the history of English people . It began with the emergence of the English nation and onward kept developing with the social development of the nation.



Milton






In the history of the English there had been several religious and political changes.As in the history of English people,so in the history of English literature there were different phases of progress.Some of the ages have got more than one name because different historians have given them different names. shakespear
  1. The old English period or The Anglo-saxon period.(450-1066)
  2. The Middle English period.(1066-1500)
  3. The Renaissance Period.(1500-1660)
  4. The Neoclassical period.(1660-1785)
  5. The Romantic period.(1785_1832)
  6. The victorian perod.(1832_1901)
  7. The Modern period.(1901_1910)
  8. The postmodern period.(1939_........)
The Old English Period:This period started in fifth century when the Jutes, Angles, Saxons came to England from Germany defeated the English tribes and started their reign.
  1. The historical events which influenced the literature of is period were:
a.Christianity reached England and Christianization of the pagan English tribes began.
b.In the 7th century monasteries were established where a written literature bogan.

famous poet of shakespear

william shakespear is a famous poet of English literature .He was famous for the objective presentation of his deep knowledge about human psychology . He wrote many novels ,sonnets ,dramas ,poems etc.


William Shakespeare

He wrote 37 plays,154sonnets, He wrote 25plays before the death of queen Elizabath 1 .

Majors works of Shakespear:Romeo and juliet, Hamlet,Macbeth, As you like it,The Merchant of venice .

William Shakespeare


He was the king of Elizabethan period.



a

Saturday, January 16, 2010

American actor's Sigourney Weaver biography.


American actor's Sigourney Weaver


Weaver was born Susan Alexandra Weaver in New York City,Weaver also has done voice work in television and film.
She Aciived lots of academic awards such as; Best Actress for Gorillas in the MistBestand Best Supporting Actressfor her role as Katharine Parker in Working Girl. She also achived neither award but was awarded a Golden Globe for each role.

She married to the filmmaker Jim Simpson at October 1, 1984.They are daughter Charlotte Simpson, was born on April 13, 1990.
She has narrated the American version of the BBC/Discovery Channel show Planet Earth. She hosted the annual gala of the Trickle Up ProgramOn April 8, 2008, a non-profit organization focusing on those in extreme poverty, mainly women and the disabled, in the Rainbow Room.

Weaver has donated $5,800 to various Democratic politicians, including Senators Ted Kennedy and Barbara Boxer. She supported President Barack Obama's 2008 Presidential campaign.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Intel® Core™ i5 processor

With intelligent performance that accelerates response to games and photo editing, the new Intel® Core™ i5 processor moves faster when you d