Sunday, June 12, 2016
Tension over the signal at Faen faire, now things are cool
It is often seen that during certain times of the phone signal is snitch. But now it will not. Libon app now to your phone when the signal is lost on such an occasion, you will provide the phone to call. But all
new Delhi. It is often seen that during certain times of the phone signal is snitch. But now it will not. Libon app now to your phone when the signal is lost on such an occasion, you will provide the phone to call. But it would be when you are in Wi-Fi zone. In this case, even without network calls and messages keep coming.
Libon app maker company called "Reach Me 'app has been developed, the network is not your things will not stop. Recently launched VoIP service behind this app is fantastic. Another great feature of this app. If you are not in the mood for receiving the call to voice mail, he also can transfer.
Its most distinguishing characteristic is that the app will work on any network. Liban first get on Android and iPhone for the last stage of the preparation work is underway. The app on iOS and Android voice calls and instant messaging service already exists in 100 countries. Now the "Reach Me 'feature of the app update with the end of March will begin in Italy. It will be launched in other countries later.
Saturday, June 11, 2016
Learn healthy benefits and physical benefits of onions
!!
You have heard that onion peels remove what's perhaps less known but these skins of the onion is the hidden treasures of health and taste. Onion is also simple in appearance and an unmatched quality vegetable drug, onions others words, we might even say a ground bud. The top and bottom of the white, pink, fleshy green leaves of both are eaten with great relish. Onion is the most consumed vegetable after potatoes.

Kelisin onions and Rayboflavin (vitamin B) is sufficient. It contains 11 percent carbohydrates and N-propyl-Die sulfide odor comes due. This substance is water-soluble amino acids causes the action of enzymes. That's why cutting onions on the tears come. Onion salad and vegetables as we do use it, it is an excellent drug.
Onion healthy benefits: -

1.) heat stroke - a common practice in the summer heat to take, but if you eat raw onions you will not heat. Heat stroke, onion juice benefits. You have heard elders say that the onion does not keep up with the heat.
2) in the treatment of arthritis - if someone in your home is arthritis or joint pain by massaging the onion juice will rest. Mix onion juice with mustard oil massage provides relief.

3.) Mix onion juice with mustard oil massage Just two months consecutive to joint pain and relieve rheumatism.
4) Mix onion juice with sugar to get rid of phlegm problem soon.
5.) In the summer of onions on white loaf breaking headache smell soon get comfortable. Msudo swelling and soreness in the event of tooth mixture of onion juice and salt to find relief from the pain.
6.) To overcome the problem of hair fall -ball onion is very effective. Rgdne onion juice in place of falling hair will stop hair loss. Coating the hair with black hair also begin to grow.

7.) -If you for appendicitis appendicitis complain onion is very useful for you. Onion juice mixed with sugar syrup to get rid of kidney stones by drinking. Onion juice in the morning empty stomach thirst slip out of the way of the stone itself is lost.
8.) If the problem Pyorrhea teeth by hot pressing down the pieces of onion close your mouth. Doing so will be collecting saliva in your mouth. Sometime after placing him in the mouth exclude. 4-5 times in a day, that the problem of Pyorrhea ends.

9.) Diabetes patients should eat foods with raw onions. Eating onion becomes normal levels of insulin in the body.
10.) onion prevents cancer cells from growing. It contains high amounts of sulfur element. The sulfur stomach, colon, breast, lung and prostate cancer avoided
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Euro fever: Fans, businesses gear up for summer windfall
Jun 10, 2016- “I’ll put on the England shirt,” says Sushil Shakya, a junior account officer at Nepal Telecom. “I hope Liecester’s Jamie Vardy carries his scoring form to lead England to their maiden Euro title,” adds Shakya, a sworn fan of the English Premier League side Manchester United.
Vardy scored 24 goals, one behind league’s top scorer Harry Kane of Tottenham Hotspur, to fire Liecester to their maiden league title in the 2015-16 season.
The 38-year-old Om Bahal native, found a common ground with friends—supporters of rival EPL sides—in celebrating Liecester’s stunning success after Red Devils’ campaign fizzled out mid-way through the season.
He plans to invite his friends to watch the Euro games on a 55-inch LED television he bought this April. “It will be a great opportunity to socialise and meet up with old friends.”
As international sports channels are readily available, increasing number of Nepalis are more familiar about Manchester United and Real Madrid than their national team, a local football administrator conceded recently. This craze will only reach higher in Kathmandu when Euro 2016—the European Championships as it is formally called—kicks off in France on Friday night.
One only has to visit sports apparel stores to witness football fever. With the competition expanded from 16 to 24 teams this time around, fans are spoilt for choice on team shirts.
Others are busy with the guessing games. Who will be the possible winners? Will France flourish encore in front of the home crowd after 1984? Will the remaining members of Spain’s “golden generation” put behind their bleak World Cup in Brazil for a record third straight European crown? Or will Germany and Italy reproduce their big-tournament temperament? While the best talents from Europe are vying for the Henry Delauney trophy in faraway France, the event is widely considered as a perfect occasion for a substantial cash windfall. Everyone—from sellers of sports merchandise to TV sets, beer companies to restaurateurs—is trying everything in their power to score big. Already, Euro 2016 has been a bonanza for DishHome, the leading operator for digital broadcasting of television channels in the country, which has recorded a 200 percent jump in subscription compared to the average sales figures of the February-April period. “We have registered around 16,000 new customers in the past 10 days. Many of them have subscribed to our sports package,” says Kalyan Adhikari, marketing chief at DishHome.
All 51 matches will be telecast live by Sony sports channels network, the holder of the broadcasting rights for the Indian subcontinent.
The championships will be watched by an estimated cumulative TV audience of over 8 billion—the third highest after the football World Cup and the Olympic Games. With an estimated 300 million supporters of European football—EPL, La Liga and Serie A—Ronaldo, Messi, Paul Pogba are all household names in South Asia. In Nepal, there is a growing trend of fans going to restaurants and bars during the matches, which clearly serves dual purpose for the viewers: catching up with old friends and enjoying matches. Carlsberg Breweries, one of the official sponsors of the month-long event, is working overtime to ensure that Nepali football fans have as much fun over here and that its money is well spent.
“We’ve installed around 200 dedicated outlets where people can relax and watch the games live,” says Salina Sharma, senior brand development executive of Gorkha Brewery, the local brewer of the Danish beverage.
“There will be a host of fun activities to entertain the fans during the matches,” she adds.
Having endured the five-month blockade, restaurateurs are full of hope that Euro 2016 will help pick up the slack. Sambhavit Shrestha, who manages Station BBQ at Pulchowk, is busy preparing for the big event.
BBQ was a popular hangout for local and foreign football fans during the World Cup held in Brazil two years ago.
“We have been showing European club football matches live during weekends without troubles since 2010,” says Shrestha, recalling Real Madrid’s record 11th Champions League triumph in the final against city rivals Atletico last month.
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
15,000 Nepali die every year from tobacco use
Bhaktapur, May 30: Some 15,000 Nepalis die every year from various health-related problems caused by the consumption of tobacco products, the data shows.
Though the Tobacco Products (Regulation and Control Act) is in force since 2011, its effective enforcement is still awaited. Over Rs 10 billion is spent every year in the purchase of tobacco products.
According to a study, over Rs 15 billion is spent in the treatment of non-communicable diseases caused by tobacco use. Some 52 percent men and 13.3 women in Nepal consume tobacco and tobacco products, the Demographic Health Survey report shows.
Some five percent pregnant women and seven percent nursing women smoke cigarettes.
Tobacco products consumers are vulnerable to asthma, coughing, cancer and heart-diseases, Health Right and Tobacco Control District Network Bhaktapur coordinator Ratnashwori Chawal said.
Chawal insisted on the launching of public awareness campaign from the government and people’s level against the consequences of smoking and consumption of tobacco products.
Monday, June 6, 2016
India court convicts five over Danish woman's rape in Delhi
Jun 6, 2016- A court in the Indian capital, Delhi, has found five men guilty for the 2014 gang rape of a Danish woman.
The 51-year-old tourist was robbed and raped at knife point on 14 January. Nine people, including three minors, were arrested for the crime.
One of the accused died in February. The minors are being tried in a separate court for juveniles.
Scrutiny of sexual violence in India has grown since the 2012 gang rape and murder of a student on a Delhi bus.
"All accused are held guilty for all offences," The Times of India quoted Additional Sessions Judge Ramesh Kumar as saying on Monday.
The sentencing is due on Thursday. The victim was not present in the court on Monday.
The tourist had lost her way to her hotel in Delhi's Paharganj area when she approached the men to ask for directions.
She gave a detailed statement in the presence of the Danish ambassador before leaving the country soon after the assault.
The 2012 gang rape led to protests and new anti-rape laws in India.
However, brutal sexual attacks against women and children continue to be reported across the country.
Sunday, June 5, 2016
World Environment Day: Campaigners lay dead demanding right to clean air Youths initiate #Maskmandu campaign Seek to declare Kathmandu Valley 'Mask-Must Zone’
Jun 5, 2016- In a symbolic protest on the World Environment day, more than 200 activists, students, environmental campaigners, cyclists and pedestrians laid dead on the ground on Sunday, demanding the government take urgent action to ensure constitutional right to live in a healthy and clean environment.
The campaigners organised a flash mob in front of Rastriya Sabhagriha in Kathmandu, where people joined them and laid down on the ground to protest against the government inaction to control worsening environment.
Shreni Rajbhandary, organiser of the event, said that they have urged the government to declare Kathmandu Valley a 'Mask-Must Zone’.
According to the Environment Performance Index 2016 prepared by Yale University in the US, Nepal is ranked 149 among 180 countries in terms of protecting human health and environment. Nepal also ranks 177 in terms of its air quality.
While cities around the world including neighboring countries are taking stringent action to improve air quality, Nepal is yet to prioritise air pollution as major public health issues and act accordingly, environment activist say.
Akash Shrestha, one of the campaigners, said, “World Health Organization (WHO) air quality report of 2016 have listed Kathmandu one of the most polluted cities in the world and that the air quality of Kathmandu is five times worse than WHO recommended guidelines.” Shrestha further added that they have started campaign #Maskmandu till the air quality in Kathmandu comes down as per National Air Quality Standards.
The campaigners have demanded government formulate ‘Comprehensive Clean Air Action Plan’, install air pollution monitoring stations in key locations of Kathmandu, devise stringent vehicle emission standard, promote non-motorised transport system, take action against contractors for delayed road construction that leads to dust pollution, take action to reduce industrial pollution especially from brick kilns, mobilise pollution tax immediately on pollution mitigation activities, among others.
The Campaign for Clean Air Rights (C-CAR), a petition that collects online signature, submitted its petition to the Ministry of Environment and Population during the official Environment Day cycle rally event of the government today.
The petition will also be submitted to Office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers, Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport, Ministry of Industry, Ministry of Health, Kathmandu Metropolitan City and all Municipalities in Kathmandu Valley, this week.
Muhammad Ali 'had a tough time for a year' before death - doctor
Ali won 56 of his 61 professional fights between 1960 and 1981
Jun 5, 2016- Muhammad Ali's doctor says the iconic boxer had been "having a tough time in the last year" before his death.
The three-time world heavyweight champion, who had Parkinson's disease for 32 years, died aged 74 from "septic shock due to unspecified natural causes" according to his family.
"The last week has been particularly tough," said Abraham Lieberman, who was with Ali only hours before he died.
"It became apparent God wanted him and we all became reconciled to it."
Lieberman told BBC Radio 5 live's Sportsweek: "Everyone in the back of their minds expected something bad was going to happen but you always hope you will beat the odds because he is someone who always beat the odds - he is not an ordinary person.
"He stood up for his beliefs and what he thought was right. He treated everybody from the humblest person to the biggest celebrity the same - which was fair.
"You could not believe how nice he was outside the ring compared to the way he was inside the ring. I lost a great friend."
Lieberman, a director of the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center in Arizona, rejected suggestions that boxing was solely responsible for Ali's illness.
"I don't think it helped but I think he developed it slowly over a number of years," he said.
"People that develop Dementia Pugilistica are usually dead within three or four years - he's had Parkinson's for over 30 years.
"It started on one side, his brain looked relatively good on MRI scan, I can't tell you boxing didn't have a role but I think he had regular Parkinson's disease."
The doctor recalled a story from many years ago when Ali visited an elderly man in a nursing home, who mistook him for another great boxer, Joe Louis.
"Muhammad said: 'If it gave that old man pleasure to think he met Joe Louis - then I'm Louis.'," he said.
"I think that summed up Muhammad, he was a great personality but really a kind person, with tremendous feeling of sympathy for people."
Lieberman said Ali had been supported by his family throughout his illness.
"His Parkinson's got worse but he had a very devoted family who really treasured him and gave him as much quality of life as you could have," he said.
Former boxer Joe Bugner, who fought Ali twice, was also a guest on Sportsweek and the 66-year-old, speaking from his home in Australia, said: "He and I became one of the closest friends in the boxing world.
"He was unique, not only was a great, great boxer and athlete but also very intelligent and nobody could outwit him as far as the words were concerned."
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