I am happy to see a new Punjabi restaurant coming up not far from where I stay......Would report after tasting the stuff....In the meantime Balle- Balle Ji.
Dorota Piotrowiak' obtained a diploma in the painting studio of prof. Mieczyslaw Ziomek at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń in 1996. . She works in painting, sculpture and graphics. Since 2013, she has been creating models and dioramas of nature, as well as maquettes and thematic displays for national parks, landscape parks and museums. She conducts authorial workshops for children and young people using the papier-mâché technique. She is the initiator and organizer of “Sztuka Papieru” ( the Art of Paper ) Festival in cooperation with the Friends of the Lower Vistula Society and Paper Technical School in Świecie on Vistula. Associated with the Art of Paper studio ( www.sztukapapieru.pl ). Here are some of the portraits made by her: Disclaimer: The copyright remains with the original holder. This blog is intended to introduce this amazing artist to a wider audience.
I am happy to share here with the list of 48 books published by me so far: List of books by Dr. K. J. S. Chatrath 1. The Foreign Policy of France; 2. The Wetlands of India (Ed.); 3. India in the Debates of French Parliament; 4. Vers la Lumiere- A Study of the French School System; 5. Managing Better with Check-Lists; 6. A Glance at France; 7. Human Rights for Education & Democracy (Ed.) 8. France - A Brief Bibliography; 9. The Joy...
I visited the Bonda Hills for the first time in 1968 when I was under training in the undivided Koraput district of Odisha. There was no road and we had to climb/walk for about 19 kms. I went there again in 2001 and noted that there were improvements. Road had been built for around 10 kms and there was a Kanyashram or tribal girls hostel nearby. The Bonda people are a tribal people who currently live in the hills of Odisha’s Malkangiri district in India. There are two different Bonda tribes: the Upper Bondas with a population of 6,700 who are the most isolated from mainstream Indian society, and the Lower Bonda with a population of 17,000. Upper Bondas have almost no connection to the outside world. On both the occasions I had a meal there. They grow brown rice which is almost roundish and has a pleasant aroma. The Bondas are generally semi-clothed, the women wear thick silver neck bands. The Bonda attire is expl...
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