Saturday, October 20, 2012

personality traits




The Miss India pageant is the ideal platform for making your
dreams come true. So, all you young girls out there, remember
to believe in yourself. And don't stop dreaming. For dreams
do come true one day. Women who have frequent vaginal orgasms
are likelier than other women to say they climax more easily
with men with larger penises, according to a new study.
Women who tend to prefer penile-vaginal intercourse over
other types of sex also say the same, it said.
"Male anxiety about penis size may not reflect internalized,
culturally arbitrary masculine stereotypes, but an accurate
appreciation that size matters to many women — just as men
feel legitimate anxiety when they enter the mating market
about their intelligence, personality traits, sense of humor,
social status, height, wealth, and other traits known to be
favored by women across cultures," the Huffington Post quoted
study researcher Stuart Brody, a psychologist at the
University of the West of Scotland, as telling LiveScience.
But other researchers were less convinced.
Women who orgasm through vaginal stimulation may indeed
prefer longer penises, but not everyone prefers to orgasm
that way, said Barry Komisaruk, who researches female sexual
response at Rutgers University, told LiveScience.
But some researchers argue that vaginal stimulation is simply
activating a different, internal, section of the clitoris.
Women report different sensations from vaginal and clitoral
orgasms, Komisaruk said, but which one women prefer largely
comes down to personal preference.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Corporation 64 acres


District land officials said the government could acquire
only 13 of the total 64 acres. "We cannot progress after the
trouble in two mouzas. The minister, district magistrate and
two local MLAs tried to persuade unwilling farmers and
pattadars. Some of the men who accepted compensation cheques
later changed their stance," a district land officer said.
Chairman of the Congress-run Dalkhola Municipality Subhas
Goswami, however, said the Power Grid Corporation offered
"good compensation" to land owners. "They offered Rs 19 lakh
per acre when the market price is Rs 4-5 lakh an acre," he
said.
Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar has offered the Power Grid
Corporation 64 acres, free of encumbrances, if the
corporation shifts the project to the state.
NEW DELHI: Keen to snap out of a policy coma and rev up an
anaemic economy, the government is looking to slash " green
tape" by making lease extensions simpler, amending
restrictions on work beginning on projects where forest land
is involved and easing expansion norms for mines.
Sifting through highly polarizing arguments, new initiatives
aim to reduce points of contention that have often locked
ministers in charge of economic and infrastructure portfolios
into an adversarial position with the ministry of environment
and forests.
Looking to resolve the "clash of mandates" that contributed
to a policy stasis, imperiling the UPA-2's political
prospects as a gloomy economy besides spawning voter
discontent, the government plans to tweak green guidelines in
a manner that brightens the investment climate.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

will not always produce the same alignments


louis vuitton luggage
The global competition between democratic governments and autocratic governments will become a dominant feature of the twenty-first-century world. The great powers are increasingly choosing sides and identifying themselves with one camp or the other. India, which during the Cold War was proudly neutral or even pro-Soviet, has begun to identify itself as part of the democratic West. Japan in recent years has also gone out of its way to position itself as a democratic great power, sharing common values with other Asian democracies but also with non-Asian democracies. For both Japan and India the desire to be part of the democratic world is genuine, but it is also part of a geopolitical calculation--a way of cementing solidarity with other great powers that can be helpful in their strategic competition with autocratic China.There is no perfect symmetry in international affairs. The twin realities of the present era--great power competition and the contest between democracy and autocracy--will not always produce the same alignments. Democratic India in its geopolitical competition with autocratic China supports the Burmese dictatorship in order to deny Beijing a strategic advantage. India's diplomats enjoy playing the other great powers against each other, sometimes warming to Russia, sometimes to China. Democratic Greece and Cyprus pursue close relations with Russia partly out of cultural solidarity with Eastern Orthodox cousins, but more out of economic interest. The United States has long allied itself with Arab dictatorships for strategic and economic reasons, as well as to successive military rulers in Pakistan. As in the Cold War, strategic and economic considerations, as well as cultural affinities, may often cut against ideology.