Tech|Style|Decor

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Tech|Style|Decor www.fridayweekly.com.np Every Thursday | ISSUE 91 | RS. 20 SUBSCRIBER COPY ISSN 2091-1092 9 772091 109009 www.facebook.com/fridayweekly 3 104 8 1810 1912 14 PAGE 3 FEATURE EVENTS HALLOFFRAME ENTERTAINMENT GOURMET What extent would some Read about the daring Beetle The Ultimate Cocktail Chal- Kathmandu witnesses one The singing nun talks The chef writes about his people go to bring their favor- journey across South Asia to lenge is here to test your more literature festival this about the book ‘Phool ko kitchen explorations with ite celebs to Nepal? Examples raise funds for Spinal Injuries bartending skills. Interested? year. Here are some of the Aankhama’ and why she persimmon – the fruit of the of rivers people could cross. Rehabilitation Center. Flip to Mark Your Calendar. personalities who attended. agreed for a book on her life. gods, and its benefits. NEWS | CLASSIFIED | SHOPPING tech | style | decor The Floydian he psychedelic rock of the late sixties derives its name from the fact that the sub genre was an attempt at recreat- Ting the effects of mind altering drugs, popular with the beat generation of the Experience time, with and in music. The movement was — Aayush Niroula relatively short lived, however, and like the effects of its inspiration, it tapered out into the changing tastes of a different generation. It was perhaps the lingering effects of the era itself (represented by the hallucinating drugs themselves) that in the seventies a new sub genre was borne, which elaborated on a similar kind of music, but was more techno oudel P and conceptualized. Termed as progressive rock, it was defined by a set of artists and upak R bands whose complicated use of sounds, Model: Model: lengthy solo extensions and elaborate studio effects all drawn around a certain “concept” for albums is said to have elevated rock music to an art form. Turn to page 2 for more. 2 Issue 91 | 9 November 2011 Fr!day cover The Floydian Experience Of course, later on it was to Floyd for a tribute means chart- all kinds of music. It has been huge fan following for the band back to Life, Another Brick in wither away inspiring many oth- ing through an extensive terri- around 10 years since I started and a tribute to Pink Floyd, I the Wall and Wish you Were er genres and sub genres, criti- tory of music that is wide, in- listening to Pink Floyd and I don’t think, has been done be- Here will be staple with the cized during its fall of popular- terwoven and important to the find myself in their songs.” The fore in South Asia itself, let relatively less-known songs like ity as being elitist while almost biography of not only the band organizers are perhaps hoping alone Nepal. Until now we have The Great Gig in the Sky and as an antithesis to it, punk rock but to the kinds of music it rep- for a crowd which shares this been getting good feedback, our Echoes thrown into the mix. was to gain momentum, with its resented. When I ask Rana what sentiment or any other form event page on Facebook has Rana is also hoping that the au- short outbursts of simpler lyr- songs have been planned for the of attachment to the band. garnered a decent following and dience will come, and also very ics, and a more aggressive mu- show, he seems to recognize the But with the seeming popu- I have heard, there is a good importantly, the weather will be sic. It is mainly the mid phase favorable. The concert was in of this graph that an ensemble “Pink Floyd is not like any fact delayed from the proposed of musicians coming in from a date of October due to weather variety of established bands of other kind of a band, totally concerns. Its venue also changed the country are set to perform different. I have not always to Army Officers’ Club. through, in a concert on 12 No- been a very close follower; Another concern regarding vember. The concert is planned the concert is going to be lights as a tribute to one of the most and even when I played and sounds. Pink Floyd is, in interesting and seminal bands professionally, I didn’t do much many ways, a band of “experi- of the psychedelic to progres- of their stuff. But their music is ence”— their shows and concerts sive era. were reputed to be elaborately “Pink Floyd is not like any of a different kind altogether. designed with ample use of lights other kind of a band, totally dif- This is why we could not decide and sounds to create effects that ferent. I have not always been on one or a few bands to do the were to be part of the way their a very close follower; and even music was felt. In the earlier years, when I played professionally, I tribute.” this meant the use of colors and didn’t do much of their stuff. projections of swirling shapes for But their music is of a differ- difficulty of covering a band larity of pop, hip hop the creation of that essential psy- ent kind altogether. This is why with an elaborately long list of and hard rock amongst chedelic experience, while in the we could not decide on one or songs to their credit. “It is very the genres of import- later years, as the band got bigger a few bands to do the tribute,” hard to cover Pink Floyd. We ed music (besides the and moved onto progressive, the shares Dev Rana, the veteran have until now gone through a filmy numbers from our shows got more theatrical, there rock musician, when I ask him couple of lists, albums. Right neighbors, of course) was an intention of presenting why the organizers went for an now, Dipesh Singh (guitarist in Nepal, is there any in- a story or a concept. “There will ensemble of artists instead of with Robin n the New Revolu- dication of a strong following buzz in the market about it right be an enormous amount of lights bands to perform on the tribute. tion) is coordinating the music for a band whose music is based now.” The band has had enough and sounds,” Rana reassures, add- Rana is coordinating artists for part.” on sentiments that are as vari- hits to command a sizeable pull- ing, “There are going to be about the event besides taking on the Manish Malla is from Pulse able as deep personal reflections ing power (its albums have sold fifteen songs and they will have a drums himself. He tells me it Events Management, the com- to wider political awakenings? about 200 million copies world- Nepali interpretation, I hope the was a challenge to pick out and pany behind the event. I tell him When I ask Malla what his con- wide) and Malla is banking audience will enjoy our version of bring together artist to do a Pink deciding to do a Floyd tribute cerns about the audience are, more on the relative commercial the classics.” ! Floyd tribute, primarily because must have been borne out of in- he points to the novelty of the hits when preparing the set list Tribute to Pink Floyd is scheduled for 12 Novem- the music the band had created spiration, and he tells me of his concept for Nepal and in fact, for the concert. Keeping in mind ber (Saturday) at Army Officers’ Club, Sundhara. The concert begins at 6 pm and runs until 9 pm. is “different”. And the difficulty connection with the band. “I like for the whole South Asian re- what most of the crowd would Gates open at 3 pm. For more details, check What’s doesn’t end just there. Choosing all genres and have listened to gion itself. “There is of course a prefer, classics such as Coming On section. page3 just asking make your statement To what extent would you go to see your favorite artist perform in Nepal? — Mannat Shrestha Personally, I wouldn’t mind even if When we first asked Ayusha She is a phenomenal artist who If that was to happen, the model but he explained, “Although I I had to sell my Rolex to pay for Shrestha, the beauty with wits, continuously reinvents her music who ruled almost half of the would love to see Goo Goo the tickets. said she would love to have Anouar and her image effortlessly while Nepali music videos years back, Dolls as they are my favorite Brahem perform to a private retaining her madonnaliciousness. would first faint. However, she band, I would not really jump off It is seldom that we get to see audience under the light of a We share our birthdays, so I could added, “After getting back to the cliff. I keep telling my friends international artists perform full moon, somewhere by water claim for all I care, that Nepal is consciousness, I would not care as well that I would not go to in Nepal although this year has in the trans-himalayan region. the best birthday destination and how much the most expensive any extent to bring my favorite been different. When Bryan “What lengths would I go to to please say yes to having the ticket cost, I’d just do anything celebrity to town. I would be Adams performed in Kathmandu, make this happen? I would go the time of her life here in Nepal on to see Lil Wayne up and close.” happy to go and watch them we hoped to welcome more of entire mathematical breadth of a this special day.
Recommended publications
  • Issue 234 Newsletter
    GURKHA INTERNATIONAL GROUP Feb 2017 Issue 234 Newsletter Contents • The Last Month in Brief, Shipping Companies ...........................................1 • GI (HK) Business, World Security: Economics, Nuclear, Europe ...........2 • The Arab World, Afghanistan & Pakistan, Palestine, Asia ...................3 • Thailand and Malaysia, The Malacca Straits, Somalia, Africa, The Americas, Myanmar, India ...............4 • Nepal News .....................................5 - 7 • Hong Kong News ........................8 - 9 • Conclusion .........................................10 We publish this month a photograph of MV Genting Dream of Star Cruise. If you have pictures or postcards of your ship, please send them in to us for future Newsletters. We Welcome Carnival UK Columbia Cruise Sevices Ltd The month has been a busy but routine Binu Choudhary Suraj Subba one. BGOS has been occupied with prepar- Subash Ranabhat Shekhar Gurung ing crew for Columbia’s new ship, the Tui Sandhya Gurung Beddhi Bahadur Manoj Budhathoki Discovery (the former Legend of the Seas), Prakash Singh Mahat Saga Shipping with dispatching new crew to ships of Car- Yamuna Gurung Dammer Bahadur Thapa Uttam Thakuri Ruk Bahadur Gurung nival UK and with recruiting for Disney, NCL and Universal Shipmanagement. We are Norwegian Cruise Lines Prestige Cruise Holdings also in the process of having our new crew Utra Bahadur Gurung Sabita Giri Khadka Tuk Prasad Gurung Keshari Shrestha for AIDA trained on the Carnival Security Kisan Ale Course in Manila, a course also attended by Asha Thapa Saru Anita Thapa Carnival United Kingdom crew. You will see Firoz Khan A.G. here the names of those who are now in SHIPPING COMPANIES the pipeline over the next few months. AND SHIPS LINKED TO US We are working with 21 shipping companies, and have 745 men and 173 women on ships, a total of 918 crew and staff under management.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2010-11
    GOVERNMENT OF INDIA MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS Annual Report 2010-11 Departments of Internal Security, States, Home Jammu & Kashmir Affairs and Border Management Contents Chapter I 1-4 Mandate and Organisational Structure of the Ministry of Home Affairs Chapter II 5-36 Internal Security Chapter III 37-60 Border Management Chapter IV 61-69 Centre-State Relations Chapter V 70-83 Crime Scenario in the Country Chapter VI 84-95 Human Rights and National Integration Chapter VII 96-130 Annual Report 2010-11 Union Territories Chapter VIII 131-158 Police Forces Chapter IX 159-176 Other Police Organisations and Institutions Chapter X 177-200 Disaster Management Chapter XI 201-209 International Cooperation Chapter XII 210-235 Major Initiatives and Schemes Chapter XIII 236-252 Foreigners, Freedom Fighters’ Pension and Rehabilitation Chapter XIV 253-261 Registrar General and Census Commissioner, India Chapter XV 262-280 Miscellaneous Issues Annexures 281-304 Annual Report 2010-11 MANDATE AND ORGANISATIONAL CHAPTER STRUCTURE OF THE MINISTRY OF I HOME AFFAIRS 1.1 The Ministry of Home Affairs insurgency, terrorism, naxalism, (MHA) has multifarious responsibilities, activities of inimical foreign important among them being internal agencies, terrorist financing, security, management of para-military rehabilitation, grant of visa and forces, border management, Centre- other immigration matters, security State relations, administration of Union clearances, etc.; Territories, disaster management, etc. Though in terms of Entries 1 and 2 of List l Department of States, dealing with II – ‘State List’ – in the Seventh Schedule Centre-State relations, Inter-State to the Constitution of India, ‘public relations, administration of Union order’ and ‘police’ are the responsibilities Territories, Freedom Fighters’ pension, Human rights, Prison of States, Article 355 of the Constitution Reforms, Police Reforms, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • JNU-NAPSIPAG Conference: Report of Proceedings
    JNU-NAPSIPAG Conference: Report of Proceedings A REPORT OF PROCEEDINGS NAPSIPAG’s Tenth International Conference hosted by the Centre for the Study of Law and Governance at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi 7th to 9th December 2013 on “Locked in Growth Patterns: Revisiting land and disasters for the post- 2015 Developmental Agenda for the Asia Pacific” (In partnership with UNDP,ICSSR,NDMA) 1 Page JNU-NAPSIPAG Conference: Report of Proceedings Background notes: The December conference has been a culmination of the continuing efforts being made by the Asia- Pacific scholars since 2010, to create a platform of mutual learning amongst decision makers from government, academia and civil society groups on achieving MDGs and identifying gaps which prevent policy implementation. The last three major international workshops (Kathmandu Dec.2011, Colombo Dec.2012 and Dehradun June 2013) have specifically focused on “Climate Change (CC) related human and environmental security issues”. The objective has been to create an interface between academia and administrators so that the gaps in knowledge and understanding could make policies implementable and sustainable. The fundamental philosophy which is the driving and consolidating force of the workshop is to interrogate policies of consumerism and commoditization of nature which destroys the carrying capacity of land and water resources. The GNP/GDP based development has made the world more vulnerable to natural calamities which are labeled as “Natural” but are mostly “manmade”. Decision making processes within countries should incorporate sustainable lifestyle patterns. The 2013 Human Development Report- “The Rise of the South: Human Progress in a Diverse World” examines the profound shift in global dynamics driven by the fast-rising new powers of the developing world and its long term implications for human development.
    [Show full text]
  • Language Politics and State Policy in Nepal: a Newar Perspective
    Language Politics and State Policy in Nepal: A Newar Perspective A Dissertation Submitted to the University of Tsukuba In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in International Public Policy Suwarn VAJRACHARYA 2014 To my mother, who taught me the value in a mother tongue and my father, who shared the virtue of empathy. ii Map-1: Original Nepal (Constituted of 12 districts) and Present Nepal iii Map-2: Nepal Mandala (Original Nepal demarcated by Mandalas) iv Map-3: Gorkha Nepal Expansion (1795-1816) v Map-4: Present Nepal by Ecological Zones (Mountain, Hill and Tarai zones) vi Map-5: Nepal by Language Families vii TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents viii List of Maps and Tables xiv Acknowledgements xv Acronyms and Abbreviations xix INTRODUCTION Research Objectives 1 Research Background 2 Research Questions 5 Research Methodology 5 Significance of the Study 6 Organization of Study 7 PART I NATIONALISM AND LANGUAGE POLITICS: VICTIMS OF HISTORY 10 CHAPTER ONE NEPAL: A REFLECTION OF UNITY IN DIVERSITY 1.1. Topography: A Unique Variety 11 1.2. Cultural Pluralism 13 1.3. Religiousness of People and the State 16 1.4. Linguistic Reality, ‘Official’ and ‘National’ Languages 17 CHAPTER TWO THE NEWAR: AN ACCOUNT OF AUTHORS & VICTIMS OF THEIR HISTORY 2.1. The Newar as Authors of their history 24 2.1.1. Definition of Nepal and Newar 25 2.1.2. Nepal Mandala and Nepal 27 Territory of Nepal Mandala 28 viii 2.1.3. The Newar as a Nation: Conglomeration of Diverse People 29 2.1.4.
    [Show full text]
  • Everything I Learned About Nepali Literature Is Wrong | 217
    (ALMOST) EVERYTHING I LEARNED ABOUT NEPALI LITERATURE IS WRONG | 217 Chautari Foundation Lecture 2018 (ALMOST) EVERYTHING I LEARNED ABOUT NEPALI LITERATURE IS WRONG Manjushree Thapa I’ve been rethinking my sense of Nepali literature, and am pleased to have a chance to share my thoughts at Martin Chautari, an organization that I played a very small role in founding back in the 1990s, when it was an informal discussion group among “development” workers.1 Most of us, at the time, were foreign-educated, or actual foreigners. We were well meaning, but we were seeking an intellectual life without any links to Nepal’s own intellectual traditions in the political parties, the universities, the writers and activists. It was particularly under Pratyoush Onta’s leadership that Martin Chautari developed these links and became a site where foreign-educated Nepalis, foreigners, and Nepal’s own intellectual traditions could meet for open debate. Knowledge-generation is a collective enterprise. It is not an endeavor a person undertakes in isolation. I’ve written and spoken before on the thoughts I’ll share here, first in the introduction (Thapa 2017a) to La.Lit, A Literary Magazine Volume 8 (Special issue: Translations from the Margins), which I edited (Thapa 2017b), and then at two talks for the Himalayan Studies Conference at the University of Colorado, in Boulder, in September 2017, and for the Nepal Studies Initiative at the University of Washington, in Seattle, in April 2018. This lecture is a crystallizing of those thoughts, which are still in formation. One caveat: I am not a scholar, but a writer; I am engaged in what Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak calls the “wild practice” (2012: 394).
    [Show full text]
  • Annual-Report-2014-2015-Ministry-Of-Information-And-Broadcasting-Of-India.Pdf
    Annual Report 2014-15 ANNUAL PB REPORT An Overview 1 Published by the Publications Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India Printed at Niyogi offset Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi 20 ANNUAL 2 REPORT An Overview 3 Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Annual Report 2014-15 ANNUAL 2 REPORT An Overview 3 45th International Film Festival of India 2014 ANNUAL 4 REPORT An Overview 5 Contents Page No. Highlights of the Year 07 1 An Overview 15 2 Role and Functions of the Ministry 19 3 New Initiatives 23 4 Activities under Information Sector 27 5 Activities under Broadcasting Sector 85 6 Activities under Films Sector 207 7 International Co-operation 255 8 Reservation for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes 259 9 Representation of Physically Disabled Persons in Service 263 10 Use of Hindi as Official Language 267 11 Women Welfare Activities 269 12 Vigilance Related Matters 271 13 Citizens’ Charter & Grievance Redressal Mechanism 273 14 Right to Information Act, 2005 Related Matters 277 15 Accounting & Internal Audit 281 16 CAG Paras (Received From 01.01.2014 To 31.02.2015) 285 17 Implementation of the Judgements/Orders of CATs 287 18 Plan Outlay 289 19 Media Unit-wise Budget 301 20 Organizational Chart of Ministry of I&B 307 21 Results-Framework Document (RFD) for Ministry of Information and Broadcasting 315 2013-2014 ANNUAL 4 REPORT An Overview 5 ANNUAL 6 REPORT Highlights of the Year 7 Highlights of the Year INFORMATION WING advertisements. Consistent efforts are being made to ● In order to facilitate Ministries/Departments in promote and propagate Swachh Bharat Mission through registering their presence on Social media by utilizing Public and Private Broadcasters extensively.
    [Show full text]
  • Chemjong Cornellgrad 0058F
    “LIMBUWAN IS OUR HOME-LAND, NEPAL IS OUR COUNTRY”: HISTORY, TERRITORY, AND IDENTITY IN LIMBUWAN’S MOVEMENT A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Dambar Dhoj Chemjong December 2017 © 2017 Dambar Dhoj Chemjong “LIMBUWAN IS OUR HOME, NEPAL IS OUR COUNTRY”: HISTORY, TERRITORY, AND IDENTITY IN LIMBUWAN’S MOVEMENT Dambar Dhoj Chemjong, Ph. D. Cornell University 2017 This dissertation investigates identity politics in Nepal and collective identities by studying the ancestral history, territory, and place-naming of Limbus in east Nepal. This dissertation juxtaposes political movements waged by Limbu indigenous people with the Nepali state makers, especially aryan Hindu ruling caste groups. This study examines the indigenous people’s history, particularly the history of war against conquerors, as a resource for political movements today, thereby illustrating the link between ancestral pasts and present day political relationships. Ethnographically, this dissertation highlights the resurrection of ancestral war heroes and invokes war scenes from the past as sources of inspiration for people living today, thereby demonstrating that people make their own history under given circumstances. On the basis of ethnographic examples that speak about the Limbus’ imagination and political movements vis-à-vis the Limbuwan’s history, it is argued in this dissertation that there can not be a singular history of Nepal. Rather there are multiple histories in Nepal, given that the people themselves are producers of their own history. Based on ethnographic data, this dissertation also aims to debunk the received understanding across Nepal that the history of Nepal was built by Kings.
    [Show full text]
  • Summary Report
    Summary Report Report submitted: January 2020 Summary Report for the High Level Meeting and Workshop on Snakebite in Nepal: The Challenges and the Needs 2-3 August 2019, Kathmandu, NEPAL Name of High Level Meeting and Workshop on Snakebite in Nepal: conference The Challenges and the Needs Theme Preparing for a Nepal where no one dies from snakebite Dates 2-3 August, 2019 Location, The inaugural ceremony was held at the Nepal Presidential Palace, venue Shital Niwas, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu, NEPAL on 2 August. The conference proper was held at the Hotel de l’Annapurna, Durbar Marg, Kathmandu, 2-3 August. Motivation This high-level meeting and workshop was a needs-driven first attempt to bring together all of the relevant players both from the global stage as well as from Nepal’s health community and ministries in the Government of Nepal. The purpose was to bring awareness among medical practitioners, policy makers, and the media to address the challenges of treatment and prevention of envenoming by snakes. The first day was a high-level consultative meeting and the second day workshop was dedicated to presentations and discussion. This conference gave a much-needed voice to those in danger of snakebite in Nepal and also reflected a global trend supported by the 71st World Health Assembly. In May 2018, the Assembly adopted a resolution formally providing the World Health Organization with a strong mandate to develop a comprehensive plan to support countries in implementing measures for access to effective treatment for those who get bitten by venomous snakes. Organizers Society of Internal Medicine of Nepal (SIMON), Snakebite Research Centre of the BP Koirala Institute of Health Sciences (Dharan), the Government of Nepal, Ministry of Health and Population the Epidemiology and Disease Control Division (EDCD).
    [Show full text]
  • 1 I. a Nexus Between Nepali Nationalism and Ethnic Mode Of
    1 I. A Nexus between Nepali Nationalism and Ethnic Mode of Expression “A nation is not some geographical entity, it is a place which is loved and liked by the people” (B.P. Koirala, Atmabrittanta, 289) The discourse of nationalism is often associated with collective identity of people. It is a tie that binds people with a nation. Nationalism is a mode of defining, expressing and recognizing oneself in relation to the state. It is constructed along with formation of nation state and incorporates several elements like people, language, culture, religion, history, social structures, and political conditions. On the other hand, ethnicity is related with particular social group that shares common cultural, lingual, religious, historical and national experiences. It is a communal identity that is based on specific value systems, rituals, customs, festivals, myths and symbols. As nationalism is not a mere political construct or pervasive integration of people in certain physical boundary, it should reflect memories, aspirations, and imaginations of the people living in particular place. Literature, like other modes of cultural production reflects the specific socio- historical dimensions of its creation. It manifests the society and culture in which it is composed. As the socio-economic materiality is the base for the articulation and production of any literary texts, literature is usually shaped by the politics or power dynamisms. In this connection, Nepali poetry can also be studied and analyzed by contextualizing it to the historical development of the nation-state or nationalism. This dissertation thus, is an attempt to study the relation between ethnicity and nationalism by foregrounding the nexus between literature and the state.
    [Show full text]
  • Himalayan Voices VOICES from ASIA 1
    Himalayan Voices VOICES FROM ASIA 1. Of Women, Outcastes, Peasants, and Rebels: A Selection of Bengali Short Stories. Translated and edited by Kalpana Bardhan. 2. Himalayan Voices: An Introduction to Modern Nepali Literature. Translated and edited by Michael James Hutt. Himalayan Voices An Introduction to Modern Nepali Literature TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY Michael James Hutt UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley Los Angeles Oxford This book is a print-on-demand volume. It is manufac- tured using toner in place of ink. Type and images may be less sharp than the same material seen in traditionally printed University of California Press editions. University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California University of California Press, Ltd. Oxford, England © 1991 by The Regents of the University of California Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Himalayan voices : an introduction to modern Nepali literature / translated and edited by Michael James Mutt, p. cm. — (Voices from Asia ; 2) Translated from Nepali. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 0-520-07046-1 (cloth). — ISBN 0-5204)7048-8 (paper) 1. Nepali poetry—20th century—Translations into Knglish. 2. English poetry—Translations from Nepali. 3. Short stories, Nepali—Translations into English. 4. Short stories, English— Translations from Nepali. 5. Authors, Nepali—20th century— Biography. 1. Mutt, Michael. II. Series. PK2598./95E5 1990 891'.49—dc:20 90-11145 CIP Printed in the United States of America The paper used in this publication meets the
    [Show full text]
  • Operation of Community Agriculture Extension Service Center and Its Management
    Final report on: Operation of Community Agriculture Extension Service Center and its Management Submitted To: Department of Agriculture Ministry of Agriculture, Land Management and Cooperatives Hariharbhawan, Lalitpur, Nepal Prepared By: Global Sustainable Research and Development Center Pvt. Ltd. Tokha, Kathmandu-13 July, 2018 1 Contents Abbreviations ............................................................................................................................iii Executive Summary ................................................................................................................... v 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 1 1.1 Background ...................................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Objectives of the study ..................................................................................................... 2 1.3 Scope and limitation of the study ..................................................................................... 3 2. Approach and methodology ................................................................................................... 4 2.1 Desk review ...................................................................................................................... 4 2.2 Field study ........................................................................................................................ 4
    [Show full text]
  • 3-50 Page.Indd
    MAY 2011 / Rs. 100 www.ecs.com.np ISSN 1729-2751 Art sincethetimeofArniko / Mud, sweat and madness on the mountain / There’s something about Kiwi /Mud,sweatandmadnessonthemountainThere’ssomethingaboutKiwi Art since the time of ww.ecs.com.np MAY 2011 www.ecs.com.np ARNIKO ARNIKOThe history of Nepali art is one that has seen times, both good and bad. However, its essence has remained preserved by dedicated masters. SUBSCRIBER COPY 117 AN EVENING WITH MUSIC MUSEUM OF NEPAL TRIALS AND TRAVAILS 64 KIRAN MANANDHAR 74 A group of music enthusiasts have 10 4 ON THE TRAIL The prolific artist goes candid ensured that Nepali history is documented Reaching Everest Base Camp without a guide about artists and art in Nepal. through musical instruments. and porter provides an altogether different high. Subscribe to Healthy Life For 1 Year (12( Issues) @ Rs. 600 & Pleasure Your Senses with Rs. 1000 worth of Spa Treatment at Chaitanya Spa, Bakhundole, Sanepa To subscribe sms HL at 9851047233 Choose any one of the following six packages Refl exology (Foot massage) & Head & Shoulder Massage Manicure & Steam Spa (Steam, Sauna, Jacuzzi Area Vertebral Message with Doctor Dry Massage-Shiatsu (60min) Sauna (60 min) with Sauna (60 min) Manicure is a spa beauty treatment Usage) (60 min) Consultati on (60 min) Shiatsu is a traditi onal Japanese Refl exology is a method of applying Head and shoulder massage for the fi ngernails and hands which These are forms of hydro- Applying deep pressure of the healing method which works on pressure to the feet and hand with includes massage of head and improves and increases the blood therapy.
    [Show full text]