Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Faisalabad Board (BISE, Faisalabad) Likely to Announce Matric (Class 9th/Class 10th) Results Tomorrow (Thursday/July 21, 2011)


Faisalabad Board Matric Result for the Year 2010-11 Expected Tomorrow (Thursday/July 21, 2011)



Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (BISE, Faisalabad), Faisalabad is likely to announce the annual results of Matric (Class 9 and Class 10) tomorrow (Thursday.July 21, 2011).



Earlier it was rumoured that the results of 9th class will be delayed up to August 4, 2011; but later on the authorities in the Faisalabad Board (BISE, Faisalabad) decided to release the result of class 9 and class 10 at the same time.

HSSC results of Faisalabad Board will be available online tomorrow at 10:00 am in the morning on the links provided after the jump.

Result page can ask only your roll number to be entered and it gives your all detailed data of your result. When you will click the given link below; the website of Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (BISE, Faisalabad), Faisalabad will be opened as shown below:

Matric Result of Faisalabad Board (BISE, Faisalabad) will be online tomorrow (Thursday/July 21 2011)



Check out the details regarding Other boards:


Thursday, July 7, 2011

Shandur Festival 2011 - - Began Today at the World’s Highest Polo Ground

Shandur Fesival 2011 Began Today



The annual Shandur polo festival kicked off today which has attracted large number of tourists after many years of tourism slump due to security concerns in the whole region.

Syed Mehdi Shah, Chief Minister of Gilgit-Baltistan, inaugurated the event while Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani would be chief guest at the concluding session.



Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Governor Barrister Masood Kausar, Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain and Sports Minister Syed Aqil Shah besides other ministers and lawmakers would also attend the event.

Chief Minister Ameer Haider Khan Hoti on behalf of TCKP and people of the province had already invited the newly-wed royal couple, Prince William and Princess Kate Middleton, to watch the final of the polo tournament.



Continue Reading  .................. Welcome to My World

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Picture/Photo Gallery: Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele

Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele
The Hand Paintings in the gallery below, dubbed "Handimals", are created by exceptionally talented Italian artist, Guido Daniele. 

Guido Daniele was born in Soverato (CZ - Italy) and now lives and works in Milan.

From 1964 to 1968 he attended Brera artistic High School. He graduated from Brera School of Arts (major in sculpturing) in 1972.

He lived in India since 1972 to 1974 where he attended the Tankas school in Dharamsala.

Guido Daniele first got the idea of painting on human hands after an advertising agency hired him to do some body paintings of animals. After researching how best to paint animals onto hands he created his first ‘‘handimal’’, that of the cheetah, shown above. Daniele notes that the hardest part is watching his creations being washed down the drain at the end of the painting day.

In 1990 he added a new artistic experience to his previous ones: using the body painting technique. He creates and paints models’ bodies for different situations such as advertising pictures and commercials, fashion events and exhibitions. His personal artistic research has recently led him to the combination of the two traditional portrait techniques, which are photography and oil painting, laid on photographic support in the same way as Jan Saudek.

See The Gallery Below:

Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele

Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele

Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele

Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele

Amazing Hand Painting (Handimals) by Guido Daniele
For more exclusive masterpieces of Guido Daniele >>>>>>. CLICK HERE.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Shandur Polo Festival, Chitral - - History and Background of the Game of Kings

Polo - - The King of Games and The Game of Kings

Polo in Pakistan:
 

The sport of free style polo had its beginnings in Baltistan Northern Area of Pakistan. Baltistan's princely kingdoms adopted the sport and made it their own, with their natural proclivity for riding. Kingdoms kept special stables for polo ponies, and their teams included among the very best in the world. Very often, the players were the rulers and members of their families, though their armies also encouraged the sport. In fact, if the sport has a presence in the country today, it is because the former royal families have continued to provide encouragement for it.


Polo continues, as it has done for so long, to represent the pinnacle of sport, and reaffirms the special bond between horse and rider. The feelings of many of its players are epitomized by a famous verse inscribed on a stone tablet next to a polo ground in Gilgit, Pakistan: "Let others play at other things. The king of games is still the game of kings."
 
History of Polo:
 
Polo is possibly the oldest recorded team sport in known history, with the first matches being played in Persia over 2500 years ago. Initially thought to have been created by competing tribes of Central Asia, it was quickly taken up as a training method for the King’s elite cavalry. These matches could resemble a battle with up to 100 men to a side. 
 
As mounted armies swept back and forth across this part of the world, conquering and re-conquering, polo was adopted as the most noble of pastimes by the Kings and Emperors, Shahs and Sultans, Khans and Caliphs of the ancient Persians, Arabs, Mughals, Mongols and Chinese. It was for this reason it became known across the lands as "the game of kings". 
 
British officers themselves re-invented the game in 1862 after seeing a horsemanship exhibition in Manipur, India. The sport was introduced into England in 1869, and seven years later sportsman James Gordon Bennett imported it to the United States. After 1886, English and American teams occasionally met for the International Polo Challenge Cup. Polo was on several Olympic games schedules, but was last an Olympic sport in 1936.
 
Continue Reading >>>>> HERE

Thursday, March 10, 2011

BA/BSc Annual Exam 2011 Date Sheet Announced by University of Punjab, Lahore


BA/BSc Annual Exam 2011 date sheet announced


LAHORE : (Tuesday, March 08, 2011): Punjab University Examinations Department has issued the written and practical examination date sheet of BA/BSc Annual Examination 2011.

According to the details, written exam will commence from April 7 and conclude on May 2 while practical exam will commence from May 9 and conclude on June 21, 2011. 

For direct view of BA/BSc Annual Exam 2011 date sheet on your PC use the link below:

 Download BA/BSc Annual Exam 2011 date sheet



Download BA/BSc Annual Exam 2011 date sheet (Practicals)

Friday, February 11, 2011

Valentine's Day Special: Ten Best Quotes to Make Her Believe "You LOve Her"

Tearing your hair out looking for classy Valentine's Day mobile text messages to send to the hot girl next door without sounding needy? 

Valentine’s Day is just around the corner; so we need something special to share. Here are some of the most passionate lines from classic authors that will get her weak in the knees. 



A list of historical love quotes:

1. Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same - Emily Bronte

2. If you live to be a hundred, I want to live to be a hundred minus one day so
I never have to live without you - A A Milne

3. But soft! What light through yonder window breaks? It is the east and Juliet is the sun – Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet



4. He was my North, my South, my East and West, My working week and my Sunday rest, My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song; I thought that love would last for ever: I was wrong - W.H. Auden

5. You know you're in love when you don't want to fall asleep because reality is finally better than your dreams - Dr. Seuss

6. When you fall in love, it is a temporary madness. It erupts like an earthquake, and then it subsides. And when it subsides, you have to make a decision. You have to work out whether your roots are become so entwined together that it is inconceivable that you should ever part - Captain Corelli's Mandolin



7. Grow old along with me! The best is yet to be - Robert Browning

8. For you see, each day I love you more. Today more than yesterday and less than tomorrow - Rosemonde Gerard

9. But to see her was to love her, love but her, and love her forever - Robert Burns 



10. I hope before long to press you in my arms and shall shower on you a million burning kisses as under the Equator - Napoleon Bonaparte's 1796 dispatch to wife Josephine.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Valentine's Day 2011 - - The Reality of Valentine's Day in Historical, Traditional and Religious Terms

Valentine's Day - - History, Traditions and Religious Views

What is Valentine's Day??

Valentine's Day is a celebration of romantic love occurring annually on February 14.
Although it is associated by legend with a Catholic saint named Valentine, Valentine's Day is not a religious holiday and never really has been. Valentine's Day has historical roots mainly in Greco-Roman pagan fertility festivals and the medieval notion that birds pair off to mate on February 14.

The custom of exchanging cards and other tokens of love on February 14 began to develop in England and France in the 14th and 15th centuries and became especially popular in the United States in the 19th and 20th centuries. Over the last decade or so, Valentine's Day observance has even spread to the Far East, India, and the Middle East.

History of Valentine's Day

The association of the middle of February with love and fertility dates to ancient times. In ancient Athens, the period between mid-January and mid-February was the month of Gamelion, which was dedicated to the sacred marriage of Zeus and Hera.

In ancient Rome, February 15 was Lupercalia, the festival of Lupercus (or Faunus), the god of fertility. As part of the purification ritual, the priests of Lupercus would sacrifice goats and a dog to the god, and after drinking wine, they would run through the streets of Rome striking anyone they met with pieces of the goat skin. Young women would come forth voluntarily for the occasion, believing that being touched by the goat skin would render them fertile. Young men would also draw names from an urn, choosing their "blind date" for the coming year. In 494 AD the Christian church under Pope Gelasius I appropriated the some aspects of the rite as the Feast of the Purification.

In Christianity, at least three different saints named Valentine or Valentinus, all of them martyrs, are mentioned in the early lives of the saints under the date of February 14. Two of the Valentines lived in Italy in the third century: one as a priest at Rome, the other as bishop of Terni. They are both said to have been martyred in Rome and buried on the Flaminian Way. A third St. Valentine was martyred in North Africa and very little else is known of him.

Several legends have developed around one or more of these Valentines, two of which are especially popular. According to one account, Emperor Claudius II outlawed marriage for all young men because he believed unmarried men made better soldiers. Valentine defied Claudius and continued to perform marriages for young couples and was put to death by the emperor for it. A related legend has Valentine writing letters from prison to his beloved, signing them "From your Valentine."

However, the connection between St. Valentine and romantic love is not mentioned in any early histories and is regarded by historians as purely a matter of legend. The feast of St. Valentine was first declared to be on February 14 by Pope Gelasius I around 498. It is said the pope created the day to counter the practice held on Lupercalia, but this is not attested in any sources from that era.

The first recorded association of St. Valentine's Day with romantic love was in the 14th century in England and France, where it was believed that February 14 was the day on which birds paired off to mate. Thus we read in Geoffrey Chaucer's (c. 1343-1400) Parliament of Fowls, believed to be the first Valentine's Day poem:
For this was on saint Valentine's day,
When every fowl comes there to choose his mate.
It became common during that era for lovers to exchange notes on Valentine's Day and to call each other their "Valentines." The first Valentine card was sent by Charles, duke of Orleans, to his wife in 1415 when he was a prisoner in the Tower of London. Valentine's Day love notes were often given anonymously. It is probable that many of the legends about St. Valentine developed during this period (see above). By the 1700s, verses like "Roses are red, violets are blue" became popular. By the 1850s, romantics in France began embellishing their valentine cards with gilt paper, ribbons and lace.

Valentine's Day was probably imported into North America in the 19th century with settlers from Britain. In the United States, the first mass-produced valentines of embossed paper lace were produced and sold shortly after 1847 by Esther A. Howland (1828 - 1904) of Worcester, Massachusetts. Her father operated a large book and stationery store, and she took her inspiration from an English valentine she had received. 

In the 19th century, relics of St. Valentine were donated by Pope Gregory XVI to the Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, which has become a popular place of pilgrimage on February 14. 

But in 1969, as part of a larger effort to pare down the number of saint days of legendary origin, the Church removed St. Valentine's Day as an official holiday from its calendar.

Read rest of the article >>>>>>>>>>> Here


Another beautiful article is recommended for you.

Valentine's Day Celebration in Pakistan - - Become a Tradition More Than An Event in Pakistan

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Smowtion

Smowtion ...