Fwd: Pacquia the negotiator | Sikhs honour Canadian soldiers | Burma's Mandela freed
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From:
Post Newspapers <editor@asianpacificpost.com> Date: Thu, Nov 18, 2010 at 9:33 AM
Subject: Pacquia the negotiator | Sikhs honour Canadian soldiers | Burma's Mandela freed
To: Palash Biswas <
palashbiswaskl@gmail.com>
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Community Finance Analyst Fraser Health Hours worked per week: 37.5 – 45 hours Years at this position: 2 years | Age: 21 Ethnicity: Asian Astrological sign: Taurus School/Education: Blanche Macdonald Studying: Fashion Design Last fashion purchase: River Island embellished waist belt | Name: Alla Cristina Profession: Make-up Artist Years Experience: 9 Contact Information: www.AchMakeupArtistry.com | News Aung San Suu Kyi's patience and fierce determination have been tested repeatedly during a 20-year war of wills against Myanmar's military rulers. Those qualities, honed by a daily morning regimen of Buddhist meditation, have helped her in a battle in which she has effectively spent 15 of the last 20 years under house arrest. Born June 19, 1945, Suu Kyi (pronounced Sue Chee) was only two when her father, Burmese independence hero General Aung San, was murdered by political rivals. | Buoyed by the latest victory of its most famous reservist personnel, the Philippine army is eyeing a new role for eight-time world boxing champ Manny 'Pacman' Pacquiao as a peace negotiator. Pacquiao, who won a three-year term as representative of Saranggani province last may, has been promoted through the years to Army Senior Master Sergeant, the highest rank for enlisted personnel. | Thousands of Sikhs gathered at Surrey's Dasmesh Darbar Sikh temple last weekend to honour members of the Canadian Armed Forces in a poignant ceremony to mark Remembrance Day 2010. The event, which was organised by Harbinder Singh Sewak, publisher of The Post Group of newspapers, was the first of its kind held in a British Columbia Sikh temple. | Bollywood Indian soaps are a rage among Pakistani women who love 'saas-bahu' sagas like "Pratigya" and "Uttaran" and the reality show "Bigg Boss" for their grandeur, costumes and larger-than-life projection. "As they say, you always love to have what you don't have; the same is the case with us. We are way too addicted to Indian soaps," Zahida Zaidi, 52, a former politician based in Karachi, told this visiting IANS correspondent. | More News | | |
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Palash Biswas
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http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/
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