[Goanet] Fwd: Hop you like the graceful dance!

2018-08-02 Thread Gabe Menezes
Have a lovely weekend!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOw2NM6RzGY



-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.


[Goanet] Fwd: Song for the day....Elvis Presley - Hawaiian Wedding Song from the film Blue Hawaii

2018-08-02 Thread Gabe Menezes
Elvis did a big promotional job for Hawaii when the move came out! We
stayed at the Honolulu beach strip many, many years ago!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1GPK4Mx_lg





-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.


[Goanet] When Goa shaped India's printing (FN in Navhind Times)

2018-08-02 Thread Bernado Colaco
 This is a very interesting article by Xri Noronha tracing briefly the history 
of printing in the region of Goa and Bombaim. Movable blocks which later became 
type faces were probably created by the Chinese.
Bombaim had many type foundries many situated in Thakurdwar in Girgaum. One 
such famous foundry was called Gujrati type foundry. One wonders with this 
disruptive technology called the internet if this company exists.
In Goa printing companies were/are mainly small scale owned by families. One 
such famous printing company is called Tipografia Rangel who has published many 
books and doucments over the ages. In Pangim the presses were probably 
supported (businesswise) by the mine owners.
In the early 70's only the letterpress system was used. In the 80's onwards as 
bharat opened its pockets for foreign exchange lithographic printing was 
introduced in Goa. Casa JD Fernandes is such an example to be using four colour 
presses for their packaging unit.



BC



Frederick Noronha (The Navhind Times)
fredericknoron...@gmail.com

          Over the past many months, I've been closely
          following a series of articles in a technical
          journal that few might notice, which is called
          PrintWeek India. These informative articles have
          been written by Murali Ranganathan. Like his
          earlier work which one encountered (Govind
          Narayan's Mumbai: An Urban Biography from 1863,
          Anthem Press, 2009), these also deal with the print
          history of Bombay, now Mumbai.

***
  


[Goanet] Miriam Makeba - Pata Pata

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
If there is a special corner of your mind that is reserved for a timeless 
favourite sung by an artiste in her prime who had yet to travel her road then 
this would qualify.

https://youtu.be/iktKbIKZh9I

Roland Francis
416-453-3371



[Goanet] The Other Side Of The Coin

2018-08-02 Thread Joao Barros-Pereira
Death, it is said, is the only fact of which we can be 100% certain;
no need to fight over it. And, no space for believers or unbelievers
unlike the existence of God!

It is the only proposition on which there has never been a debate at
the Oxford Union which is the holy citadel and mecca of all people who
want to hone their rhetorical and oratorial skills. No, this topic is
not open for discussion. It is closed! And, so we open a new topic:
After life? This is where religion begins; enter the priests and
scholars and philosophers, and a projection of all our dreams and
desires.

But death is one side of the coin. Only because there is death do we
have life, as we cannot have one without the other. We need to
appreciate death and even be thankful for it, otherwise we would not
be here at all. Some people, especially Americans, try to cheat death
and, so far, they have only been successful in cheating themselves.
The rich, at times, keep their bodies in cold storage. Do they use
formalin? Don't ask me, ask the FDA.

If death is certain, wouldn't human beings want to celebrate life and
living? That is logical, isn't it? Even though we have been taught in
school how God created man in his own image and how man is rational,
looking around you or reading the history of human beings, can this
really be true? History is a record of wars all over the world,
including in our country. No matter how much we may hold up the mirror
of spirituality the facts sink us fully. We, human beings, are violent
and might even use violence to defend our image of spirituality and
non-violence. That much we know and learn without even having to go to
school.

Do human beings really want peace or is living in a peaceful world too
boring? Peace - cynics tell us - is only an interval and a time when
we prepare for the next war. Are the critics really being cynical? For
there have been more than five thousand wars in the previous two
millennia. Our report card is poor, no matter how much we may try to
fudge it. Maybe there is in human beings the need to kill, and so we
go to war every decade or two. Since the Second World War, how many
wars have there been around the world? And, we no longer fight with
bows and arrows or sticks and stones. Scientists tell us human
knowledge nowadays doubles every ten years unlike in the past when it
took centuries. But have humans beings changed? Aren't our mindsets
the same?

What is the future of the world when the development of science is
moving at a tremendous pace, and we can now destroy the world several
times over using nuclear weapons? Great progress accompanied by a
retarded human perspective on life? We can, most of us, only work on a
micro level, and hope to make some progress by protecting our
immediate environment: our rivers, sea, air, food and earth to a
limited extent - on the micro level - only if our greed level is also
micro. No need for grandstanding.

Today in Goa our air and rivers are polluted. Fishing and tourism are
safe industries. Government needs to make sure hotels and casinos do
not release their sewage into our rivers. Why can't government make
sure they follow the rules? The formalin fish problem can open doors
to a healthier Goa. Stop imports of fish from other states and stop
exports. Goa has a lot of new hotels and people who live in Goa are
from all over India. Goan food habits have also changed over the
years. Goans eat all kinds of fish today. No need for export of fish.
We cannot depend on spot checks of imported fish from other states as
it is playing matka with the health of the people who live or visit
Goa. It is unacceptable.

A famous sage reminds us how all wars begin in chai shops. Maybe, not
just chai shops but also in the kitchen.


[Goanet] The Law Is A Laugh

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
Though no laughing matter, the law can sometimes not only be an ass, but can 
also induce a titter.

In the UK unlike India, adultery is not a crime, but it is grounds for divorce. 
The legal definition of adultery there is “physical contact with an unlawful 
and alien organ”.

I leave it to you to find out what unlawful and alien represents.

Roland.



Re: [Goanet] Is Adultery A Crime?

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
I am not saying they were not colonial, re-packaged laws, that they were new 
laws.

But I am saying they need to be continuously repackaged or even better 
completely discarded as in this example, as D Y Chandrachud is contemplating 
and as Faye D’Souza is postulating.

India’s jurisprudence is fashioned on Common Law like Britain. Britain too has 
some archaic laws on its books, but not important ones like those concerning 
adultery.

Roland.

> On Aug 2, 2018, at 6:12 PM, Frederick Noronha  
> wrote:
> 
> Fall behind? Many of these are colonial laws, just repackaged after
> Independence and continued with their colonial/archaic/Victorian
> approach.
> 
> 


Re: [Goanet] Is Adultery A Crime?

2018-08-02 Thread Frederick Noronha
This is the Mirror Now (Times of India Group) comment by the prominent
and (usually) articulate Mangalorean journalist Faye D'Souza:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzPm7DLTsvo

FN


Re: [Goanet] Is Adultery A Crime?

2018-08-02 Thread Frederick Noronha
Fall behind? Many of these are colonial laws, just repackaged after
Independence and continued with their colonial/archaic/Victorian
approach.

This is the law as it stands:
Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code deals with Adultery. As per the
Indian law, a woman cannot be punished for the offence of adultery.
Only a man who has consensual sexual intercourse with the wife of
another man without his consent can be punished under this offense in
India.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adultery_law_in_India

Obviously, women are being treated like property. So, a man having sex
with another man's wife is seen as depriving the latter of his rights.

It is specifically stated: "In such case the wife shall not be
punishable as an abettor."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adultery_law_in_India

So, women cannot be punished under this law.

On the other hand, if a married woman's husband has a relationship
with an unmarried woman, neither the man in question or the unmarried
woman would be violating India's adultery law!

FN

On Fri, 3 Aug 2018 at 03:04, Roland Francis  wrote:
>
> In many respects, Indian law often falls far behind the times we live in and 
> in comparison with laws of other progressive countries.
>
> Perhaps the yoke of colonialism will forever restrict bureaucracy and justice 
> in the country.
>
> Recently for example there have flip flops on laws regarding homosexuality 
> and euthanasia. And now you have the coincidences of a son having to overturn 
> his father’s rulings.
>
> It’s not to say that occasionally some forward looking member of the bench 
> will not break ground; but that is a rare exception.
>
> The case of Yeshwant Chandrachud and his son Dhananjaya Chandrachud 
> highlights this rarity.
>
> Both were/are illustrious judges. The father who retired in 1985 as CJI and 
> died in 2008 was known as “Iron Hands”. The son is a Harvard educated Supreme 
> Court Justice who is tipped to become a future CJI himself.
>
> The father was conservative, but not die-hard. The son is liberal and 
> progressive. I witnessed a brilliant presentation by the senior Chandrachud 
> who was called to grace a moot court in Govt Law College in Churchgate when I 
> was a first year student there. There is not much that can impress a 22 year 
> old, but I was impressed. I recently read a judgement by junior and it was 
> scintillating. Forgetting Harvard, you couldn’t tell who was the cleverer - 
> Father or son.
>
> https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/justice-chandrachud-keeps-running-into-fathers-rulings/articleshow/65250527.cms
>
> Roland.
>


-- 
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
_/
_/  FN* फ्रेड्रिक नोरोन्या * فريدريك نورونيا‎ +91-9822122436
_/  RADIO GOANA: https://archive.org/details/@fredericknoronha
_/
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/


[Goanet] REPORTER FULL KONKANI TIATR BY FRANCIS DE TUEM

2018-08-02 Thread Frederick Noronha
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8FnaguB1pw


[Goanet] Securing the Internet of Things - Public Service Announcement

2018-08-02 Thread Fidibus
CYBER ACTORS USE INTERNET OF THINGS DEVICES AS PROXIES FOR ANONYMITY AND 
PURSUIT OF MALICIOUS CYBER ACTIVITIES


https://www.ic3.gov/media/2018/180802.aspx

*Securing the Internet of Things*

https://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/tips/ST17-001


--
Rebellion against the norms is Love for the Creation

skype:fidibee

homepage: www.fidibus.info



---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus


[Goanet] Is Adultery A Crime?

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
In many respects, Indian law often falls far behind the times we live in and in 
comparison with laws of other progressive countries.

Perhaps the yoke of colonialism will forever restrict bureaucracy and justice 
in the country.

Recently for example there have flip flops on laws regarding homosexuality and 
euthanasia. And now you have the coincidences of a son having to overturn his 
father’s rulings.

It’s not to say that occasionally some forward looking member of the bench will 
not break ground; but that is a rare exception.

The case of Yeshwant Chandrachud and his son Dhananjaya Chandrachud highlights 
this rarity. 

Both were/are illustrious judges. The father who retired in 1985 as CJI and 
died in 2008 was known as “Iron Hands”. The son is a Harvard educated Supreme 
Court Justice who is tipped to become a future CJI himself.

The father was conservative, but not die-hard. The son is liberal and 
progressive. I witnessed a brilliant presentation by the senior Chandrachud who 
was called to grace a moot court in Govt Law College in Churchgate when I was a 
first year student there. There is not much that can impress a 22 year old, but 
I was impressed. I recently read a judgement by junior and it was 
scintillating. Forgetting Harvard, you couldn’t tell who was the cleverer - 
Father or son.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/justice-chandrachud-keeps-running-into-fathers-rulings/articleshow/65250527.cms

Roland.



[Goanet-News] When Goa shaped India's printing (FN in Navhind Times)

2018-08-02 Thread Goanet Reader
Frederick Noronha (The Navhind Times)
fredericknoron...@gmail.com

  Over the past many months, I've been closely
  following a series of articles in a technical
  journal that few might notice, which is called
  PrintWeek India. These informative articles have
  been written by Murali Ranganathan. Like his
  earlier work which one encountered (Govind
  Narayan's Mumbai: An Urban Biography from 1863,
  Anthem Press, 2009), these also deal with the print
  history of Bombay, now Mumbai.

At first, this might seem like a dour and boring subject. But
once you read it, you quickly realise that understanding the
history of printing can offer interesting and sharp insights
into a region. We learn about society and communities of the
past, the local history, power play among diverse segments,
literacy and reading habits, even the intellectual history of
a place and what shaped it into being the region we now know.

In Goa's case, print history should have had a special role.
After all, way back in 1556, Goa was the first region in the
whole of Asia to get access to the global printing
revolution, one of the realities of history we have to
ironically thank colonialism for. Some of the first books in
Tamil, Konkani etcetera were printed here, and useful
knowledge of Indian plants and much more got globalised
through Europe, thanks to that press. This colonial press
might have hardly believed in free speech, not surprising for
those times. But it did give inhabitants of the region a
headstart with the printed word. Something we have certainly
lost over the centuries.

  Anyway, Murali Ranganathan's book was actually a
  translation of an 1863 description of Bombay
  (called 'Mumbaiche Varnan') and written by a former
  resident of Margao, Goa himself, identified as
  Govind Narayan. We're told in the introduction to
  that book: "By the 1860s, (Marathi) had achieved a
  certain level of standardization and an evolving
  sense of style. There were, however, hardly any
  books that could match 'Mumbaiche Varnan' (which
  could be translated to 'A Description of Bombay')
  either in terms of originality or compare with it
  in terms of size and scope."

By way of figures: Bombay had a population of just 16,000 in
the 1670s, which grew to 200,000 by the early 1800s. With the
capitulation of the Maratha Peshwas, the English became
overlords of the Indian subcontinent and Bombay emerged as
the de facto "capital of Western India".

But getting back to the history of print in India... As a
young student on a scholarship to Germany in 1990, I was
surprised if not shocked to realise that Goa's role in the
spread of printing in Asia was prominently highlighted in the
guidebook sold at the museum of printing, at Mainz, the city
that was home to Gutenberg. As we know, Johannes Gensfleisch
zur Laden zum Gutenberg (c 1400-1468) was the German
blacksmith, goldsmith, printer, and publisher who introduced
printing to Europe and spread it across the world.

Even today, in Ranganathan's narration, the role of Goa in
the spread of early Indian printing shows up clearly once more.

For example, Murali writes (PrintWeek, 10 July 2018) that
Gujarati printing, unlike that of other Indian languages, was
promoted largely by the "agency of Indians". It was mainly
the Parsis who developed printing there. One of the Parsi
pioneers Furdoonjee Murzban (1787-1847), whose press was also
known as the Summachar Press, was working out of Bombay. In
1832, he fled from Bombay under the pressure of mounting
debts. He then chose to seek refuge in the then Portuguese
enclave of Daman, where he founded another printing press and
type foundry, the Daman Gujarati Chhapakhana.

  In another essay (PrintWeek, 10 April 2017),
  Ranganathan tells us that Narayen Dajee
  (1830?-1875) was a recognised early expert in the
  art of photography in the subcontinent. Dajee was a
  graduate as a medical doctor from the Grant Medical
  College, as the brother of the Bhau Dajee aka Laad
  (widely identified as a prominent Goan today), and
  carried an inquisitive mind, an excellent knowledge
  of chemistry and was not constrained by finances.

Yet another column (PrintWeek, 10 October 2016) talks about
how religion stoked a printing revolution in Bombay. Among
various religious groups there in the 19th century, the
researcher notes that "Roman Catholics were resident in large
numbers in Bombay and its vicinity" and "Christian
missionaries were the most prolific and printed a number of
Christian tracts and the Bible in Marathi, Gujarati and
Hindustani". One would suspect that much more work awaits
being done on this aspect.

In the early 1820s, the Bombay Government ventured into the
print area, experimenting with lithography (PrintWeek, 

[Goanet] When Goa shaped India's printing (FN in Navhind Times)

2018-08-02 Thread Goanet Reader
Frederick Noronha (The Navhind Times)
fredericknoron...@gmail.com

  Over the past many months, I've been closely
  following a series of articles in a technical
  journal that few might notice, which is called
  PrintWeek India. These informative articles have
  been written by Murali Ranganathan. Like his
  earlier work which one encountered (Govind
  Narayan's Mumbai: An Urban Biography from 1863,
  Anthem Press, 2009), these also deal with the print
  history of Bombay, now Mumbai.

At first, this might seem like a dour and boring subject. But
once you read it, you quickly realise that understanding the
history of printing can offer interesting and sharp insights
into a region. We learn about society and communities of the
past, the local history, power play among diverse segments,
literacy and reading habits, even the intellectual history of
a place and what shaped it into being the region we now know.

In Goa's case, print history should have had a special role.
After all, way back in 1556, Goa was the first region in the
whole of Asia to get access to the global printing
revolution, one of the realities of history we have to
ironically thank colonialism for. Some of the first books in
Tamil, Konkani etcetera were printed here, and useful
knowledge of Indian plants and much more got globalised
through Europe, thanks to that press. This colonial press
might have hardly believed in free speech, not surprising for
those times. But it did give inhabitants of the region a
headstart with the printed word. Something we have certainly
lost over the centuries.

  Anyway, Murali Ranganathan's book was actually a
  translation of an 1863 description of Bombay
  (called 'Mumbaiche Varnan') and written by a former
  resident of Margao, Goa himself, identified as
  Govind Narayan. We're told in the introduction to
  that book: "By the 1860s, (Marathi) had achieved a
  certain level of standardization and an evolving
  sense of style. There were, however, hardly any
  books that could match 'Mumbaiche Varnan' (which
  could be translated to 'A Description of Bombay')
  either in terms of originality or compare with it
  in terms of size and scope."

By way of figures: Bombay had a population of just 16,000 in
the 1670s, which grew to 200,000 by the early 1800s. With the
capitulation of the Maratha Peshwas, the English became
overlords of the Indian subcontinent and Bombay emerged as
the de facto "capital of Western India".

But getting back to the history of print in India... As a
young student on a scholarship to Germany in 1990, I was
surprised if not shocked to realise that Goa's role in the
spread of printing in Asia was prominently highlighted in the
guidebook sold at the museum of printing, at Mainz, the city
that was home to Gutenberg. As we know, Johannes Gensfleisch
zur Laden zum Gutenberg (c 1400-1468) was the German
blacksmith, goldsmith, printer, and publisher who introduced
printing to Europe and spread it across the world.

Even today, in Ranganathan's narration, the role of Goa in
the spread of early Indian printing shows up clearly once more.

For example, Murali writes (PrintWeek, 10 July 2018) that
Gujarati printing, unlike that of other Indian languages, was
promoted largely by the "agency of Indians". It was mainly
the Parsis who developed printing there. One of the Parsi
pioneers Furdoonjee Murzban (1787-1847), whose press was also
known as the Summachar Press, was working out of Bombay. In
1832, he fled from Bombay under the pressure of mounting
debts. He then chose to seek refuge in the then Portuguese
enclave of Daman, where he founded another printing press and
type foundry, the Daman Gujarati Chhapakhana.

  In another essay (PrintWeek, 10 April 2017),
  Ranganathan tells us that Narayen Dajee
  (1830?-1875) was a recognised early expert in the
  art of photography in the subcontinent. Dajee was a
  graduate as a medical doctor from the Grant Medical
  College, as the brother of the Bhau Dajee aka Laad
  (widely identified as a prominent Goan today), and
  carried an inquisitive mind, an excellent knowledge
  of chemistry and was not constrained by finances.

Yet another column (PrintWeek, 10 October 2016) talks about
how religion stoked a printing revolution in Bombay. Among
various religious groups there in the 19th century, the
researcher notes that "Roman Catholics were resident in large
numbers in Bombay and its vicinity" and "Christian
missionaries were the most prolific and printed a number of
Christian tracts and the Bible in Marathi, Gujarati and
Hindustani". One would suspect that much more work awaits
being done on this aspect.

In the early 1820s, the Bombay Government ventured into the
print area, experimenting with lithography (PrintWeek, 

[Goanet] Are Australian-Goans Sleeping?

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
While Toronto, London and other expat-Goan places keep Goanet informed about 
their neck of the woods, Goans who are well represented in Perth, Melbourne and 
Brisbane in Aussieland along with Christchurch, Wellington and Auckland in 
Kiwiland are rather droopy as far as keeping in touch with their Goan brothers 
elsewhere.

I understand the delicate nature of existence in the Persian Gulf, but could 
not Goans post from there on non-political, non-sensitive topics?

Roland.



[Goanet] Taste Of Manila

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
July and August are the summer months of Street Festivals in Toronto with at 
least a major one or two every weekend.

On August 18 will be the Taste of Manila that in 2016 attracted 375,000 people. 
The population of Filipinos in Toronto was 142,000 in 2011.

Now compare that to about 5 to 7 thousand people that Viva Goa gets on an 
average from the 1990s while the Manila Festival started only in 2014.

Of course the Goan population of Toronto can be projected to now be about 
55,000 from the 40,000 estimated some years ago by John Nazareth (growth rate 
in the last 5 years approx 27% period 2011 to 2016) versus the Filipino 142,000 
and theirs is a Street Festival compared to the confined Viva Goa, but it does 
provide some perspective.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/taste-of-manila-officially-back-on-1.4770157

Roland.



[Goanet] A Portuguese Wedding Dance in Toronto

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
Most of the Portuguese speaking community in Toronto are from the Azores, but 
for the past few years those from Brazil are gradually becoming significant in 
numbers. The Azoreans have spread throughout Ontario in lesser numbers, owning 
farms, wineries, construction and other businesses. 

Toronto residents from the Portuguese mainland are fewer and younger, coming on 
temporary or seasonal work permits and overstaying, hoping for permanent 
residency.

There are a few Macanese, many owning high quality Chinese restaurants with 
names like Casa Luz. They speak both Portuguese and English fluently in public 
and Chinese at home.

This is probably an Azorean wedding reception.

https://youtu.be/RamtpfVlnQM

Roland.



[Goanet] Shik Shak Shok

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
A Thursday morning java jolt by belly dancer Shira snaking to an Arabic hit 
song.

https://youtu.be/iFxTh0zvUYQ

Roland Francis
416-453-3371



[Goanet] Artisians demand early subsidy

2018-08-02 Thread samir umarye
-- 
Samir Umarye

BICHOLIM: Artisans making idols of Ganesh, from  Mayem have suggested that
government should give them subsidies well in advance and should also
increase the grants given to them.

It may be stated that Ganesh festival will be celebrated next month and in
several parts of the state artisans have already stated making Ganesh
idols. When Herald contacted some of the artisians from Mayem they came up
with several difficulties faced by them and also demanded that the
government should provide them with subsidy well in advance.

“There are several problems that we face while making idols. Earlier we
were getting the required clay from Pernem but this year we had to satisfy
with the clay that we got from Bicholim after we were not allowed to lift
the clay from Pernem” Durgaram Shet from Mayem told.

“The cost of idol has increased because of all these reasons. But we cannot
charge heavily to the locals even if we have to bare some loss” Shet told
adding “only if we take the idols to Mapusa and other cities we get some
good money.”

They also believe that plaster of paris idols has also dampen their market.
“Government should provide us subsidy in the month of April or May so that
we can buy the needed material” Shet demanded also asking the government to
increase the subsidy.

The workers how work to make the idols feel that now making and colouring
of idols has become easy with new technology but they are not getting the
required price.


[Goanet] Maulingtad locals fear flooding due to breach of mining pits

2018-08-02 Thread samir umarye
-- 
Samir Umarye

BICHOLIM: The residents of Maulingtad in Sanquelim fear that accumulated
water would breach the mining pits and flood their homes. They also claimed
that water from these pits is seeping into their houses during heavy
rainfall.

There are 30 houses at the foot of the hill where mining was carried out
for years. The pits on other side of the hill have gone very deep and the
residents have blamed that the water from these pits is entering their
houses.

“During heavy rainfall, the pits get flooded and this water seeps into our
houses,” Sanquelim Municipal councillor, Dayanand Boryekar told Herald.
According to locals the water seeping into their houses floods the entire
house.

According to another local, “Sometimes the flow is so much that it becomes
even difficult to sit on the floor in the house. The pits have gone very
deep and we are just waiting for a tragedy to happen.” The residents feel
that the authorities are not concerned about the problems faced by them in
the area.

“We have submitted letters to the deputy collector and the mamletdar but no
action has been taken so far,” Boryekar said. He demanded that the company
should fill the pits and should not allow water to get accumulated in these
pits.

The residents feel that the dump of the mining company on top of the hill
should also be removed as it is a possible threat to their lives. They
claim that it is not only during monsoon season but even during other
seasons that water seeps into their houses.


[Goanet] Teach Me To Dance

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
Great love song for a dance, but it serves equally well as a hymn at Offertory 
Time.

https://youtu.be/T1LaArPzHyk

Roland.



[Goanet] Bombay Meri Jaan

2018-08-02 Thread Roland Francis
An old 1960s Bollywood ‘filmi’ song redone in modern style with Anna Tanvir and 
Arko Mukherjee in a charming duet.

Bollywood songs despite having the benefit of top-notch Goan musicians in the 
day, were mostly spoofs of American popular music. This one was based on 
Clementine.

A pleasure to hear nevertheless.

https://youtu.be/6QBhhPJb9FQ

Roland.



[Goanet] AIFF REPORT: THE BOYS ARE PUTTING IN THAT EXTRA EFFORT: BIBIANO FERNANDES

2018-08-02 Thread AIFF Media
Dear Colleagues,



Please find the interview of India U-16 National Team Coach Bibiano
Fernandes before taking on Japan in the WAFF U16 Championship tomorrow
(August 3, 2018).



--

*THE BOYS ARE PUTTING IN THAT EXTRA EFFORT: BIBIANO FERNANDES*



*NEW DELHI:* After having secured a comfortable 4-0 victory over hosts
Jordan, Head Coach Bibiano Fernandes feels the job is far from being done.
Rather than basking in glory he feels best to focus on one match at a time.
As the team gears up to take on Japan in their next match, Bibiano, in an
interview speaks at length about the chemistry in the team, the defensive
four, Japan’s strengths and much more.



*READ MORE:* https://the-aiff.com/news-center-details.htm?id=9083



--



Request you to follow our OFFICIAL accounts:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/IndianFootball
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheIndianFootballTeam
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/IndianFootball

*---*

Best Regards,

Media Department, AIFF.
Alternate: me...@the-aiff.com
Website: www.the-aiff.com


[Goanet] EVENT LISTING: Going Green without Growing Greens - An e-waste collection drive in Margao

2018-08-02 Thread r...@arjuntree.com
ARJUNTREE in association with Karo Sambhav and Global e-Waste Management 
Systems is pleased to announce an e-waste collection drive in Margao. 


GOING GREEN WITHOUT GROWING GREENS
An e-waste collection drive in Margao



DETAILS:

Dates: 4th - 5th August 2018
Time: 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. 
Location: Arjuntree One, Behind BSNL Tel Exchange, Nr Hotel Anugraha, Comba, 
Margao
What can be donated: All electrical and electronic waste except for toners, 
printer cartridges, tube lights and bulbs
Contact Aleixo 89757 66033 for directions and details

FACEBOOK: fb.me/ewasteinmargao 







Raj S Pai Panandiker
CEO & Director 

Arjuntree Structures Pvt Ltd
3rd Floor, Panandiker Chambers,
M L Furtado Rd. Margao.
Goa - 403601
Tel: +91 8975766032
Email: r...@arjuntree.com

Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail!
 
DISCLAIMER:This email (and any attachments) is for the intended recipient only 
and may contain privileged, confidential or copyright information. If you have 
received it in error, please notify the sender immediately and delete the 
original. Any other use of the email by you is prohibited. The company does not 
accept liability for any damage caused by this email or its attachments due to 
viruses, corruption, delay, interruption, unauthorised access or use. Any 
personal information in this e-mail must be handled in accordance with the 
Information Technology Act, 2000 (INDIA).





[Goanet] Goa to make chairs benches with recycled plastic waste.

2018-08-02 Thread Con Menezes
   
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/state-to-make-chairs-benches-with-recycled-plastic-waste/articleshow/64325524.cms?_source=Articleshow_medium=Organic_campaign=Related_Stories

---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus


[Goanet] In Goa...take a peek into Portugal.

2018-08-02 Thread Con Menezes
 
https://www.outlookindia.com/outlooktraveller/hotels/being-responsible-in-goa-take-a-peek-into-portugal/

---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus


[Goanet] Easy listening selection....When you wish upon a star.....Rosemary Clooney & Harry James.

2018-08-02 Thread Con Menezes


 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUQnNgt-Ysk

---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus


[Goanet] Fwd: Song for the day...."HEY PAULA" Paul and Paula 1963 - HQ STEREO

2018-08-02 Thread Gabe Menezes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vOo-3XWxpo=TLGGujf6K0WKMIwzMTA3MjAxOA



-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.