BE A CONTESTANT IN THE MISS INDIA NEW ENGLAND PAGEANT 2003!
Coming this
April 4th, 2003 at the Copley Theatre
in Boston, MA!! Official Afterparty TBA!
~Presented by Arya International~
Performances by BU, MIT, Harvard, NU, BC with Fashion Show
by Elite Indian Designers!
*PLUS: New England's Finest
Gentlemen to be up for bids at our DATE AUCTION during this
event!
Pageant Perks:
--Winner of the Miss India New England pageant will go on
to Miss India USA in California
and hopefully to Miss India Worldwide in South
Africa--acclaimed as the most glamorous function in the world! --Past winners
of Miss India USA have traveled around the world, promoting various
charitable causes while being interviewed by numerous publications and
popular satellite TV show Movers and Shakers in Mumbai, India. --Finalists
will win many prizes, including jewelry, cash, etc. --Winners will
receive the opportunity to meet top modeling agents in New York. --Interested
in acting? Winners may even be offered screen tests for Bollywood
productions. --Competitions will receive media coverage by TV Asia and Zee
TV.
History:
*The Miss India Worldwide pageants are produced by the
India Festival Committee, a non-profit and purely voluntary organization
established in 1974 and based in New York City. In 1997, the pageant was
organized in Mumbai to salute India on its 50th anniversary of independence.
In the year 1998, the pageant was organized, in association with UTV
International, in the exotic and beautiful country of Singapore.
www.worldwidepageants.com
The Host of the
Pageant: **The host of the pageant, Arya International is
an entertainment agency and dance academy, offering a large variety of South
Asian based movement and performance techniques. We welcome anyone who
is interested in learning Kathak, Folk Dance, Hindi Film Dance, Bharatnatyam,
Yoga, and Bhangra... Bollywood Style!!!! Locations include: MA, CT, NY,
NJ, PA, GA www.aryaintl.com Costume Rental available for folk, fusion, and classical dance
styles.
HOW TO APPLY:
We are in the process of interviewing potential
candidates. Young ladies attending any New England University are welcome to
apply.
If you are interested in participating in this glamorous
affair or would like to sponsor this event, please contact Arya International
by March 7th at dance@aryaintl.com.
Rules & Regulations for Miss
India New England: The contestants must be of Indian
origin, between the ages of 17 and 25, never married, and live or attend
college in either Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, or
Connecticut. The pageant consists of four segments - Evening Gown, Indian
Dress, Talent, and Question-Answer.
Event Proceeds:
Event proceeds will benefit National Marrow Donor Program
& Manavi.
**If you would like to be treated like a Queen while
making a difference in our community, join us in the Miss India New England
Pageant, as it is the best platform to promote your cause!
Tickets: TICKETS NOW
AVAILABLE: $15, $25, $35, $50, VIP - Arya
International dance@aryaintl.com ~
866-279-2468 (Toll Free)
- Purchase Tickets on-line at www.SULEKHA.com
- The Copley Theatre 225 Clarendon Street
Boston, MA (Between Boylston & Newbury Street) at 6:00pm
( First-Come First-Serve )
The Doctor explained that at sea the time is divided into watches, or periods, of four hours each. The bell strikes once for each half-hour, until four hours, or eight bells, are reached, and then they begin again. One o'clock is designated as "two bells," half-past one is "three bells," and[Pg 54] four o'clock is "eight bells." Eight o'clock, noon, and midnight are also signalled by eight strokes on the bell, and after a little while a traveller accustoms himself to the new mode of keeping time. They went thither by jin-riki-shas, and arranged to stop on the way to see the famous bronze statue of Dai-Boots, or the Great Buddha. This statue is the most celebrated in all Japan, as it is the largest and finest in every way. Frank had heard and read about it; and when he learned from the Doctor that they were to see it on their way to Enoshima, he ran straightway to Fred to tell the good news. VIII "Ach, but I have no case, I am not what you call a patient. It is another matter--a matter of sentiment." "Oh, no," Hetty cried. "She never could have done that. Her own child, Bruce? Fancy a mother sacrificing the life of her own child to gratify a vengeance! I could not think as badly of her as that." He explained to me that one of those soldiers accused me of ... spying and arson. He had thought to recognise in me a person who had asked him that afternoon whether he was ... a Belgian or a German soldier, and whom he had also seen escaping from a factory which was in full blaze a moment later. A world where ordering reason was not only raised to supreme power, but also jealously secluded from all communion with lower forms of existence, meant to popular imagination a world from which divinity had been withdrawn. The astronomical teaching of Anaxagoras was well calculated to increase a not unfounded alarm. Underlying the local tribal mythology of Athens and of Greece generally, was an older, deeper Nature-worship, chiefly directed towards those heavenly luminaries which shone so graciously on all men, and to which all men yielded, or were supposed to yield,41 grateful homage in return. Securus judicat orbis terrarum. Every Athenian citizen from Nicias to Strepsiades would feel his own belief strengthened by such a universal concurrence of authority. Two generations later, Plato held fast to the same conviction, severely denouncing its impugners, whom he would, if possible, have silenced with the heaviest penalties. To Aristotle, also, the heavenly bodies were something far more precious and perfect than anything in our sublunary sphere, something to be spoken of only in language of enthusiastic and passionate love. At a far later period Marcus Aurelius could refer to them as visible gods;32 and just before the final extinction of Paganism highly-educated men still offered up their orisons in silence and secresy to the moon.33 Judge, then, with what horror an orthodox public received Anaxagoras’s announcement that the moon shone only by reflected light, that she was an earthy body, and that her surface was intersected with mountains and ravines, besides being partially built over. The bright Selênê, the Queen of Heaven, the most interesting and sympathetic of goddesses, whose phases so vividly recalled the course of human life, who was firmly believed to bring fine weather at her return and to take it away at her departure, was degraded into a cold, dark, senseless clod.34 Democritus observed that all this had been known a long time in the Eastern countries where he had travelled.C Possibly; but fathers of families could not have been more disturbed if it had been a brand-new discovery. The sun, too, they were told, was a red-hot stone larger than Peloponnesus—a somewhat unwieldy size even for a Homeric god. Socrates, little as he cared about physical investigations generally, took this theory very seriously to heart, and42 attempted to show by a series of distinctions that sun-heat and fire-heat were essentially different from each other. A duller people than the Athenians would probably have shown far less suspicion of scientific innovations. Men who were accustomed to anticipate the arguments of an orator before they were half out of his mouth, with whom the extraction of reluctant admissions by cross-examination was habitually used as a weapon of attack and defence in the public law courts and practised as a game in private circles—who were perpetually on their guard against insidious attacks from foreign and domestic foes—had minds ready trained to the work of an inquisitorial priesthood. An Athenian, moreover, had mythology at his fingers’ ends; he was accustomed to see its leading incidents placed before him on the stage not only with intense realism, but with a systematic adaptation to the demands of common experience and a careful concatenation of cause and effect, which gave his belief in them all the force of a rational conviction while retaining all the charm of a supernatural creed. Then, again, the constitution of Athens, less than that of any other Greek State, could be worked without the devoted, self-denying co-operation of her citizens, and in their minds sense of duty was inseparably associated with religious belief, based in its turn on mythological traditions. A great poet has said, and said truly, that Athens was ‘on the will of man as on a mount of diamond set,’ but the crystallising force which gave that collective human will such clearness and keenness and tenacity was faith in the protecting presence of a diviner Will at whose withdrawal it would have crumbled into dust. Lastly, the Athenians had no genius for natural science; none of them were ever distinguished as savants. They looked on the new knowledge much as Swift looked on it two thousand years afterwards. It was, they thought, a miserable trifling waste of time, not productive of any practical good, breeding conceit in young men, and quite unworthy of receiving any attention from orators, soldiers, and43 statesmen. Pericles, indeed, thought differently, but Pericles was as much beyond his age when he talked about Nature with Anaxagoras as when he charged Aspasia with the government of his household and the entertainment of his guests. The whole mausoleum, the terrace on which it stands, the four minarets as tall as light-towers, are all in dead white marble, the whiteness of milk and opal, glistening with nacreous tints in the brilliant sunshine under a sky pale with heat and dust. “Il est ici comme à Versailles Then it was the first, at any rate. His manner softened. Landor held up a silencing hand. "If you have any explanations that you care to make, that it would be worth any one's time to listen to, you may keep them for a judge advocate." He pointed to the door. He knew while he was yet afar off which was the American. She stood, big and gaunt, with her feet planted wide and her fists on her hips, looking over toward the general's tent. And when Cairness came nearer, strolling along with his hands in his pockets, observing the beauties of Nature and the entire vileness of man, she turned her head and gave him a defiant stare. He took his hands from his pockets and went forward, raising his disreputable campaign hat. "Good morning, Mrs. Lawton," he said, not that he quite lived up to the excellent standard of Miss Winstanley, but that he understood the compelling force of civility, not to say the bewilderment. If you turn its bright light full in the face of one whose eyes are accustomed to the obscurity wherein walk the underbred, your chances for dazzling him until he shall fall into any pit you may have dug in his pathway are excellent. There was an expression in his eyes Cairness did not understand. It was not like their usual twinkle of welcome. "Wait a moment," he said, and went on with his writing. Cairness dropped down on the ground, and, for want of anything else to do, began to whittle a whistle out of a willow branch. GREAT SEAL OF GEORGE III. Shorty sprang up with something of his old-time alacrity, and Si made an effort to rise, but was too weak. "I shall have to say that he was boisterous and yelling then, but not so wildly excited." Albin shut the door and leaned against it. "Okay," he said. "Now the first thing, you come over here and watch me." He went to the far side of the room, flicked on the remote set, and waited for it to warm up. In a few seconds it held a strong, steady picture: a single smelter, a ladle, an expanse of flooring. His heart swelled for an instant as the brothers retired; but the indignant flash presently passed from his eyes, and he rejoiced that no selfish consideration had prevented him from, as far as in him lay, saving the guilty soul of the deceased. HoME欧美高清一级毛片免费下载 下载
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