Tamanna Bhatia is a beautiful South Indian actress who started rising to fame only recently. She is a teenage actress to start with and became a leading actress when she stepped out of her teenage. After her Happy Days film her ads are most watched ads. This is her small biography and photo gallery.
Tamanna Bhatia is a South Indian model and actress who was born on 21 December 1989, in Mumbai, Maharashtra. Like many south Indian actress she too was from outside south Indian region. She has appeared in Tamil films and Hindi films. In 2005, she made her acting debut in her only Hindi film so far, Chand Sa Roshan Chehra, before working in the major South Indian film industries.
NRI girl Vaanika working in multinational company as a Network Systems and Data Communications Analyst. Vaanika completes her MSC from UK. Vaanika says A data communications analyst is one of the most needed positions in the information technology field.
The analyst is hired by a business to maintain and troubleshoot the data system utilized by the company. A data communication analyst has job security while also earning a nice paycheck.
Vaanika writes about definition of data communications analyst that a person who installs, maintains, and troubleshoots data networks. A data communications analyst may have knowledge of T1 lines, TCP/IP, fiber optics, SNA, frame relay. He assists users with problems related to connectivity, analyses data flow, configures modems, DSUs, multiplexors, and routers, and uses network tools such as NetView or Netspy.
The world can’t get enough of these lovely Indian starlets. Women unabashedly are amongst the most beneficial class. They have an ample variety from which they can select their apparels. Especially when it comes to buying Indian wear, we see more diversity and rich colors.
The Indian fashion sari has its variety in adorning in this multicultural society of India. The Style, texture varies from south to north and east to west in India. The fashionable sari has retained its beauty over centuries.
The latest fashion in saris has become a style of added value to the wearer with a magnetic grace and attraction. This attire has retained its innocence through its original form but it has evolved in tremendous variety.
A more feminine dress has never been seen anywhere. This attire can cover the body from head to toe, making a woman look modest and coy. But just shift the pallu, wear it with a stylish blouse, it could give any western dress a complex. Sari is attire worn throughout the country, irrespective of the caste, creed and religion. Though each city has its own way of draping this simple length of cloth which is usually 5 ½ meters or 6 yards and at times 9 yards, the sari is to be treated as a fashion sari and not a piece of cloth.
Shamita is the second and youngest daughter of Surendra and Sunanda Shetty. She was born in a traditional close-knit family that hails from the Bunt community of Udupi. Her parents are manufacturers of tamper-proof caps for the pharmaceutical industry and her native language is Tulu. Shamita Shetty attended St Anthony’s Girls High School in Chembur, Mumbai. She graduated from Sydenham College.
Shamita Shetty took a cue from sister Shilpa’s success in Bollywood when she decided to take up acting. Shetty made her debut in 2000 with the Yash Raj Films blockbuster Mohabbatein, which was directed by Aditya Chopra. Since Mohabbatein, she mostly found success in item numbers, including “Sharara Sharara” in Mere Yaar Ki Shaadi Hai (2001) and “Chori Pe Chori” in Saathiya (2002). Later Shetty found success as an actress with her first solo-hit Zeher. She worked once with her sister Shilpa Shetty in Fareb in that same year. She was a guest on Bigg Boss (Season 3) on Colors TV. She opted out of the show for her sister Shilpa’s marriage. She was out of the show on 14 November 2009 after staying for 7 weeks in the show on day 41.
It remains to be seen if she will reach the heights of success that Shilpa Shetty is currently enjoying.
Pakistani & Indian girls may be getting hooked to smoking as early as 15 years, says a new study. The study conducted by Amina our regular reader of this blog shows that 16 per cent of girls have tried smoking by the age of 15, while over six per cent smoked at least once a month by that age.
Interestingly, the users were found to be aware of the hazards of smoking. While most girls admitted to smoking to keep a check on their weight, the findings endorsed other studies which suggest that sex differences in tobacco use are disappearing and that tobacco companies are aggressively targeting women in developing countries. The percentage of Pakistani teen girl smokers is higher than that reported in some Indian cities as well as neighboring countries like Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal and Sri Lanka.
“It is distressing how often studies of girls’ smoking rates in countries previously protected by cultural and religious factors are finding results well on the way to catching up males of comparable age,” said a report in the Tobacco Control Journal, which cited the study.
Amina says smoking trend in Pakistani school girls is rising by 16 percent especially in big cities, according to a study report. “A complete ban on tobacco ads and strict enforcement of the anti-tobacco health ordinance should be enforced to control this rising indecent fashion,” the report suggested.
The research released said that the strategy has been proved useful to distract the people from tobacco usage in countries like the United Kingdom and Brazil. Research shows that even a brief three-minute advice by doctors on quitting smoking brings about significant results but it is unfortunate we are not doing this practice.