Search results for university mono

Geishas serve beer instead of green tea as recession hits Japan

London, July 17 (ANI): Geishas have turned to serving customers beer instead of the customary green tea because of the economic downturn in Japan.

The beautiful kimono-clad women, who serve green tea, recite poetry and play classical instruments, have now turned to serving customers beer for 4 pounds.

The slump in the global economy has forced them to seek a creative and cheaper way of earning a living, and they have started setting up geisha beer gardens, like the traditional inn Gion Shinmonso.

It is situated in the ancient capital of Japan, and for the 4 pounds cost of a draft beer, visitors can raise toasts and make conversation with trainee geisha, called maiko, before they perform nightly traditional Kyotan dances known as “kyomai” on a special beer garden stage.

Another is the beer garden at Kamischichiken, which enables visitors to buy a “geisha starter pack” for 13 pounds, including a mug of beer, two snacks and company of kimono-clad geisha.

“We introduced the service because before, fewer guests were visiting the inn,” the Telegraph quoted a spokeswoman from Gion Shinmonso, as saying.

“We also wanted people to learn more about maiko and geisha. Many more people are able to see them now. They have attracted a lot more customers,” she added.

According to Ayako Itagaki, deputy director of the London office of the Japan National Tourist Organisation, the rise of the geisha beer gardens may help more people gain access to a world that was previously unaffordable.

Roland Kelts, author of Japanamerica (pls keep), a lecturer at Tokyo’s Temple University and a visiting scholar at the University of Tokyo, said that he suspects the idea of a geisha beer garden can really do well. (ANI)

Toxic bacteria killed Alexander the Great?

Washington, July 17 (ANI): Scientists are claiming that a deadly bacterium in the The Styx River, the legendary portal to the underworld, may have ended Alexander”s life.

An extraordinarily toxic bacterium harboured by the "infernal" Styx River might have been the fabled poison rumoured to have killed Alexander the Great (356 -323 B.C.) more than 2,000 years ago, according to a scientific-meets-mythic detective study.

According to the study, calicheamicin, a secondary metabolite of Micromonospora echinospora, is what gave the river its toxic reputation. It was the Styx where gods swore sacred oaths.

"If they lied, Zeus forced them to drink the water, which struck them down. The 8th-century B.C. Greek poet Hesiod wrote that the gods were unable to move, breathe or speak for one year," Discovery News quoted co-author Adrienne Mayor, a research scholar at Stanford University”s Departments of Classics and History of Science, as saying.

The researchers believe this mythic poison must be calicheamicin.

"This is an extremely toxic, gram-positive soil bacterium and has only recently come to the attention of modern science. It was discovered in the 1980s in caliche, crusty deposits of calcium carbonate that form on limestone and is common in Greece," author Antoinette Hayes, toxicologist at Pfizer Research, said.

Whether Alexander really died from poisoning, as some of his closest friends believed, is pure speculation, Mayor and Hayes concede.

"We are not claiming that this was the poison that killed Alexander, nor we are arguing for or against a poison plot," Mayor said.

"However, such a sacred poison, used by the gods, would be appropriate for Alexander, who was already being thought of as semi-divine," she added.

Alexander fell ill at one of many all-night drinking parties in Babylon with abdominal pain and a very high fever – he was pronounced dead on June 11, 323 B.C.

"Notably, some of Alexander’s symptoms and course of illness seem to match ancient Greek myths associated with the Styx. He even lost his voice, like the gods who fell into a coma-like state after drinking from the river," Mayor said.

"Cytotoxins cause cell death and induce high fever, chills, and severe muscle and neurological pain. Therefore, this toxin could have caused the fever and pain that Alexander suffered," Hayes said. (ANI)

Rani Durgavati university Results 2010 Result of B.Sc.II and III 2009-10 at rdunijbpin.org

images_mono Rani Durgavati University has been declared result of b.Sc II and III –2010. The students can check their result on the university’s website. Students  an obtain the B.Sc II and III results-2010  are published inthe university’s official website  www.rdunijbpin.org The University is privileged to have the blessings and good wishes of many important and distinguished Indians.

Dr. S. Radhakrishnan delivered its first Convocation address on 1.3.1958 and blessed students and the institution. Similarly Dr. C.D. Deshmukh delivered the Convocation address on 16.11.1960, Shri Lal Bahadur Shastri on 10.12.1961 and Dr. C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar on 15.2.1963. Prof. R. Chidambaram, the well known atomic scientist was the Chief Guest at its convocation held on 28.2.2002, while Dr. J.S. Verma, farmer Chief Justice of India delivered the address in convocation on 7th March, 2005.

www.rdunijbpin.org

http://www.rdunijbpin.org/bsc2.htm

http://www.rdunijbpin.org/bsc3.htm