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Sunday

US Open could still end on schedule

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FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – The U.S. Open might still crown a champion Sunday, even though rain has prevented any of the first three rounds at Bethpage Black being completed on schedule.

A steady downpour limited play to a total of just over 3 hours Thursday. The first round was completed Friday, and the second round started, but darkness caused play to be suspended with more than half the field having played less than 36 holes.

Even though the forecast called for heavy rain and possible thunderstorms Saturday, the second round was completed, the cut line established and the third round got under way at 5:30 p.m. A brief, heavy shower and the onset of darkness forced the third round to be suspended at 7:10 p.m. Eight groups, including the leaders, did not tee off.

But Mike Davis, the USGA's senior director of rules and competition, said Saturday night there was a chance to get the 72 holes in on time.

"We were unbelievably lucky today," he said. "Then, having 60 players make the cut made a big difference. If we don't have weather tonight, enough to cause problems that would delay the scheduled restart at 7:30, we could complete the third round around noon, re-pair and get the final round started as late as 1:30 and have the final round end around 7, 7:30."

Davis said changing the final round to threesomes instead of the traditional twosomes wouldn't be necessary. But groups will start at both the first and 10th tees.

"But we wouldn't re-pair them. So if it really got bad, then we'd just keep them in the same groups they're playing in Round 3. That's not ideal, because you literally could have the winner of the U.S. Open finishing on the ninth hole. But we want to get done with this thing, so we will do that if we needed to."

collecting from yahoo

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Defiant Tehran protesters battle police

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collecting from yahoo

TEHRAN, Iran – Thousands of protesters defied Iran's highest authority Saturday and marched on waiting security forces that fought back with baton charges, tear gas and water cannons as the crisis over disputed elections lurched into volatile new ground.

In a separate incident, a state-run television channel reported that a suicide bombing at the shrine of the Islamic Revolution leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini killed at least two people and wounded eight. The report could be not independently evaluated due to government restrictions on journalists.

If proven true, the reports could enrage conservatives and bring strains among backers of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi. Another state channel broadcast images of broken glass but no other damage or casualties, and showed a witness saying three people had been wounded.

The extent of injuries in the street battles also was unclear. Some witnesses said dozens were hurt and gunfire was heard.

Some bloggers and Twitter users claimed that there had been numerous fatalities in Saturday's unrest, reports that could not be immediately verified.

The clashes along one of Tehran's main avenues — as described by witnesses — had far fewer demonstrators than recent mass rallies for Mousavi. But they marked another blow to authorities who sought to intimidate protesters with harsh warnings and lines of black-clad police three deep in places.

The rallies also left questions about Mousavi's ability to hold together his protest movement, which claims that widespread fraud in June 12 elections robbed Mousavi of victory and kept hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in office.

Mousavi bewildered many followers by not directly replying to the ultimatum issued Friday by Iran's most powerful figure, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His stern order to Mousavi and others: Call off demonstrations or risk being held responsible for "bloodshed, violence and rioting."

A police commander sharpened the message Saturday. Gen. Esmaeil Ahmadi Moghadam said more than a week of unrest and marches had become "exhausting, bothersome and intolerable." He threatened a more "serious confrontation" if protesters return.

Mousavi broke his silence after the melee with another call to annul the election results. But there was no mention of the clashes — suggesting he wants to distance himself from the violence and possibly opening the door for more militant factions to break away.

Amateur video showed clashes erupting in the southern city of Shiraz and witnesses reported street violence in Isfahan, south of Tehran.

Other footage posted in the hours after the crackdown showed blood pouring from a young woman's nose and mouth as frantic people tried to help her. Two separate videos of the incident, each shot from a different angle, were uploaded onto the social networking sites Facebook and Youtube. The Youtube video described the location of the incident as Amirabad, central Tehran, and said the woman had been fatally shot.

The Associated Press could not independently verify the content of the video, its location, or the date it was shot.

"I think the regime has taken an enormous risk in confronting this situation in the manner that they have," said Mehrdad Khonsari, a consultant to the London-based Center for Arab and Iranian Studies.

"Now they'll have to hold their ground and hope that people don't keep coming back," he added. "But history has taught us that people in these situations lose their initial sense of fear and become emboldened by brutality."

In Washington, President Barack Obama urged Iranian authorities to halt "all violent and unjust actions against its own people." He said the United States "stands by all who seek to exercise" the universal rights to assembly and free speech.

Obama has offered to open talks with Iran to ease a nearly 30-year diplomatic freeze, but the upheaval could complicate any attempts at outreach.

Full details of the street battles could not be obtained because of Iranian media restrictions. But witnesses described scenes that could sharply escalate the most serious internal conflict since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

An estimated 3,000 marchers — some chanting "Death to dictatorship!" — marched directly onto a blockade of security forces keeping them from approaching Azadi Square, where Mousavi gathered hundreds of thousands of people on Monday.

Police first fired tear gas and water cannons at the protesters, witnesses said. Then came a second wave. It included volunteer militiamen on motorcycles chasing down demonstrators.

Witnesses claimed some marchers were beaten with batons by security forces or metal pipes wielded by the militiamen known as Basijis, who are directed by the powerful Revolutionary Guard.

An old woman cloaked in a head-to-toe black chador shouted, "Death to the dictator," drawing the attention of Basij members who ran from the other side of the street and clubbed her, according to one witness contacted by the AP.

Protesters lit trash bins on fire — sending pillars of black smoke over the city — and hurled rocks. Some managed to wrestle away a few motorcycles and set them ablaze.

One witness told the AP that people came from apartments to aid the wounded demonstrators or allowed them to take shelter. Helicopters hovered over central Tehran until dusk.

The witnesses told AP that between 50 and 60 protesters were seriously beaten by police and pro-government militia and taken to Imam Khomeini hospital in central Tehran. People could be seen dragging away comrades bloodied by baton strikes.

Nearby, Tehran University was cordoned off by police and militia.

On the streets, witnesses said some protesters also shouted "Death to Khamenei!" — another sign of once unthinkable challenges to the authority of the successor of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the father of the Islamic Revolution.

All witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared government reprisals. Iranian authorities have placed strict limits on the ability of foreign media to cover events, banning reporting from the street and allowing only phone interviews and information from officials sources such as state TV.

Mousavi, who served was prime minister during the 1980s, is not believed to seek the collapse of the Islamic system. But he claims that state powers were abused to skew the election results and re-elect Ahmadinejad in a landslide.

That stand has increasingly brought him and his supporters into direct confrontation with Iran's highest authorities.

A statement on Mousavi's Web site said he and his supporters were not seeking to confront their "brothers" among Iran's security forces or the "sacred system" that preserves the country's freedom and independence.

"We are confronting deviations and lies. We seek to bring reform that returns us to the pure principals of the Islamic Republic," it said.

Khamenei sided firmly with Ahmadinejad on Friday, saying the vote reflected popular will and ordering opposition leaders to end street protests.

A report on Press TV listed the fallout from the unrest, including 700 buildings and 300 banks damaged and 400 police hurt. It gave no similar list for the protesters. At least seven people have died, according to the official Iranian count, but the total could be more.

Mousavi's extremely slim hope of having the election results annulled rest with Iran's Guardian Council, an unelected body of 12 clerics and Islamic law experts. But Mousavi and another moderate candidate in the race, Mahdi Karroubi, did not appear at a meeting called to discuss their allegations of fraud, a council official told state TV.

The council has said it was prepared to conduct a limited recount of ballots at sites where candidates claim irregularities.

In a letter to the council, posted on one of Mousavi's Web site, he listed alleged violations that include his representatives being expelled from polling stations and fake ballots at some mobile polling stations.

The government has blocked Web sites such as BBC Farsi, Facebook, Twitter and several pro-Mousavi sites used by Iranians to tell the world about protests and violence. Text messaging has not been working in Iran since last week, and cell phone service in Tehran is frequently down.

But that won't stifle the opposition networks, said Sami Al Faraj, president of the Kuwait Center for Strategic Studies.

"They can resort to whispering ... they can do it the old-fashioned way," he said.

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Today news

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There is no legality in ATN Bangla's claims - Rajuk

Rajuk has said there is no grounds for ATN Bangla to say that the Gulshan Avenue House number 69 is under their ownership.

NOAB appeals to PM to save newspaper industry

Newspaper Owners' Association of Bangladesh (NOAB) has issued the following statement: The proposed budget has provided for imposition of five per cent tax on import of newsprint. But in effect, the actual tax will stand at over eleven and a half per cent.

Govt itself viloating building rules

No government building including those built by Public Works Department (PWD) has taken approval from authorities concerned since 1987, which is mandatory under the Building Construction (BC) Act of 1952 and subsequent building rules.

AL govt keen on reviving 1972 constitution

The Awami League led government is likely to restore within its tenure the 1972 constitution to bring back fundamental principles including secularism which were deleted by the controversial fifth amendment during the regime of Ziaur Rahman.

FBCCI backs money-whitening scope but have few complaints

Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI) today supported the provision in the proposed budget for fiscal year 2009-10 to allow whitening of black money in exchange for payment of 10 percent tax.

Cases without specific allegations to be withdrawn: ACC chief

Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) Chairman Ghulam Rahman today said the commission will withdraw all the cases filed against political leaders without any specific allegations.

BNP for int'l steps to stop Tipaimukh plan

The main opposition BNP today urged the international community for taking effective measures to refrain India from building Tipaimukh dam. It also asked the government to take quick steps to stop the Indian plan.

Bangladesh Radio launches Comilla station

Information minister Abul Kalam Azad launched a new Bangladesh Radio station in Comilla on Saturday.

Parliament doesn't become lively without opposition: Speaker

Calling upon the main opposition BNP to join the important budget session, Speaker Abdul Hamid today said parliament does not become lively without opposition lawmakers.

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Sahara vows to bring Gulshan Ave home grabbers 'to book'

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Sahara vows to bring Gulshan Ave home grabbers 'to book'


Sahara Khatun, the home minister, has promised to bring to book those behind the assault on an octogenarian couple on the capital's Gulshan Avenue during a night time bid last week to dislodge them from their home of nearly 40 years.

The minister visited the couple for an hour and a quarter on Saturday night. "This is a democratic government; we won't allow such actions," she told reporters emerging from the house.

Over a dozen intruders, claiming they were from private TV station ATN Bangla, broke into the home of retired civil servant Abdul Qaiyum at around 1:30am on Wednesday and tried to forcibly evict his family from their decades-old home.

Sahara said the elderly couple were still visibly shaken on Saturday night. "We are on the side of truth," the minister added. "The home minister has assured us that the guilty will be brought to justice," said a family member.

The armed intruders, planting a signboard bearing the TV station's name, overpowered the house guards on the night, but were chased down by neighbours' security men. Eleven of them were arrested, taken to court and sent to jail on Wednesday.

Saiful Bari, a spokesperson for ATN Bangla, said on the day that the company's chairman Mahfuzur Rahman had purchased the property, at 69 Gulshan Avenue, from a man named Abdur Rashid Khan in March.

"But no one from ATN Bangla tried to illegally grab the house; those who did so are not associated with ATN Bangla," Bari told the media. He also said the signboard seized by police, with ATN Bangla's name, was not theirs.

According to a document shown by Bari, Mahfuzur Rahman bought the 21-katha plot for Tk 2.25 crore. The current market price for just one katha of land in upscale Gulshan, however, costs nearly Tk 2 crore.

A RAJUK official told on Thursday that ATN Bangla's claims of owning the land at 69 Gulshan Avenue have no legal basis. Mostafa Jamil Khan, assistant director of city development authority RAJUK, said the channel's chairman had bought the 21-katha plot from a fake owner.

Abdur Rashid Khan did not own the plot, he said. "He was hanging around in the office with fake lease papers. He came to us. But after scrutinising the papers it was found that his papers were false," said the RAJUK official.

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Friday

Today news

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  • The Very Long Con of a Very Short List [Moguls]
    Posted 10h ago via Gawker
    Barry Diller's effort to pawn off Very Short List, his failed shopping newsletter for the rich, is turning into a classic New York media folly — a big drama over a puny digital property. Very Short List was, from the beginning, an act of hubris. In 2007,
  • AOL's Shameless CEO Bailout [Conflicts Of Interest]
    Posted 10h ago via Gawker
    Tim Armstrong, AOL CEO, just bought a company from... Tim Armstrong, investor. The official line is that the deal is on the up and up, since the consummate salesman won't be taking any profits off his stake. Rich. Consider, first, that AOL is buying Armstrong out...
  • Even Better In The Flesh!
    Posted 10h ago via PerezHilton
    David Beckham's latest ad campaign for Emporio Armani Underwear are hot hot hot! And, even if the photos are retouched, it's nice to be reminded that Becks looks just as hot - or better - in person! Beckham made an in-store appearance on Thursday at Selfridges...
  • Brad Pitt Stops Traffic..Literally!
    Posted 10h ago via PerezHilton
    Russian traffic police have recruited Brad Pitt to help slow traffic in Siberia. That sounds insane! Cardboard cutouts of the actor dressed as a traffic cop have been placed by the most dangerous intersections in the city of Omsk. Apparently, the campaign is...
  • Banned! Zero Coke Zero In Venezeula
    Posted 10h ago via PerezHilton
    Venezuelan President and critic of the US Government, Hugo Chavez, has demanded that Coke Zero be pulled from his nation because it poses a health threat. Health Minister Jesus Mantilla did not specify these health threats, but strongly advised that "the product...
  • The New & Improved Kathy Griffin
    Posted 10h ago via PerezHilton
    Did she hire a new stylist? Whatever Kathy Griffin has been doing recently, she needs to keep it up. The funnylady has been looking pretty damn hot lately. And that didn't change last night as she was spotted leaving her hotel while heading to the Ed Sullivan...
  • Late blues great Koko Taylor gets musical sendoff (AP)
    Posted 10h ago via Yahoo Entertainment (AP)
    AP - Hundreds of mourners have shown up at a wake for the Chicago blues icon Koko Taylor, the "Queen of the Blues," including Chicago...
  • Property owners forgive Alba plastering posters
    Posted 10h ago via MSNBC Celeb News
    The apology that she made through her publicist, I think, was enough for...
  • Michael Emerson still in the dark on 'Lost'
    Posted 10h ago via Access Hollywood
    I know exactly as much as you do at this point,' Michael Emerson said....
  • Jack Black Has Fun in 'Year One'
    Posted 10h ago via Entertainment Tonight
    Jack Black and Michael Cera don sandals and swords for the hilarious...

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Tuesday

Alertpay in Bangladesh

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Option 1: Mailed Check. Go to your alertpay account and request to withdraw your funds through check. You will have to wait 3-4 weeks to arrive in your address. Once you've got your check, you can encash your check in your nearest money changers accepting international dollar checks. You can also deposit your check in your bank account. It doesn't matter if you have a dollar or taka account. Hsbc and standered chatered are some of the banks that accept international checks. If your bank is not on this list, inquire in your bank to be sure. If they are not accepting international checks, open a bank account in one of these banks.


option 2:

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No Problem Give Us a Call and We Would Be More Than Happy To Help Assist You"

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Bangladeshi Taka (BDT) Currency Exchange Rate Conversion Calculator

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Enter the amount to be converted in the box to the left of the currency and press the "convert" button. To show Bangladeshi Taka and just one other currency click on any other currency.

The Bangladeshi Taka is the currency in Bangladesh (BD, BGD). The symbol for BDT can be written Tk. The Bangladeshi Taka is divided into 100 paisa (poisha). The exchange rate for the Bangladeshi Taka was last updated on June 9, 2009 from Yahoo Finance. The BDT conversion factor has 5 significant digits.




if you are Bangladeshi then go on http://coinmill.com/BDT_calculator.html#BDT for more easy to convert rate for taka

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Monday

General Issues

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Index of Articles on General Issues

Agenda for the new government-social

Can we pull out the country from the depths of despair and deprivation-social

Can we save Buriganga-pollution

Entrepreneurship in Bangladesh calls for support

Failure of conservation efforts dooms wildlife-1

Failure of conservation efforts dooms wildlife-2

My experience on the First Victory Day or Reflections on the victory day

Topsoil Loss and Land Degradation- How to Arrest the Process

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War, Weapons and Peace

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Articles on War, Weapons and Peace

Chemical Warfare- Legacy of Silent Cruelty

Chemical weapons- a slow mass killer

Liberation of Iraq --- Invaders jump from the frying pan into the fire

Liberation of Iraq- At what Cost

Microwave can be used for clearing the Landmines

RDX explosive – a new science of terror

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Articles on Health, Disease and Medicine

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Articles on Health, Disease and Medicine

AIDS crisis flares up in Africa and Asia- can Bangladesh remain complacent

AIDS crisis is looming up

AIDS crisis is looming up - it is a disaster waiting to happen

AIDS is on the march

Alternative Medicine-looks promising

Brain tumors can cause a bewildering array of symptoms

Canadian Neutrino observatory could give clue to solar mystery

Deadly dengue fever strikes cities as sanitation system collapses

Doctors now lay siege to deadly genetic diseases

Drug Addiction and Trafficking peaking up alarmingly

Environmental Pollution- Pollutants are damaging human reproductive system

Forest- Hidden Chest of Medicine must be preserved

ICMH (Institute of Child and Mother Health) at Matuail - a model of child and mother health care

Immunization takes a big stride through vaccines that don't require needles

Malaysian doctors takes on an Asian killer

Migraine

Mission of a visionary- Health care for the vulnurnerable

Mutant viruses of HIV, chicken flu and Hepatitis B can now be spotted through Mass spectrometer

Removal of Arsenic from drinking water is the viable option now

State of Russian Science- The Story of missing gallium for neutrino detector

To salt or not to salt

Treatment for Alzheimer's disease is now in sight

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Articles on Tragedy

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Articles on Tragedy


Banshkhali tragedy --- a burning Shame for the nation

Garments Factories turn into Death traps

Menacing rise in Sexual Crimes and brutality- can we stop this barbarity

Sexual abuse of Minors- a reminder of the return of the barbarians

Shakharibazar tragedy spotlights brazenly inept handling of civic responsibilities

Sony’s killing exposes the dark side of student politics

Swapan Goswami’s killing raises questions about societal collapse

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Forest

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Articles on Forest

Are we going to live in a denuded world

Habitat destruction and imbalance in ecosystems spell disaster

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Food

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Articles on Food

Aquaculture can produce ecological devastation

Genetically Modified Food can meet the challenge of population explosion

Genetically Modified Food is the answer to soaring population and declining land ceilings in the next millennium

GM Food will feed the world

The Looming Fish Crisis

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Flood

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Articles on Flood


The current flood havoc in SW region of Bangladesh and post-flood priorities

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Environment and Climate Change

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Articles on Environment and Climate Change

Acid rain blights our woodlands

Air pollution scenario in the Dhaka city

Air Pollution scenario takes a menacing turn

Awareness can help save our deteriorating environment

Can we save Dhaka city

Climate Change- Impact on Health System

Consensus on global warming policy fails- Disastrous future awaits Bangladesh

Dangers from Dioxin buster surround us

Depletion of Forest resources signals an environmental catastrophe

Destruction of wild life and plant species means a lost chance to use nature’s medicine chest

Dhaka City- drowning in trash

Dying Forest Syndrome can we halt this process

Dying Sea --- Corals are in deep peril

Earth day pledge- Hope for the battered Planet Earth

Environment- Protecting the last wilderness is a monumental job

Forest- The hidden Medicine Chest must be Saved

Garbage disposal a global dilemma

Global warming- Can we slow it down

Global warming causes global fever OR Climate change impacts health systems

Global warming is now a grim reality

Global warming- Meltdown can be prevented

Global warming trend plays havoc in the country

Global Water Crisis hits the millennium goal

Global water supplies in Peril --- Managing the resource is the solution

Greenhouse gas emissions- A global challenge to greener future must be met now

Habitat destruction and imbalance in ecosystems spell disaster

Impact of climate change on environment

Measures to save our environment

Nations bear the brunt of global warming

New Alarm bells about the deteriorating condition of our environment

Noise Pollution- A serious threat to Health and Environment

Ozone depletion and its impact on health and climate

Ozone Depletion is a threat to our environment

Ozone hole peaks up --- Global warming trend intensifies

Plundering the sea-resources signals catastrophic disruptions for the planets ecosystems

Poisoning of city lakes Portends an ecological disaster

Pollution

Pollution and overfishing plague the oceans- Human assault must be stopped

Preparing for the worst calamities due to climate change

Sharing recycled goods may eliminate garbage

Sustainable development in Bangladesh - is the road too far

Temperatures Rising- Enemies have been spotted but not subdued

Why is our weather going wild

World Environment Day- Clean Technology is the road map to sustainable development

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Education

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Articles on Education

Brain drain- Perhaps a bane yesterday- may be a born to day

Crisis cuts the quality short

Degree Examination Result Debacle- Analyzing the genesis of the Problem

Dhaka University's role in spreading higher education

Expulsion at Examination Centers- Crisis must be solved at the grassroots level

H.S.C. Exam Results debacle -- an analysis of the anomalies

Higher Education and Research totter on a Collapse

Higher education in the country is in doldrums

H.S.C. Result and non functioning colleges- Diagnosing the ills

Non-functioning school system spawns poverty and crime

Polluted academic scene signals a disastrous future

Primary Schooling system is total disarray

Public Exam. Result Debacle-Overhauling the system is the need of the hour

Role of Universities in higher Education and Research in the 21st century's

Women's Emancipation Through Education is The Key to National Development

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Earthquake and Tsunami

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Articles on Earthquake and Tsunami

Lessons of Asian Tsunami

Preparedness is the best defense against an earthquake disaster

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Articles on Drinking Water

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Articles on Drinking Water

Critical (or Millennium) water crisis will spawn disease- malnutrition and poverty

Squeezing water from the sea

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Articles on Dhaka City

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Articles on Dhaka City

Bad city roads thwarts development

Demise of the Suhrawardy Uddyan --- needed action to save it

High-rise building scenario in Dhaka city --- a necessity or a luxury

High-rise building scenario in the Dhaka city

Recycling of Garbage will take us toward a world without waste

The decline of the Dhaka city

The perils of dam building- Ecological damage galore

Traveling on Dhaka city roads is a - Journey to Hell

Unremitting violence shakes the soul of the country

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Articles on Crime

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Articles on Crime

Barbarity is at its worst peak - It is time to wake up to the danger

Behind the sleazy world of Ershad Shikdar

Bestiality returns, sanity disappears

Bizarre killing of Dhaka businessmen - bestiality at its worst

Brutal Crimes Sky-rocket in the Country–the administration must arrest this slide

Dowry related deaths climb up

Governance at Stake

Gruesome rape incidents tear the soul of the country

Journalist killing spells doom for the country

Rampant crime wave- Analyzing the roots of the torment

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Articles on Children

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Articles on Children


Children - the best asset of the country are victims of apathy and neglect

Increased focus on children is a must for economic emancipation

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Science and Technology

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Science and Technology


After nuclear test ban, bio-terror haunts people

Bangladesh can reap the benefit of Millennium Technology

Biodiversity is the stuff of life

Biotechnology – its prospects and dilemmas

Concrete goes high-tech use

Diesel – a environmentally friendly fuel of the future

DNA Profiling can help track down criminals with stunning accuracy

Human Genome mapping revolutionizes medicine

Human Genome Sequencing - Hope and dilemma

International workshop on “Small hydropower generation” in BUET moot prospects of hydropower in Bangladesh

Japan’s recent worst nuclear accident

Nanotechnology holds promise to serve as the future technology

Plant power to combat diseases must be explored

Polythene - an environmental hazard

Scientific Efforts to build a better Kilogram are under way

The birth of Transistors and its metamorphosis into Microchip

The electric revolution gets on the way OR The advent of Micro power - Small is beautiful

The hazards of Mobile phone technology

Transparent metals are now being made

Treasure from trash - an economic enterprise is now at our doorstep(1)

Treasure from trash - an economic enterprise is now at our doorstep(2)

Treasures of the seas are on the verge of extinction

Tyre making industry makes a big stride in technological advancement

Vanishing biodiversity portends a critical future

Workshop on Renewable deliberates bright prospects for wind energy in Bangladesh


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Tragedy

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Food

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General Issues


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