Inkaar about the movie: Inkaar is about the battle for the top job between Rahul (Arjun Rampal) and Maya (Chitrangada Singh) at one of India's leading ad agency. The story takes a dramatic turn when Maya files a s*xual harassment complaint against Rahul. Only one of them will walk away with their reputation intact and get the top job. Watch Inkaar on URDUMOVIES to find out more.
Rajdhani Express is the story of Keshav who steals the weapons and books a ticket on the Rajdhani Express from Delhi to Mumbai to escape. His fate follows him through his escape onto the train in the form of DY Commissioner of ATS Yadav. While trying to apprehend Keshav, Yadav manages to extracts political mileage from the situation weaving a web, endangering not only Keshav, but also his co-passengers. Yadav has his ulterior motive to get even with his boss, the Minister Of Home, whose parents also happens to be on the same train. Distanced, ridiculed and humiliated, he reacts by pointing his gun at them. All hell brakes loose. Can Keshav escape the trap? Watch and Find out in Rajdhani Express.
Table No 21 is a suspense thriller movie. After living a mediocre life throughout the day, couple Vivaan and Siya are quite excited to go on a long trip vacation at Fiji, which they have won in a contest. The contest not only includes staying in a lavish hotel with grand suite, but also a generous lunch at one of the finest resorts in Suva, Fiji, to celebrate their wedding anniversary. The excitement level of Vivaan Agasthi and Siya increases more when they meet the very charming, sophisticated and debonair Mr. Khan (Paresh Rawal) at the restaurant. At there, he offers them a fortunate chance to play a "Tell All Truth" game for a mindboggling jackpot prize of Rs. 21 crores. The rules of the game are quite simple: Answer 8 questions honestly, finish the allotted tasks, and the money is all yours. Vivaan and Siya happily and gladly agree to be a part of this live-game, as they were wishing to take their winnings to Mumbai and live the life they both have always dreamed of. The game now begins, where Vivaan and Siya are set off to make a big start of answering each question correctly, as well as finishing off the given assignments successfully. However, as soon as they were proceeding further, the questions and tasks were getting more and more personal. Each question sarcastically opens an important chapter of their lives. Eventually with all frustration, Vivaan and Siya had enough of this game and decide to quit the game. Well one very much important rule they forgot, which Khan reminds them on that moment that You can't quit, and if you lie, you die! As luck would have it, Tena by mistakenly uttered lie while playing the game. Now according to the rule - if you lie, you die - the couple is in the most dangerous situations ever faced in their life. A story called Table No 21. Watch the movie Table No 21 to find out more.
Mirza Taqi Farahani was born in 1807 in Farahan, Iran, entitled Ataback-e Azam (The Chief Minister), Amir Nezaam (The Prince of the State), and Amir Kabir (The Great Prince), is one of the greatest politicians in the recent two centuries of Iran. He initiated reforms that marked the effective beginning of the modernisation of Iran. At an early age Mirza Taqi learned to read and write despite his humble origins. Because of his natural gift and talent, he mastered the required knowledge and skills when still very young. He joined the provincial bureaucracy as a scribe and, by his abilities, rapidly advanced within the hierarchy of the administration. In 1829, as a junior member of an Iranian mission to St. Petersburg, he observed the power of Russia, Iran's great neighbour. He concluded that important and fundamental reforms were needed if Iran was to survive as a sovereign state. As a minister in Azerbaijan he witnessed the inadequacies of Iranian provincial administration, and during tenure in Ottoman Turkey he studied their progress toward modernisation. Upon his return to Iran in 1847, Mirza Taqi was appointed by Mohammad Shah of Qajar Dynasty to the court of the crown prince, Naser o-Din, in Azerbaijan. With the death of Mohammad Shah in 1848, Mirza Taqi was largely responsible for ensuring the crown prince's succession to the throne. Out of gratitude, the young monarch appointed him Chief Minister and gave him the hand of his own sister in marriage. At this time Mirza Taqi took the title of Amir Kabir. He gained his Premiership at a time when the affairs of the country were completely ruined and its internal system was totally torn down. Iran was virtually bankrupt, its central government was weak, and its provinces were almost autonomous. During the next two and a half years the Amir initiated important reforms in virtually all sectors of society. Government expenditure was slashed, and a distinction was made between the privy and public purses. The instruments of central administration were overhauled, and the Amir assumed responsibility for all areas of the bureaucracy. Foreign interference in Iran's domestic affairs was curtailed, and foreign trade was encouraged. Public works such as the bazaar in Tehran were undertaken. A new secular college, the Dar ol-Fonun (The Skills House), was established for training a new cadre of administrators and acquainting them with modern techniques. Among his other accomplishments was the foundation of a newspaper called "Vaqaye Etefaqieh" (The Happened Events). Many exploits in political affairs as well as in the relationships with the neighbouring and other foreign countries were made; he also attended to the order of Iranian Embassies across the world. The ambassadors of great lands in Iran were behaved in a way as expected from the Premier of an independent and self-governing government. With a firm, doubtless, strong, and steady will, Amir Kabir continued his reformations and exploitations, and all alone, resisted the most selfish, tyrannous and despotic king of the Qajar Dynasty along with his corrupt relatives, courtiers, and flatterers, among whom some had been excluded from the government. They regarded the Amir as a social upstart and a threat to their interests, and they formed a coalition against him, in which the queen mother was active. She convinced the young Shah that the Amir wanted to usurp the throne. In October 1851 the Shah dismissed him and exiled him to Kashan, where he was murdered on the Shah's orders on 8 January 1852 (18 Dey 1230 Iranian Calendar or Jalali Calendar) . Historians and those who are acquainted with Amir Kabir and have studied his life and manners appreciate and regard him as a great and remarkable man.
Defensible Borders of Israel (How they Secure Israel) Must Watch Israel's decision to disengage from the Gaza Strip has placed the future of the disputed West Bank at the top of the international agenda. Prominent voices have called on Israel to withdraw fully from the West Bank and return to the 1949 Armistice Lines (1967 borders) – a move that would undermine Israel's security and even pose an existential threat. It is therefore a matter of urgency that while the debate over the future of the Middle East addresses Palestinian claims for an independent state, Israel's rights and requirements for defensible borders, as proposed by President George W. Bush, are now placed squarely on the global diplomatic agenda. Maj.-Gen. (res.) Giora Eiland Israeli-Syrian negotiations in 1999-2000 discussed security arrangements to compensate Israel for the loss of the Golan Heights. The idea was to guarantee that in case of war, IDF forces could quickly return to the place where they are currently stationed. This analysis demonstrates that Israel does not possess a plausible solution to its security needs without the Golan Heights. Not only was the "solution" proposed in the year 2000 implausible at the time, but changing circumstances have rendered Israel's forfeiture of the Golan today an even more reckless act. The idea of defensible borders has been at the heart of the Israeli national consensus for years. In fact, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin laid this out in his last Knesset address in October 1995 – just one month before he was assassinated. Rabin insisted that: "The border of the State of Israel, during the permanent solution, will be beyond the lines which existed before the Six Day War." He emphasized: "We will not return to the 4 June 1967 lines." Specifically, he noted "the security border of Israel will be located in the Jordan Valley, in the broadest meaning of that term." He concluded that Israel must retain "a united Jerusalem" and the settlement blocs of the West Bank. Rabin reflected the views of most Israeli leaders that defensible borders are the key to a durable peace in a volatile Middle East. What Jews are doing to save them , what Muslims are doing Now! Must Watch
The Life of Thomas Edison (1847-1931) 23 December 1878 He invented Gramophone Thomas Edison invented his tin-foil phonograph, Edison's phonograph was followed by Alexander Graham Bell's graphophone. In 1887 Emile Berliner invented the gramophone and records. He was a poor student. When a schoolmaster called him "addled," his furious mother took him out of the school and proceeded to teach him at home. Thomas Edison said many years later, "My mother was the making of me. She was so true, so sure of me, and I felt I had some one to live for, some one I must not disappoint." At an early age, he showed a fascination for mechanical things and for chemical experiments. • Biography Born on February 11, 1847 in Milan, Ohio; the seventh and last child of Samuel and Nancy Edison. When he was seven his family moved to Port Huron, Michigan and Edison lived there until he struck out on his own at the age of sixteen. He had very little formal education as a child, attending school only for a few months. He was taught reading, writing, and arithmetic by his mother, but was always a very curious child and taught himself much by reading on his own. This belief in self-improvement remained throughout his life.
Plastic Made On 23 Dec 1932
A plastic material is any of a wide range of synthetic or semi-synthetic organic solids that are moldable. Plastics are typically organic polymers of high molecular mass, but they often contain other substances. They are usually synthetic, most commonly derived from petrochemicals, but many are partially natural. Early plastics were bio-derived materials such as egg and blood proteins, which are organic polymers. Treated cattle horns were used as windows for lanterns in the Middle Ages. Materials that mimicked the properties of horns were developed by treating milk-proteins (casein) with lye. In the 1800s the development of plastics accelerated with Charles Goodyear's discovery of vulcanization as a route to thermoset materials derived from natural rubber. Many storied materials were reported as industrial chemistry was developed in the 1800s. In the early 1900s, Bakelite, the first fully synthetic thermoset was reported by Belgian chemist Leo Baekeland. After the First World War, improvements in chemical technology led to an explosion in new forms of plastics. Among the earliest examples in the wave of new polymers were polystyrene (PS) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC). The development of plastics has come from the use of natural plastic materials (e.g., chewing gum, shellac) to the use of chemically modified natural materials (e.g., rubber, nitrocellulose, collagen, galalite) and finally to completely synthetic molecules (e.g., bakelite, epoxy, polyvinyl chloride).