President Joyce Banda First Female President of Malawi
Posted on Wednesday, 8 November 2017
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President Jacob Zuma meets the President of Malawi Joyce Banda
Posted on Monday, 6 November 2017
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Heart Cushion At Print Haat
Posted on Sunday, 18 September 2016
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Photo Cushions to showcase your memories. Suitable as a gift for your loved once.
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Our major advantage is that we do not outsource any of our work from other people in the industry. It saves time and ensures quality. Our aim is to have satisfied and happy client. We do not believe in making false promises to our clients. We guarantee that we can match your corporate branding requirements and family satisfaction.
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About Print Haat
Whether you are looking for business promotional material or family happiness you need to keep few very important things in mind, in which quality comes first. It should not just look attractive, but the quality of paper and ink should be up to the standards. We make sure the end product is exactly what you want to impress your clients, family, parents, and beloved.
Heart Cushion At Print Haat
Our major advantage is that we do not outsource any of our work from other people in the industry. It saves time and ensures quality. Our aim is to have satisfied and happy client. We do not believe in making false promises to our clients. We guarantee that we can match your corporate branding requirements and family satisfaction.
Printhaat.com is your one-stop online shop based in New Delhi having a team of young, dynamic and enthusiastic people. We know that a satisfied customer is the best advertisement.
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Bonsai plants for sale in noida
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South Dakota Mother Living With Balloons Under Her Skin Before Life Changing Surgery
Posted on Monday, 25 April 2016
by Unknown
A mother whose face was left disfigured by a life-
threatening disease is living with balloons
underneath her skin to prepare her for
surgery.Jennifer Hiles suffers from arterial venous
malformation (AVM), which causes 'tangles' of veins
and blood vessels to form beneath her skin, which
spread like the branches of a tree.
The condition, which can also causes excess bleeding
and even heart failure, has nearly killed her on
several occasions - and she has been bullied
throughout her life.While many surgeries to remove
the tangles from her face have failed, she is about
to have one final operation which doctors are
confident will work.They will cut out all the
tangles of blood vessels - and will also remove her
nose and rebuild it from her jaw.
Until the operation, Mrs Hiles has had balloons
inserted into her skin, to stretch it so the excess
can be used to cover the scars.She hopes the
operation will stop people calling her names and
allow her to live a normal life with her husband and
two children Marlina and Kiah.She said: 'I just want
to be able to spend all of my time with my kids
without people looking at me and calling me names.
'I just want to not be shy and be who I am without
worrying about what people will think.'AVM is so
hard to deal with - it makes my gums bleed and has
completely eroded the bone in my teeth, if they fall
out I could bleed to death.'Mrs Hiles, of South
Dakota, will soon undergo surgery to remove the AVM
tangles from her face.Until then, doctors have
inserted balloons into her face which are filled
with saline every week in order to stretch her skin.
When they carry out the surgery in May they will use
the excess skin to cover up the scars left from the
removal of the tangles.'They're just like breast
implants but in my face - like a big balloon with
saline inside,' Mrs Hiles said.'They don't feel good
- if you can imagine someone taking your skin and
stretching it - that's what this feels like.'They
will also remove her nose and make a knew one out of
my rib.
She continued: 'The doctors will effectively remove
all of the AVM - which is all of the pink on my face
- and cover it with new skin from the expanders. 'I
don't know if I'm going to look normal, I don't want
to look perfect, just normal.'When Mrs Hiles was
born her family initially believed her facial
deformity was the result of a birthmark - but it
quickly worsened.
Her mother, Alfreda Simms, 44, said: 'She needed
constant blood transfusions.'They had tried to
cauterize her veins and blood vessels to make it
stop but nothing worked for her.'Seeing my daughter
going through that was horrible.'Mrs Hiles was 12
years old when she was diagnosed with AVM and has
had numerous unsuccessful surgeries throughout her
life to remove the growths from her face.
The condition has meant that she has faced a
lifetime of bullying and unwanted stares.Her family
found the bullying hard to deal with when she was
younger - but the constant fear of sh might die was
more concerning.Mrs Simms said: 'There would be
times where I was terrified to go to sleep at night
because her nose would bleed.
'She wouldn't be crying at all but I would just find
her in her crib covered in blood.'She nearly died
when she was 11 and had to be airlifted to hospital
- she was bleeding from her nose and lost a ton of
blood.'She only had two pints in her when they got
her into hospital - that was the scariest day of my
life.'The blood transfusions became so frequent that
a portacath - a tube placed beneath the skin so
liquid can be given directly - was placed directly
into her heart.
Throughout school Mrs Hiles found it hard to make
friends and boys would often date her in secret, as
they were embarrassed to be seen with her.'I didn't
realise that I was so different until my first
boyfriend,' Mrs Hiles said.'He would always talk to
me but then when we were in school he would
completely ignore me and talk to the pretty
girls.'That's when it clicked in my head that I was
different - I didn't like feeling like that.'
But Mrs Hiles' life changed when she met her future
husband Dustin VanOverschelde in biology class.She
said: 'I remember he would give me a hug and kiss in
school and that really surprised me.'He didn't care
that people could see him with me and that was the
best feeling in the world.'He always tells me how
beautiful and pretty I am, he is the best person in
the whole world.'Mr VanOverschelde, 27, claims the
cosmetic element of the surgery will have no bearing
on him - instead he just hopes that it will lead to
Mrs Hiles leading a longer and healthier life.
'I can see past her outside because she is so
beautiful on the inside,' Mr VanOverschelde
said.'It's kind of scary to think about what she
will look like because it's just a mystery.'It won't
change the way I feel about her - I'm always going
to think she is beautiful no matter what.'Any spare
time Mrs Hiles gets is spent with her two young
children Kya and Marlena, who understand their
mother has a rare condition.
She loves to pick Marlena up from school every day -
but finds people can react badly to her face.Mrs
Hiles, 28, added: 'Some of the younger children can
be quite mean - one kid once looked at me and
screamed what is wrong with her face.'They were all
literally screaming at me like I was a monster.She
continued: 'They said it was gross and were asking
whose mum is that.
'I didn't hug or kiss my Marlena when she got out of
school because I didn't want people to know that I
was her mum.'I worry about the children making fun
of her - I don't want her to be affected by it.'Once
the procedure is complete, Mrs Hiles hopes the
bleeding will stop and she can being living a normal
life with her husband and children.She said: 'If I
don't ever have to worry about bleeding,
haemorrhaging or being called names when I pick up
my children that would be a dream come true.'I would
be the happiest woman in the world if I could go for
lunch with my family and not be stared at.
threatening disease is living with balloons
underneath her skin to prepare her for
surgery.Jennifer Hiles suffers from arterial venous
malformation (AVM), which causes 'tangles' of veins
and blood vessels to form beneath her skin, which
spread like the branches of a tree.
The condition, which can also causes excess bleeding
and even heart failure, has nearly killed her on
several occasions - and she has been bullied
throughout her life.While many surgeries to remove
the tangles from her face have failed, she is about
to have one final operation which doctors are
confident will work.They will cut out all the
tangles of blood vessels - and will also remove her
nose and rebuild it from her jaw.
Until the operation, Mrs Hiles has had balloons
inserted into her skin, to stretch it so the excess
can be used to cover the scars.She hopes the
operation will stop people calling her names and
allow her to live a normal life with her husband and
two children Marlina and Kiah.She said: 'I just want
to be able to spend all of my time with my kids
without people looking at me and calling me names.
'I just want to not be shy and be who I am without
worrying about what people will think.'AVM is so
hard to deal with - it makes my gums bleed and has
completely eroded the bone in my teeth, if they fall
out I could bleed to death.'Mrs Hiles, of South
Dakota, will soon undergo surgery to remove the AVM
tangles from her face.Until then, doctors have
inserted balloons into her face which are filled
with saline every week in order to stretch her skin.
When they carry out the surgery in May they will use
the excess skin to cover up the scars left from the
removal of the tangles.'They're just like breast
implants but in my face - like a big balloon with
saline inside,' Mrs Hiles said.'They don't feel good
- if you can imagine someone taking your skin and
stretching it - that's what this feels like.'They
will also remove her nose and make a knew one out of
my rib.
She continued: 'The doctors will effectively remove
all of the AVM - which is all of the pink on my face
- and cover it with new skin from the expanders. 'I
don't know if I'm going to look normal, I don't want
to look perfect, just normal.'When Mrs Hiles was
born her family initially believed her facial
deformity was the result of a birthmark - but it
quickly worsened.
Her mother, Alfreda Simms, 44, said: 'She needed
constant blood transfusions.'They had tried to
cauterize her veins and blood vessels to make it
stop but nothing worked for her.'Seeing my daughter
going through that was horrible.'Mrs Hiles was 12
years old when she was diagnosed with AVM and has
had numerous unsuccessful surgeries throughout her
life to remove the growths from her face.
The condition has meant that she has faced a
lifetime of bullying and unwanted stares.Her family
found the bullying hard to deal with when she was
younger - but the constant fear of sh might die was
more concerning.Mrs Simms said: 'There would be
times where I was terrified to go to sleep at night
because her nose would bleed.
'She wouldn't be crying at all but I would just find
her in her crib covered in blood.'She nearly died
when she was 11 and had to be airlifted to hospital
- she was bleeding from her nose and lost a ton of
blood.'She only had two pints in her when they got
her into hospital - that was the scariest day of my
life.'The blood transfusions became so frequent that
a portacath - a tube placed beneath the skin so
liquid can be given directly - was placed directly
into her heart.
Throughout school Mrs Hiles found it hard to make
friends and boys would often date her in secret, as
they were embarrassed to be seen with her.'I didn't
realise that I was so different until my first
boyfriend,' Mrs Hiles said.'He would always talk to
me but then when we were in school he would
completely ignore me and talk to the pretty
girls.'That's when it clicked in my head that I was
different - I didn't like feeling like that.'
But Mrs Hiles' life changed when she met her future
husband Dustin VanOverschelde in biology class.She
said: 'I remember he would give me a hug and kiss in
school and that really surprised me.'He didn't care
that people could see him with me and that was the
best feeling in the world.'He always tells me how
beautiful and pretty I am, he is the best person in
the whole world.'Mr VanOverschelde, 27, claims the
cosmetic element of the surgery will have no bearing
on him - instead he just hopes that it will lead to
Mrs Hiles leading a longer and healthier life.
'I can see past her outside because she is so
beautiful on the inside,' Mr VanOverschelde
said.'It's kind of scary to think about what she
will look like because it's just a mystery.'It won't
change the way I feel about her - I'm always going
to think she is beautiful no matter what.'Any spare
time Mrs Hiles gets is spent with her two young
children Kya and Marlena, who understand their
mother has a rare condition.
She loves to pick Marlena up from school every day -
but finds people can react badly to her face.Mrs
Hiles, 28, added: 'Some of the younger children can
be quite mean - one kid once looked at me and
screamed what is wrong with her face.'They were all
literally screaming at me like I was a monster.She
continued: 'They said it was gross and were asking
whose mum is that.
'I didn't hug or kiss my Marlena when she got out of
school because I didn't want people to know that I
was her mum.'I worry about the children making fun
of her - I don't want her to be affected by it.'Once
the procedure is complete, Mrs Hiles hopes the
bleeding will stop and she can being living a normal
life with her husband and children.She said: 'If I
don't ever have to worry about bleeding,
haemorrhaging or being called names when I pick up
my children that would be a dream come true.'I would
be the happiest woman in the world if I could go for
lunch with my family and not be stared at.
Blues Alley offers big shoes for Cyrus Chestnut
Posted on Sunday, 27 December 2015
by Unknown
With Cyrus Chestnut booked as Blues Alley’s year-end performance, comparisons with the famous pianists who preceded him there — Ahmad Jamal, who rang in 31 new years, and Monty Alexander, who did five — are inevitable. These veterans are two of the most acclaimed jazz pianists of all time. Could Chestnut, relatively young at 52, escape their long shadows?
On Saturday, the first night of a six-night stand that culminates on New Year’s Eve, Chestnut didn’t so much escape shadows as dissolve them. His trio, featuring D.C. native Eric Wheeler on bass and Chris Beck on drums, offered a nearly perfect evening of straight-ahead jazz that made no attempt to “live up to” anyone or anything but Chestnut’s own vision.
Much is made of his deep gospel influence, which made itself known in his soulful “Ami’s Dance,” and the chiming chords of the standard “I’ve Never Been in Love Before.” But on Saturday night, Chestnut’s filter was the blues. Everything he touched came out sounding like the blues, be it Charlie Parker’s bebop “Yardbird Suite” or a vaguely Latin take on Lionel Richie’s “Hello.” (“You’ll have to forgive us for not playing it Lionel Richie’s way,” Chestnut joked.) That second work introduced another motif that would continue throughout the set: quotes from other songs. “Hello” incorporated “Summertime,” “My Favorite Things” — even the theme from TV’s “Bonanza,” which resurfaced later in “Yardbird Suite.” Another tune morphed into the “Jeopardy” theme, then “Three Blind Mice” — usually calculated for laughs but also beautifully played.
Although he never abandoned the blues, Chestnut showed his virtuosity by recalibrating his approach with every song. He pursued Ellington’s “In a Mellotone” with a double-note voicing that suggested the Sicilian piano tradition. “A Door for the Door of No Return” made use of masterful dynamics, while “Giant Steps” received a delicate touch that seemed to tease the sound out of the keys. “I’ve Never Been in Love Before” seemed to change flavors with every improvised chorus.
But if Chestnut was unpredictable, Wheeler and Beck were together a model of solid support. They held the swing beat steady in the closing “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy” even as the pianist re-syncopated it in his solo, and they played frenetic bop rhythms on “Giant Steps,” Beck even dropping bombs on his bass drum. Wheeler had a feature in Chestnut’s “Soul Brother Cool,” embodying the song’s title with a solo that combined walking bass with a muscular swagger.
The one flaw in the set was a persistent buzz in Chestnut’s microphone. The pianist is already soft-spoken, and his announcements came in a near-whisper that was tough to hear in the best of circumstances. The mic problems rendered him incomprehensible in the back of the room. Chestnut took it as a sign: “Maybe I just need to stop talking and play some music,” he said.
See More Latest Entertainment News, Latest Offer, Retail News
On Saturday, the first night of a six-night stand that culminates on New Year’s Eve, Chestnut didn’t so much escape shadows as dissolve them. His trio, featuring D.C. native Eric Wheeler on bass and Chris Beck on drums, offered a nearly perfect evening of straight-ahead jazz that made no attempt to “live up to” anyone or anything but Chestnut’s own vision.
Much is made of his deep gospel influence, which made itself known in his soulful “Ami’s Dance,” and the chiming chords of the standard “I’ve Never Been in Love Before.” But on Saturday night, Chestnut’s filter was the blues. Everything he touched came out sounding like the blues, be it Charlie Parker’s bebop “Yardbird Suite” or a vaguely Latin take on Lionel Richie’s “Hello.” (“You’ll have to forgive us for not playing it Lionel Richie’s way,” Chestnut joked.) That second work introduced another motif that would continue throughout the set: quotes from other songs. “Hello” incorporated “Summertime,” “My Favorite Things” — even the theme from TV’s “Bonanza,” which resurfaced later in “Yardbird Suite.” Another tune morphed into the “Jeopardy” theme, then “Three Blind Mice” — usually calculated for laughs but also beautifully played.
Although he never abandoned the blues, Chestnut showed his virtuosity by recalibrating his approach with every song. He pursued Ellington’s “In a Mellotone” with a double-note voicing that suggested the Sicilian piano tradition. “A Door for the Door of No Return” made use of masterful dynamics, while “Giant Steps” received a delicate touch that seemed to tease the sound out of the keys. “I’ve Never Been in Love Before” seemed to change flavors with every improvised chorus.
But if Chestnut was unpredictable, Wheeler and Beck were together a model of solid support. They held the swing beat steady in the closing “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy” even as the pianist re-syncopated it in his solo, and they played frenetic bop rhythms on “Giant Steps,” Beck even dropping bombs on his bass drum. Wheeler had a feature in Chestnut’s “Soul Brother Cool,” embodying the song’s title with a solo that combined walking bass with a muscular swagger.
The one flaw in the set was a persistent buzz in Chestnut’s microphone. The pianist is already soft-spoken, and his announcements came in a near-whisper that was tough to hear in the best of circumstances. The mic problems rendered him incomprehensible in the back of the room. Chestnut took it as a sign: “Maybe I just need to stop talking and play some music,” he said.
See More Latest Entertainment News, Latest Offer, Retail News
0 comments Filed Under: Ahmad Jamal, Blues Alley, Chris Beck, Cyrus Chestnut, Eric Wheeler, Lionel Richie, Monty Alexander
Joyce Banda elevates two T/As to Senior Chiefs
Posted on Wednesday, 8 October 2014
by Unknown
President Dr Joyce Banda has put Mwanza District on the map by
elevating two Traditional Authorities Nthache and Kanduku to Senior
Chiefs and has called on chiefs in the country to work with the current
Government on development matters.
President Banda said this on Thursday at Senior Chief Nthaches’s headquarters in Mwanza during the Official installation of Senior Chief Nthache in the district.
The President earlier in the day distributed maize to hunger stricken families; thereafter distributed vocational equipments to youths in the district.

“Mwanza has been sidelined by the previous
governments and I was wondering why Mwanza has been treated as if it
was not a district in the country. Today, I have elevated two T/As to
senior chiefs because of the good work they are doing in supporting the
government,” she said.
She therefore asked chiefs in the country to support government by ensuring they mobilize their subjects to actively participate in development work.
She also said traditional leaders should have good behavior and respect their subjects, saying people look up to them as role models and should desist from acts that can undermine their reputation in the society.
She described chiefs as ‘agents of change’ in that they have the capacity to uplift the lives of the people by prioritising activities that are development in nature.
“You do not apply to be chiefs but it is God who put you in that positions and you need to thank Him by doing good things to your people,” Dr Banda said.
She said she was saddened to learn that other chiefs take away property of their subjects by force saying such behavior ought to be stopped.
“People are not happy when they see their chief taking away land from them by force. I do not want to hear such behavior from chiefs that I am promoting,” she warned.
The President, however, thanked the traditional leaders from actively working hand in hand with her government for the past two years and promised to continue improving the lives of the people once voted into power during the forthcoming general elections.
On agriculture, the President said her government will continue to implement Farm Inputs Subsidy Program (FISP) and Commercial subsidy as it has proved that the two programs have made the country food secure.
Earlier, Minister of Local Government and Rural Development Rachael Zulu said chiefs in the country are very happy with the leadership of President Joyce Banda.
“In the past, chiefs were just used by greedy politicians without properly looked after but since Dr Banda came into power in 2012 chiefs’ lives have tremendously improved.
Zulu further thanked the President for promoting about 60,000 chiefs within the two years she has been in power.
She said government through Mudzi Transformation Trust is building houses for the poor in all parts of the country.
The chieftaincy of Nthache dates back in 1800 AD and the current senior chief became T/A on 17th May 2002
President Banda said this on Thursday at Senior Chief Nthaches’s headquarters in Mwanza during the Official installation of Senior Chief Nthache in the district.
The President earlier in the day distributed maize to hunger stricken families; thereafter distributed vocational equipments to youths in the district.

President Joyce Banda crowning Nthache when she officially elevated him to Senior Chief in Mwanza on Thursday
She therefore asked chiefs in the country to support government by ensuring they mobilize their subjects to actively participate in development work.
She also said traditional leaders should have good behavior and respect their subjects, saying people look up to them as role models and should desist from acts that can undermine their reputation in the society.
She described chiefs as ‘agents of change’ in that they have the capacity to uplift the lives of the people by prioritising activities that are development in nature.
“You do not apply to be chiefs but it is God who put you in that positions and you need to thank Him by doing good things to your people,” Dr Banda said.
She said she was saddened to learn that other chiefs take away property of their subjects by force saying such behavior ought to be stopped.
“People are not happy when they see their chief taking away land from them by force. I do not want to hear such behavior from chiefs that I am promoting,” she warned.
The President, however, thanked the traditional leaders from actively working hand in hand with her government for the past two years and promised to continue improving the lives of the people once voted into power during the forthcoming general elections.
On agriculture, the President said her government will continue to implement Farm Inputs Subsidy Program (FISP) and Commercial subsidy as it has proved that the two programs have made the country food secure.
Earlier, Minister of Local Government and Rural Development Rachael Zulu said chiefs in the country are very happy with the leadership of President Joyce Banda.
“In the past, chiefs were just used by greedy politicians without properly looked after but since Dr Banda came into power in 2012 chiefs’ lives have tremendously improved.
Zulu further thanked the President for promoting about 60,000 chiefs within the two years she has been in power.
She said government through Mudzi Transformation Trust is building houses for the poor in all parts of the country.
The chieftaincy of Nthache dates back in 1800 AD and the current senior chief became T/A on 17th May 2002
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