Showing posts with label Indian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Plus Size Indian Maid Costumes - Womens Full 18-22 (Plus Size)

Plus Size Indian Maid Costumes - Womens Full 18-22 (Plus Size)Description

It"s time for a pow wow! This Plus Size Native American Costume is the perfect Indian inspired costume for plus size women because of the decorative fringe and pretty colorful beads. Pick up some matching mocassins for the complete look.




Features



  • Includes: Dress, Headpiece, Belt, Boot Tops

  • Plus Size




Details & Price

This product was manufactured by Unknown.



Brand: Forum Novelties Inc.
UPC: 721773618291
List Price: $34.99.
New Price: $29.59 Only 19 left
Save 15% ($5.40) by purchasing on Amazon.com
5 Stars(Read Reviews)

Buy Now on Amazon.com





Plus Size Indian Maid Costumes - Womens Full 18-22 (Plus Size)

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Indian arrested for letting son, 9, drive Ferrari

NEW DELHI (AP) — Police in India have arrested a man who allowed his 9-year-old son to drive his Ferrari.


Mohammed Nisham was arrested on charges of endangering the life of a child and allowing a minor to drive, said Inspector Biju Kumar. He was released after posting bail of 5,000 rupees ($92), Kumar said.


Nisham's wife filmed the boy driving the sports car on his 9th birthday two weeks ago with his 5-year-old brother in the passenger seat. The video was widely watched on YouTube and created an outrage across India, causing police to file charges.


India's economic boom has created a class of super-rich, whose excesses are frequently in the news.


Police Inspector M.V. Verghese said the boy's father, who has a thriving tobacco and real estate business, owns 18 cars worth an estimated $4 million.


Nisham turned himself in at a police station near the port city of Kochi in the southern state of Kerala, Kumar said.


Police have impounded the Ferrari, but it will be returned to him in a few days after police complete the paperwork for the case, police said.


The boy's parents were unabashed. "I am proud of him. He's been driving since he was 5," said his mother, Amal Nisham.


She said the boy has also driven the family's Lamborghini and Bentley and other cars.


"It was his 9th birthday, and since he was insisting for months, we allowed him to drive the Ferrari. He is a cautious and confident driver," she told television channel NDTV.


"It's not easy for a child to achieve such a feat at this young age," she said.


___


Online:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYUnp7G9fBo


View the original article here

Monday, February 25, 2013

Adolf Hitler stumping for votes in Indian elections

GAUHATI, India (AP)-Adolf Hitler is running for elections in India. So is Frankenstein.

Small Northeast State of Meghalaya has a special charm for interesting names and sometimes controversial and ballot for state elections Saturday, is proof.

Among the 345 candidates running for the State Assembly are Frankenstein Momin, Billykid Sangma, field Marshal Mawphniang and Romeo Rani. Some, like Kenedy Marak, Kennedy Khyriem and Jhim Carter Cornelius Sangma, are clearly hoping for the electoral success of their American Presidents.

Then there is Hitler.

This 54 year old father of three has won three elections for the State Assembly with little controversy over being named after the Nazi dictator.

His father had served with the British army, but apparently developed enough of a fascination with the archenemy of Britain to name his son Adolf Hitler — although gave him the middle name Lu, Hitler said.

"I realize at some point of time that Adolf Hitler was the most hated person on Earth for the genocide of the Jews. But my father added ' Lu ', naming me Lu of Adolf Hitler, and that is why I am different, "Hitler told the Associated Press from the small village of Mansingre, 200 kilometers (125 miles) West of Gauhati, the capital of the neighboring state of Assam.

Hitler said that his name has not ceased to travel the globe, including United States and Germany.

"I've never had problems obtaining a visa, but I have been asked many times during immigration as to why I should have a name. I said the immigration staff who possibly did not have a role in my name, "he said.

India had thousands of troops fighting alongside the allies in World War II, especially in North Africa and Burma, but many Indians View Hitler not as the personification of evil, but as a figure of fascination. Hitler's book "Mein Kampf" is clearly visible in many Indian libraries. The owner of a men's clothing store named his shop "Hitler" and has expressed concerns last year after Israel complained.

Musfika Haq, a teacher in the capital of Meghalaya, Shillong, said that these names are common in the State.

"Parents obviously get fascinated by well-known names or great leader, but should be aware that some of them, like Hitler, was highly controversial," he said.


View the original article here