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Top 10 Pinterest Pins This Week. We repin images on Pinterest that capture our attention and inspire new ideas. This week's top 10 Pinterest pins contains 10 items that will have you clicking the "repin" button. This week, we included pins that ranged from handy household items to helpful tips for living. Pinners this week were quick to repin a special hairbrush that uses absorbent microfiber bristles to dry your hair as you brush. (Don't worry, it has a mildew guard!) We also included some handy kitchen utensils and a guide that will help you start to eat healthier. FOLLOW: Mashable on Pinterest For our top 10 pins post, we use Pinterest analytics tool Repinly to see what pinners are repinning and find interesting. What were some of your favorite Pinterest pins this week? Mashable See On Thumbnail Courtesy of Etsy, Fishstikks. 6 Arduino Gadgets You Can Build at Home. Tech & Gadgets. Polls - What is the best comment in source code you have ever encountered.

ICICI Bank - BANGLORE - NEW BEL ROAD Branch Details. (2) Chinese Room Menu, Menu for Chinese Room, Kothrud Pune. Chinese Room Oriental ( CRO) Was my favourite restaurant when I was in school ....! Anytime, anyone , used to ask me where I wanted to go, pat came the reply.....CRO ! I was passing by the other day....and realized that it had been a very long time since I visited this place.... Hoping to have the same delightful experience....I walked in. Looks like nothing has changed in terms of decor, in all these years.....the same Oriental theme obvious in the artifacts and overall interior. Chicken Wonton soup- The same taste that I remember.....a teeny tiny piece of chicken inside huge wantons, in a clear broth....with lots of fresh spring onion. Paper wrapped Chicken (steamed) - Now this one is really good...! Veg Fried Rice - Decent... Shredded Lamb with diced Capsicum - This one had lamb, onion, capsicum in a medium spicy, brown sauce... Stewed Chicken with Green Onion - I like bland food in general.... so I liked this one.

Desert- This was the moment I was waiting for... Drifting. Incredibox. The Film Sufi: "About Elly" - Asghar Farhadi (2009) When middle-class Iranians in Tehran have a holiday, they often like to escape their dry urban confines and trek up north to the Caspian seaside, where everything is cooler and greener. It’s also an opportunity for people to be a little more casual and relaxed in the open air. About Elly (Darbareye Elly, 2009) is a deceptively clever film about one such holiday visit, where events don’t go exactly as planned. Over the course of the three-day weekend by the sea, the viewer is exposed to the fascinatingly complex social dynamics of people under stress.

In particular, this film has things to say about some of the nuances of Iranian culture under these circumstances (but, of course, much of what happens relates generally to how all of us interact with others). The film was written and directed by Asghar Farhadi, whose subsequent production was the more famous and highly praised A Separation (2011), which won the US Oscar for Best Foreign Film. Now the finger-pointing begins. Notes: Storytelling assignment NID, Banaglore.mov. The Useless Web. Dionysus. The earliest cult images of Dionysus show a mature male, bearded and robed. He holds a fennel staff, tipped with a pine-cone and known as a thyrsus. Later images show him as a beardless, sensuous, naked or half-naked androgynous youth: the literature describes him as womanly or "man-womanish".[10] In its fully developed form, his central cult imagery shows his triumphant, disorderly arrival or return, as if from some place beyond the borders of the known and civilized.

His procession (thiasus) is made up of wild female followers (maenads) and bearded satyrs with erect penises. Some are armed with the thyrsus, some dance or play music. The god himself is drawn in a chariot, usually by exotic beasts such as lions or tigers, and is sometimes attended by a bearded, drunken Silenus. He was also known as Bacchus (/ˈbækəs/ or /ˈbɑːkəs/; Greek: Βάκχος, Bakkhos), the name adopted by the Romans[12] and the frenzy he induces, bakkheia. Names Etymology Epithets Acroreites at Sicyon.[24] Mythology.