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  <title type="text">plastib</title>
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  <updated>2021-01-29T10:26:21+09:00</updated>
  <author><name>No Name Ninja</name></author>
  <generator uri="//www.ninja.co.jp/blog/" version="0.9">忍者ブログ</generator>
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  <entry>
    <id>plastib.blog.shinobi.jp://entry/4</id>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://plastib.blog.shinobi.jp/aftermarket-plastic-inject/the%20incident%20came%20on%20the%20h" />
    <published>2021-03-10T10:39:15+09:00</published> 
    <updated>2021-03-10T10:39:15+09:00</updated> 
    <category term="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" label="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" />
    <title>The incident came on the heels of plastic rice sales</title>
    <content mode="escaped" type="text/html" xml:lang="utf-8"> 
      <![CDATA[Alleged sale of plastic rice in Cuttack, Odisha triggered panic among locals. The district administration ordered a probe into it in the city on Friday.The "plastic rice" was found by Dillip Narayan Gutu, a resident of Sheikh Bazaar in Cuttack, who told his neighbours about it. He said he had purchased 5kg rice (Arua Chaula) of the Balami variant at Rs 250 in the first week of June. He found the rice to be "very long, white and plain like Biryani rice. After cooking, the grains looked separated from each other."Mr Gutu said that he felt a "different taste" while consuming thea rice on Wednesday. Suspecting it to be plastic, he threw the rice at the wall making a ball of it, but the ball didn&rsquo;t break. Also, the rice was still fresh a day after on Thursday."The rice does not smell rotten," said Dilip&rsquo;s mother. On getting the information, Cuttack collector Nirmal Chandra Mishra directed district supply officer Amar Mohapatra for a probe into the matter. <br />
<br />
The incident came on the heels of plastic rice sales being reported from different parts of the country. Recently, plastic rice samples were found in Nuapada district in Odisha. Residents of Taraboda village demanded a probe into the alleged sale of plastic rice as their children fell ill after consuming rice that appeared "completely plain and polished."After receiving the complaint, Komna block civil supplies officer said that they would examine <a href="https://www.yongfengchina.com/product/">China Plastic Injection Industry Part Molding Manufacturer</a> the samples. Odisha University of Agriculture and Technology (OUAT) vice chancellor professor Surendranath Pasupalak said the plastic-rice reports were a "rumour." "The plastic rice allegation is a rumour. We are ready to examine the rice if the samples will be sent to us," said the V-C.]]> 
    </content>
    <author>
            <name>No Name Ninja</name>
        </author>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>plastib.blog.shinobi.jp://entry/3</id>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://plastib.blog.shinobi.jp/aftermarket-plastic-inject/dismissing%20reports%20of%20acti" />
    <published>2021-02-20T11:18:57+09:00</published> 
    <updated>2021-02-20T11:18:57+09:00</updated> 
    <category term="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" label="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" />
    <title>Dismissing reports of action being initiated against people for carrying</title>
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      <![CDATA[Dismissing reports of action being initiated against people for carrying plastic bags, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has clarified that the plastic ban would only be implemented from June as per the state government orders. However, the action would continue against plastic carry bags of under 50 microns thickness, which have already been banned.After the state announced the plastic ban starting from Gudi Padwa, messages on social media about the civic body penalising citizens for using plastic bags with images of receipts of fine being charged are being circulated.However, a senior civic official said no such <a href="https://www.yongfengchina.com/">China Plastic Injection Part Molding Suppliers</a> action has been initiated yet. "The state has decided to give an extension of two months to people for disposing off the banned plastic items. Hence, we cannot start any punitive action against the offenders till June 23," said the official.According to the Maharashtra Plastic and Thermocol Products (Manufacture, Usage, Sale, Transport, Handling and Storage) Notification, 2018 on March 23, the government had banned manufacture, usage, storage, distribution, wholesale or retail sale, import and transportation of all kinds of plastic bags and small PET and PETE bottles having capacity of less than half litre, across the state.The state also declared a fine of Rs 5,000 and Rs 10,000 respectively for first and second time offence. A third-time offender will be fined Rs 25,000 and three months&rsquo; jail time.However, the action would continue against the use of plastic carry bags of thickness under 50 microns, said the BMC official.]]> 
    </content>
    <author>
            <name>No Name Ninja</name>
        </author>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>plastib.blog.shinobi.jp://entry/2</id>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://plastib.blog.shinobi.jp/aftermarket-plastic-inject/this%20play%20is%20part%20of%20the%20n" />
    <published>2021-02-03T12:05:48+09:00</published> 
    <updated>2021-02-03T12:05:48+09:00</updated> 
    <category term="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" label="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" />
    <title>This play is part of the National School of Drama production</title>
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      <![CDATA[Towards the end of the Bharangam, there were some very interestig plays. The Wild from Walkabout Theatre Company, USA, directed by Thom Pasculli was an hour of extremes in physical theatre, inspired by the myth of dinosysus and the pursuit of ecstatic ritual. The performance begins with a mysterious gathering of creatures inhabiting darkened corners of the theatre space. After a while, the creatures disappear and people emerge in song and dance to enact the powerful physical interpretation of the Bacchae. The world then transforms into a tropical terrace where people become the aristocratic rulers of a foreign land and reveal their sophisticated savagery. Soon the glamorous construct of the upper class begins to crack open and crumble. Through a deep self-examination, dynamic movement, visceral action and a deep commitment to each other, Walkabout has developed a unique foundational performance practice and ensemble culture that connects us to the work of those in the past to better orient us to the present. With an ensemble of 10 multi-disciplinary artists, Walkabout is a unique example of laboratory theatre in Chicago. <br />
<br />
The director has trained at the Odin Theatre in Denmark and the Growtoski Institute in Poland. As co-artistic director of Walkabout theatre, he specialises in developing physical and laboratory theatre. He specialises in actor training and exchange. The Wild examines what happens to people when institutions crumble and deities fail to show up. It was a marvellous production of physical and aesthetic theatre with the actors completely at ease with each other and the exercises they were doing. Two Delhi-based performers in the group, Amba Jhala and Anirudh Nair fitted in perfectly with the rest of the team. Everything was keyed on to the performance text of the play and works very well together. Playwright and director Saurabh Shukla&rsquo;s sensitively written Hindi play Barff (snow) was presented by AGP World, Mumbai. Dr Kaul well played by Vinay Pathak is coerced into driving out at night into the interiors of Kashmir valley to treat a child of Ghulam Rasul and Nafiza. He discovers that the child is not a child but a doll which they treat as a live child. Without breaking their heart, he leaves the house, raising questions on what is truth; is it belief or is it the reality Does truth actually exist or is it a manifestation of one&rsquo;s own belief Nafiza, played by Sadiya Siddiqui, believes that the child is actually alive and has got high temperature and the doctor must cure him. She keeps pestering him for not concentrating on the child. He is brow-beaten by her. He cracks up in the middle and lifts up the doll and asks her if she really believes it&rsquo;s alive and her child And she says yes. So he feels defeated. He tries to leave the house but is bound hand and feet to a chair. Next morning, he declares the child well and is allowed to leave. This play was directed by its author with a great deal of patience and feeling, which came across very well. Soul of Fire, written by Susanne Felicitas Wolf and directed and acted by Maxi Blaha, was a moving document about Austrian pacifist, Bertha von Suttner. She fought for peace against nationalistic fanaticism and aggressive militariasim, anti-semitism and recognised the danger of hate-breeding. As a writer and lecturer, she inspired her friend and benefactor, Alfred Nobel to create a peace prize. She was the first woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1905 for her famous novel, Lay Down Your Arms. Maxi Blaha was excellent as the Austrian Suttner. She played all the passionate humanitarian and dramatic love affairs in later years and the heroine&rsquo;s life vicissitudes in a moving yet humorous manner. She showed the ups and downs of her struggle with life with unsparing honesty and hopeful idealism. It brings into focus important political, psychological and emotional aspects of Suttner&rsquo;s life. A excerpt from her novel says, "to apply international law, merge the divided group into a single group and found the union of civilised nations in Europe! Tiny is a minority which still wishes for war. Immeasurable vast are the masses who yearn for peace &mdash; not a truce maintained out of fear but a secure and guaranteed peace.""My challenge is to all of us who wish to join us, send in your name and address.<br />
<br />
The Transparent trap was written and directed by Shrikant Bhide. It is a story about plastic and how humans have used it for each and everything since the day it was invented. We use plastic daily because it is extremely user-friendly. Yet, it is one of the prime reasons for global warming and has killed many aquatic, terrestrial and amphibian species. We have on stage actors coming on trapped in plastic bags, trying to get out and some dying in the process. Plastic invented for the betterment of humanity and it has become the killer of humanity itself. We eat out of plastic plates, <a href="https://www.yongfengchina.com/product/exterior-parts/">China Automotive Exterior Injection Plastic Part Molding</a> we use plastic spoons, knives and forks and drink out of plastic cups and when the refuse becomes too much it is sought to be burnt leading to poisonous gas emissions which can cause death if it is breathed in for a long time. Besides this, we throw plastic bags in the seas and oceans and rivers and lakes, which can kill life below in the water and besides that the cows and dogs eat plastic bags leading to all kinds of problems. The fighting between the dogs over the plastic bags was hilarious. Led by Shrikant Bhide, the cast performed each of the scene-to-scene compositions, carefully crafted with a combination of physical theatre, music and lights, very well. The group from Pune that performed this non-verbal play was called Dhyaas. Tar aya is about the introduction of tar roads to a small village in Mysore. The visions of these scenes were well carved. The opinion between the educated youth is also seen as a clash of modernity and traditional values. Very interestingly the village elders were keen to bring in modernity while the youth fights to keep it at bay. From a simple narrative, the story plunges into diverse issues of caste system, religion and the role of women in rural society. The nature of the stories is inspirational enough though it is grounded in reality. The ending is quite tragic as in the fight between urbanisation and corruption an innocent child is killed in the molten tar. <br />
<br />
This play is part of the National School of Drama production, New Delhi. The director of the play, Pandu Ranga and the playwright is Devanooru Mahadeva, a well known Kannada writer. The characters in the play are a variety of people from the village, including a temple priest, a musician girl, a mentally ill old man, a "bitching" woman and a musician man and seducing females forms, besides the women and men of the village. The tarring of the road scenes were very well done and they led to the narratives in an effortless manner. Jal Dumroo Baje is a tragic play, very dark and almost unoptimistic in its denoument. They are floods in the village where the human relationships are riven with internal conflicts, taboos, caste-based fundamentalism and beliefs and non-beliefs. These aspects continue to drive these people even when their surroundings are flooded with water and there is little hope of their being saved as the rains keep on coming. Their thought process is responsible for their psychological calamity in their individual situations and circumstances. The play was directed by Sanjay Upadhyay for the Patna based Nirman Kala Kendra and the play was worked out in a workshop process along with the writer, Rameshwar Prem.]]> 
    </content>
    <author>
            <name>No Name Ninja</name>
        </author>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>plastib.blog.shinobi.jp://entry/1</id>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://plastib.blog.shinobi.jp/aftermarket-plastic-inject/a%20syrian%20man%20works%20at%20his" />
    <published>2021-01-29T10:28:05+09:00</published> 
    <updated>2021-01-29T10:28:05+09:00</updated> 
    <category term="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" label="Aftermarket-Plastic-injection-parts-molding-Suppliers" />
    <title>A Syrian man works at his shop behind a front window</title>
    <content mode="escaped" type="text/html" xml:lang="utf-8"> 
      <![CDATA[A Syrian man works at his shop behind a front window sealed with plastic tarp in the rebel-held Kallaseh district of the northern city of Aleppo. (Photo: AFP)In a city whose windows have been blasted from their frames, remaining residents of Syria&rsquo;s war-torn Aleppo go about their daily lives behind gaping holes covered with plastic.For inhabitants of the battle-scarred and divided city, glass windows have become more of a liability than a luxury."Every window pane we have has been shattered by shelling," said Ammar Wattar, an English teacher, as he fitted a hard plastic sheet into the window frame of his home in the government-held district of Al-Midan. "We changed it the first time, then the second time, the third time &mdash; until this time, we decided not to change it anymore." The windows are regularly blown out in the frequent rocket attacks and air strikes on Aleppo city, turning the shards into dangerous projectiles. Replacing them is also prohibitively expensive &mdash; so residents have been opting to cover the empty frames with sheets of plastic. In many neighbourhoods, children can be seen slipping behind white tarpaulin hanging like curtains from the doorways of their apartments. Abandoned apartment <a href="https://www.yongfengchina.com/">Aftermarket Plastic injection parts molding Suppliers</a> buildings are often identified by the partly-smashed glass windows protruding like jagged teeth from the metal frames.Clashes and bombardment have carried on in Aleppo despite a February 27 truce across parts of Syria and multiple attempts to secure a local freeze on fighting in the city. Asraa al-Masri, a teacher in a regime-held district of the city, said a shard of glass flew into her daughter&rsquo;s leg during a rocket attack.She has since stopped replacing her windows with glass, but she now faces a new set of worries. "Bugs, dust, soot, loud noises, the burning smell of the generators, which are bad for your health and negatively affect our children while they&rsquo;re studying," she listed.Perhaps no one has seen as much shattered glass as Mohammed Bouz, who used to sell it in a shop in Al-Midan."My stockpile has been destroyed many times during the shelling, and I haven&rsquo;t been able to get new deliveries," he told AFP.Before Syria&rsquo;s war erupted in March 2011, a square metre of glass cost 425 Syrian pounds (70 cents) &mdash; but it now fetches about 3,300 ($6). Aleppo&rsquo;s desperate residents &mdash; many of whom have been left jobless since war came to their city in 2012 &mdash; opt for the much cheaper plastic at a maximum of 500 Syrian pounds per square metre.But for Umm Ahmad&rsquo;s conservative Muslim family, no proper windows means no privacy.Synthetic canvas billows in the wind, "so my daughters and I can only change our clothes in the bathroom or in the hallways so our neighbours don&rsquo;t see us", the 52-year-old woman said.Privacy "is something really sacred for Aleppan families".Across the frontline in Aleppo&rsquo;s rebel-held east, shopkeeper Ali Makansi recounts sitting in his grocery store one day "when a mortar shell crashed into the roof of a nearby building". "Because the explosion was so powerful, an entire window pane fell on me and cut the main nerve in my hand," said the 32-year-old whose shop is in the Al-Shaar neighbourhood."All the houses and commercial buildings in Aleppo are using plastic now instead of glass," he said. "Plastic is cheap and won&rsquo;t hurt anyone if there&rsquo;s an explosion nearby."Mohammed Jokhdar, a 29-year-old Arabic language teacher, sent his family to Turkey after his brother was killed in shelling last year. He lives alone in his apartment in Bustan al-Qasr district where he has covered the windows with sheets of transparent plastic. "But the plastic doesn&rsquo;t protect from the weather and sometimes water leaks through. It doesn&rsquo;t block the noise either &mdash; I feel like I&rsquo;m in the street."Abu Omar, 69, who lives in Tariq al-Bab neighbourhood, also complains about the noise and water leaks.But "the biggest problem is the street cats... They tear the plastic and come into my home looking for food."]]> 
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    <author>
            <name>No Name Ninja</name>
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