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Quote zxz3xcvfrg Replybullet Topic: toms shoes online left
    Posted: May 03 2013 at 6:10am
Invalid entry: Please type the verification code again.[标签:标题]
We sent an email to: Please click on the link inside the email to complete your registrationThis service is temporary unavailable due to system maintenance. Please try again later.The username entered is already associated withanother account. Please enter a different usernameThe email address you have entered is already in use.Please re-enter the email address.Raveendran/Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesMeira Kumar, right, even got Aung San Suu Kyi, left, to pot a sapling on her visit to India s Parliament in November last year. When Meira Kumar was elected speaker of the Lok Sabha, India’s lower house of Parliament, in 2009, she set out to drastically reduce the use of paper.Her office took a major step in this direction in late 2011, when lawmakers were given a choice between two tablets: Apple’s iPad2 or Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 7.1.This, says Ms. Kumar,toms shoes online, has helped reduce the volume of Parliament’s day-to-day paperwork by around 30%. Now, she says she wants to turn the Lok Sabha “paperless.” “To an extent we have tried to do away with paper,” Ms. Kumar, draped in a light green sari, said over tea in Parliament House in a recent interview. “Yet, we haven’t been able to fully do away with it,” she added.While lawmakers can now read bulletins and notices on their tablet computers, “reams and reams of paper still go to Parliament every day,” said Ms. Kumar.According to estimates received from her office, at least 200 sheets of paper – ranging from printed copies of the day’s agenda to proposed bills– are handed out daily to the lower house’s 525 members when the house is in session. That adds up to roughly 105,000 sheets of paper each day during parliamentary sessions and that’s just in the lower house.Ms. Kumar, who is extremely “fond of nature,” says this worries her.In an attempt to go paperless, her office is now laying greater emphasis on digitizing more documents, and developing applications that will make it easier for lawmakers to navigate digital content.“We have to keep at par with modern times,” says Ms. Kumar, who is 67.This is one of several initiatives aimed at making Parliament greener. In 2011, the government spent 24 million rupees ($447,000) to install solar panels on the grounds of Parliament, and today solar energy heats about three-fourths of the water used in Parliament House.In 2010, plastic bags were banned in Parliament, two years prior to a local government order that imposed a blanket ban on polybags in New Delhi.To raise awareness on the environment, Ms. Kumar often plants saplings of endangered species in Parliament’s sprawling lawns. “Anytime I come to know a tree is in danger of getting extinct, I always plant its seed in the complex,” says Ms. Kumar.Recently, she says she’s potted a “Rudraksha,cheap toms,” a tree considered auspicious according to Hinduism, and a “Ruilla,toms shoes on sale,” or wild petunia.Ms. Kumar says she recently persuaded Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s opposition Related articles:
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