Rule Book for journalism
Click edit above to add content to this empty capsule.
No plagiarism
By now, you've likely discovered that writing is hard work. You certainly don't want someone else swiping your effort and presenting it as his or her own.
So don't steal others' work.
Such theft is plagiarism. It includes not just cutting and pasting whole articles, but copying photos, graphics, video and even large text excerpts from others and putting them on your web page as well.
If you want to reference something on another website, link it instead.
If you are concerned that the page you're linking to will disappear, give your readers the name of the publication that published the page, its date of publication and a short summary of its content. Just like news reporters used to reference other content before the Web. (“In a Sept. 20 report, the Wall Street Journal reported....").
When in doubt, do both. There's no such thing as too much supporting information.
Disclose, disclose, disclose
Tell your readers how you got your information, and what factors influenced your decision to publish it. If you have a personal or professional connection to people or groups you're writing about, describe it. Your readers deserve to know what has influenced the way you reported or wrote a story.
Don't hide whom you work for, or where the money to support your site comes from. If your site runs advertising, label the ads as such. Let readers know if you are making money off links elsewhere on your site, as well.
No gifts or money for coverage
One common way journalists avoid conflicts of interest is by refusing gifts or money from sources they cover. Writers who accept gifts, payments or honoraria from the people or groups they cover open themselves up to charges that their work is a paid advertisement for those sources. Or, at the very least, that those writers are too "close" to these sources to cover them honestly. You can avoid controversy by politely declining such offers.
Most major news organizations do allow their writers to accept free admission to events for the purpose of writing a feature or review. But most of those organizations bar their writers from "junkets," where groups provide free travel and hotel rooms in addition to attendance at their event.
Many companies also send items such as books and DVDs to writers who review them. Items of significant value ought to be returned after the review. Less expensive items, such as books, can be donated to a local school or charity.
If you are writing about your employer, obviously you are accepting money from it. But let your readers know that. Identify yourself as an employee, even if you are writing anonymously, so people know enough about your background that they can make their own judgment about your credibility.
As writers should not accept money from sources, they also should not ask for it. If your site runs ads, do not solicit people or groups you cover to buy ads or sponsorships on your site. Find someone else handle your ad sales.
Check it out, then tell the truth
Just because someone else said it, this statement does not make it true. Reward your readers with accurate information that stands up to scrutiny from other writers. Check out your information before you print it.
Find facts, not just others' opinions, to support your comments. Start with sites such as our guide to reporting to learn how to find real data, not someone else's spin. Make sure that what you are writing isn't merely repeating some urban myth, either.
If you are writing about someone else, call or e-mail them for a comment before you publish. If your subject has a blog, link to it. That link will notify the subject that you've written about them, and will allow your readers to click-through and read the subject's side of the story.
If you want to write satire or spoofs, fine. But make sure your audience knows that what you are writing is not literal truth. Tricking readers won't help you develop the respect, credibility or loyal audience that truthful writers enjoy and rely upon.
Be honest
In summary, be honest with your readers and transparent about your work. If people wonder for a moment about your honesty or your motives, you've lost credibility with them. Don't let them do that. Answer those questions even before readers ask.
And most important is to never utilise your power of press for personal gains or simply annoying someone
Saturday, March 20, 2010
My Published articles
at merinews.com
Commodities Market..........the real truth
What is this business called without actual delivery orders?
Any Commercial activity or transaction without the delivery of certain object called gambling,
The Authorized and legalized gambling called Commodity future market or commodity trading. Here there is nothing in real only rates are real and people are making or loosing money just by gambling.
POKER VS COMMODITY market ?????
1) In poker, all the money you EVER win comes from money that others loss. In the Commodity market all the money you EVER win comes from money that others loss. 2) In Poker, you cannot control the cards that come yet people BET BEFORE the cards come(pre flop). In the futures market, you cannot control the direction of the market, yet people BET on whether the market will rise or fall (long or short position) BEFORE it does. 3) In Poker, you know by looking at your cards, that some hands are highly likely to win, such as a pair of ACES (80%) against a random hand. In the Futures market, there are strategies, such as OPTION WRITING, in which you are highly likely to win (80%) of the time. 4) In Poker, the house takes a cut from the players (the rake) In the Futures market, the brokers take their (cut) commissions from the players So from a MONETARY ONLY standpoint, tell me the difference between playing Poker and “Investing” in the Commodity market.
WHAT ARE futures?
FUTURES ARE contracts in which one party agrees to buy or sell a certain commodity, such as a bushel of wheat or a barrel of oil, at a certain price at an agreed upon date in the future.
Everything is spelled out in the contracts, including the quantity and quality of the commodity, the price per unit, and the date and method of delivery. The futures market is different from the "spot market," where buyers and sellers trade the same commodities, but in the present time.
It helps to think of this as traders buying a service up front. In practice, people complete these sorts of transactions every day. For example, when you purchase an airline ticket, you are paying the company today for the right to travel on an agreed upon time in the future. Futures contracts are the same thing, except they typically involve companies buying and selling commodities in the future--oil, wheat, corn, soybeans, pork, cattle, butter, milk, gold, silver, etc.
The practical benefit of futures contracts is that they help firms to lock in the prices of what they are buying or selling in advance. For example, airlines use futures contracts when buying jet fuel, rather than buying it on the so-called spot market. It helps both buyers and sellers to more accurately predict their operating costs and incomes.
HOW ARE the prices determined?
THIS IS where futures exchanges come into the picture. The largest futures exchange is the Chicago Board of Trade, which has been in operation since 1848. All futures contracts are registered at such exchanges, which then create the benchmarks for further contracts.
For example, if a company agrees to buy 1,000 barrels of oil from another firm for delivery in June at $125 a barrel, the two parties report the contract to a futures exchange. This becomes a new standard price for oil futures.
Another supplier could decide if they thought that price was too high (or too low) and make an offer to deliver 1,000 barrels at $125.50. If a buyer steps forward and accepts, this sets a new benchmark. Then another supplier could enter the picture and make the same calculation, or a different one. These trades happen over and over throughout the course of the day. Demands for futures contracts sends prices up. When demand falters, prices drop.
What happens next is that at the end of every day, the two parties must settle up based on where the futures price of that commodity ended the day.
Let's say Buyer A (known as the "long" position) and Seller B (known as the "short" position) agree to a futures contract in which Buyer A would buy 1,000 barrels of oil from Seller B on July 1 for $125 a barrel. On the next day, say the futures price increases to $130 a barrel. The Seller B has lost $5 per barrel because he is now obligated to sell at a price below the market. Buyer A has made $5 per barrel because the price he is obligated to pay is below the market. The Seller must pay the Buyer $5,000 ($5 times 1,000 barrels) to settle the account.
These adjustments are made daily, depending on how the price of futures changes, until the contract expires, the goods are delivered and the final settlements are made.
Therein lies another benefit for the actual traders in commodities. The futures markets enable buyers and sellers to hedge against--or cushion the impact of--pricing changes. Buyers and sellers could set up trades to minimize potential losses from rising and falling prices on spot markets through these hedges in the futures market.
If prices fall after a contract is signed, a seller would be protected from lower prices on the spot market because he would be collecting income on existing futures contract. If prices rise, the seller would lose money on the futures contract, but could try to sell more in the spot market to make up the difference. In theory, futures contracts are meant to be a zero-sum hedge to protect against changes in prices.
WHAT'S WRONG with this picture?
HISTORICALLY, FUTURES contracts were traded primarily between producers of commodities and consumers of commodities at large, regulated commodities exchanges. Most futures contracts eventually resulted in the actual delivery of a commodity on a set date.
That's all changed in recent years. Now, the bulk of firms trading on futures exchanges are speculators with no intention of ever receiving delivery of the commodities they are trading.
For example, for some crops, it might take only 10,000 contracts to satisfy the needs of buyers and sellers to hedge prices. However, the volume of wheat contracts from the beginning of the year through March 2008 was 5.7 million contracts.
As well, contracts are usually wound down or rolled over without commodities ever being exchanged. Instead, traders make their profits simply through creating and exchanging contracts, and timing those moves to make the most of day-to-day price fluctuations on the futures markets.
Plus, new, unregulated exchanges have emerged, so traders don't even have to report all of their activity. Thus, traders could make a trade on a public market and then make another on an unregulated market to balance or heighten the first trade.
It used to be that all futures trading was monitored by the U.S. Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). Created in 1974, the CFTC was built upon legislation passed in the 1920s and 1930s in response to speculation on grain futures prior to the Great Depression. However, the CFTC lost some of its oversight ability in 2000, thanks to legislation passed that makes it easier to trade in futures outside monitored exchanges (such as the Chicago Board of Trade and the New York Mercantile Exchange).
New Threat to Farmers
Commercial speculation in agriculture has traditionally been used by traders and processors to protect against short-term price volatility, acting as a sort of price insurance while helping to set a benchmark price in the cash market. But the elimination of speculative position limits for financial speculators and the rise of commodity index funds undermined traditional price risk management. These funds create a constant upward pressure on commodity prices, alleviated abruptly only when fund contracts are "rolled over" to take profits
HOW IS this affecting food prices?
THE PRICE of futures contracts is affected to some degree by prices in the present. For example, when the cyclone hit Myanmar, it wiped out some of the country's anticipated rice production and thus sent the price of rice and rice futures up. Similarly, when Nigerian rebels disrupt oil pipelines, this sends the price of oil futures up as it raises concerns about future deliveries.
At the same time, if futures prices are going up and a gap develops with current spot market prices, this could lead buyers of commodities to hoard in the present--to take advantage of the lower current prices and avoid paying higher prices in the future. If, say, the price of oil futures is $125, but the price of oil on the spot market is only $115, more firms will buy oil today, thus putting upward pressure on the current price of oil. On the flip side, rising oil prices in the present can help push futures prices upwards.
Thus, rising prices in either the spot market or the futures market could end up reinforcing each other and further exacerbate inflation.
And there's more. There is mounting evidence that prices on futures markets are out of whack with what's happening in the real-world supply of the commodities being traded.
All other things being equal, the prices of expiring futures contracts should converge with the pricing on spot markets on the date of expiration--that is, the price of oil in June should be pretty close to the price of oil futures contracts trading today that expire in June. But there are huge divergences developing.
Why? Because there are too many investors chasing too few futures contracts, and this is creating demand for the underlying commodity that drives up the price of the commodity to be delivered in the future.
Thus, according to AgResource Co., total index fund investment in corn, soybeans, wheat, cattle and hogs amounts to $47 billion, up from $10 billion just two years ago.
Some of this is increase is to rising demand based on the boom in the world economy in the middle of this decade, as rising incomes in China, India and other developing countries spur greater consumption of foodstuffs.
But the rising prices have encouraged speculators to move in as well. The situation has grown all the worse as other financial markets falter. With interest rates low, inflation on the increase and stock markets in turbulence, growing numbers of investors are turning to commodities futures market in search of returns.
"There is a shortage of futures for sale amid an index fund business model for carrying long positions for extended periods," Richard J. Feltes, senior vice president and director of MF Global Research, wrote in a recent note. "Wall Street money flows in the long side of market exceed influence of short hedgers by many multiples...
"The answer to the 'mystery' is that grain futures contracts for some have become investment securities--not hedging instruments that offset either cash inventories or future usage."
WHAT'S THE outcome of all of this?
IN INDIA, the imbalances became so bad that the country last week moved to suspend futures trading in soybean oil, rubber, chickpeas and potatoes. This is an attempt by the government to reign in inflation. Chickpea futures jumped 89 percent in the past 12 months, while rubber rose 41 percent and soybean oil 21 percent. The Indian government already suspended trading on rice and wheat futures last year.
It's possible that other nations could follow suit with similar measures. It's also possible that in the U.S., regulators could try to limit the amount of over-the-counter trading occurring on unregulated markets or expand the powers of the CFTC. There have been hearings before the CFTC in recent weeks exploring the link between futures markets and the skyrocketing costs of fuel and food.
However, none of that is likely to happen very quickly, since there is little agreement as to how big a role futures markets are playing in the overall crisis. Meanwhile, this factor in the global food crisis will continue
Commodities Market..........the real truth
What is this business called without actual delivery orders?
Any Commercial activity or transaction without the delivery of certain object called gambling,
The Authorized and legalized gambling called Commodity future market or commodity trading. Here there is nothing in real only rates are real and people are making or loosing money just by gambling.
POKER VS COMMODITY market ?????
1) In poker, all the money you EVER win comes from money that others loss. In the Commodity market all the money you EVER win comes from money that others loss. 2) In Poker, you cannot control the cards that come yet people BET BEFORE the cards come(pre flop). In the futures market, you cannot control the direction of the market, yet people BET on whether the market will rise or fall (long or short position) BEFORE it does. 3) In Poker, you know by looking at your cards, that some hands are highly likely to win, such as a pair of ACES (80%) against a random hand. In the Futures market, there are strategies, such as OPTION WRITING, in which you are highly likely to win (80%) of the time. 4) In Poker, the house takes a cut from the players (the rake) In the Futures market, the brokers take their (cut) commissions from the players So from a MONETARY ONLY standpoint, tell me the difference between playing Poker and “Investing” in the Commodity market.
WHAT ARE futures?
FUTURES ARE contracts in which one party agrees to buy or sell a certain commodity, such as a bushel of wheat or a barrel of oil, at a certain price at an agreed upon date in the future.
Everything is spelled out in the contracts, including the quantity and quality of the commodity, the price per unit, and the date and method of delivery. The futures market is different from the "spot market," where buyers and sellers trade the same commodities, but in the present time.
It helps to think of this as traders buying a service up front. In practice, people complete these sorts of transactions every day. For example, when you purchase an airline ticket, you are paying the company today for the right to travel on an agreed upon time in the future. Futures contracts are the same thing, except they typically involve companies buying and selling commodities in the future--oil, wheat, corn, soybeans, pork, cattle, butter, milk, gold, silver, etc.
The practical benefit of futures contracts is that they help firms to lock in the prices of what they are buying or selling in advance. For example, airlines use futures contracts when buying jet fuel, rather than buying it on the so-called spot market. It helps both buyers and sellers to more accurately predict their operating costs and incomes.
HOW ARE the prices determined?
THIS IS where futures exchanges come into the picture. The largest futures exchange is the Chicago Board of Trade, which has been in operation since 1848. All futures contracts are registered at such exchanges, which then create the benchmarks for further contracts.
For example, if a company agrees to buy 1,000 barrels of oil from another firm for delivery in June at $125 a barrel, the two parties report the contract to a futures exchange. This becomes a new standard price for oil futures.
Another supplier could decide if they thought that price was too high (or too low) and make an offer to deliver 1,000 barrels at $125.50. If a buyer steps forward and accepts, this sets a new benchmark. Then another supplier could enter the picture and make the same calculation, or a different one. These trades happen over and over throughout the course of the day. Demands for futures contracts sends prices up. When demand falters, prices drop.
What happens next is that at the end of every day, the two parties must settle up based on where the futures price of that commodity ended the day.
Let's say Buyer A (known as the "long" position) and Seller B (known as the "short" position) agree to a futures contract in which Buyer A would buy 1,000 barrels of oil from Seller B on July 1 for $125 a barrel. On the next day, say the futures price increases to $130 a barrel. The Seller B has lost $5 per barrel because he is now obligated to sell at a price below the market. Buyer A has made $5 per barrel because the price he is obligated to pay is below the market. The Seller must pay the Buyer $5,000 ($5 times 1,000 barrels) to settle the account.
These adjustments are made daily, depending on how the price of futures changes, until the contract expires, the goods are delivered and the final settlements are made.
Therein lies another benefit for the actual traders in commodities. The futures markets enable buyers and sellers to hedge against--or cushion the impact of--pricing changes. Buyers and sellers could set up trades to minimize potential losses from rising and falling prices on spot markets through these hedges in the futures market.
If prices fall after a contract is signed, a seller would be protected from lower prices on the spot market because he would be collecting income on existing futures contract. If prices rise, the seller would lose money on the futures contract, but could try to sell more in the spot market to make up the difference. In theory, futures contracts are meant to be a zero-sum hedge to protect against changes in prices.
WHAT'S WRONG with this picture?
HISTORICALLY, FUTURES contracts were traded primarily between producers of commodities and consumers of commodities at large, regulated commodities exchanges. Most futures contracts eventually resulted in the actual delivery of a commodity on a set date.
That's all changed in recent years. Now, the bulk of firms trading on futures exchanges are speculators with no intention of ever receiving delivery of the commodities they are trading.
For example, for some crops, it might take only 10,000 contracts to satisfy the needs of buyers and sellers to hedge prices. However, the volume of wheat contracts from the beginning of the year through March 2008 was 5.7 million contracts.
As well, contracts are usually wound down or rolled over without commodities ever being exchanged. Instead, traders make their profits simply through creating and exchanging contracts, and timing those moves to make the most of day-to-day price fluctuations on the futures markets.
Plus, new, unregulated exchanges have emerged, so traders don't even have to report all of their activity. Thus, traders could make a trade on a public market and then make another on an unregulated market to balance or heighten the first trade.
It used to be that all futures trading was monitored by the U.S. Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). Created in 1974, the CFTC was built upon legislation passed in the 1920s and 1930s in response to speculation on grain futures prior to the Great Depression. However, the CFTC lost some of its oversight ability in 2000, thanks to legislation passed that makes it easier to trade in futures outside monitored exchanges (such as the Chicago Board of Trade and the New York Mercantile Exchange).
New Threat to Farmers
Commercial speculation in agriculture has traditionally been used by traders and processors to protect against short-term price volatility, acting as a sort of price insurance while helping to set a benchmark price in the cash market. But the elimination of speculative position limits for financial speculators and the rise of commodity index funds undermined traditional price risk management. These funds create a constant upward pressure on commodity prices, alleviated abruptly only when fund contracts are "rolled over" to take profits
HOW IS this affecting food prices?
THE PRICE of futures contracts is affected to some degree by prices in the present. For example, when the cyclone hit Myanmar, it wiped out some of the country's anticipated rice production and thus sent the price of rice and rice futures up. Similarly, when Nigerian rebels disrupt oil pipelines, this sends the price of oil futures up as it raises concerns about future deliveries.
At the same time, if futures prices are going up and a gap develops with current spot market prices, this could lead buyers of commodities to hoard in the present--to take advantage of the lower current prices and avoid paying higher prices in the future. If, say, the price of oil futures is $125, but the price of oil on the spot market is only $115, more firms will buy oil today, thus putting upward pressure on the current price of oil. On the flip side, rising oil prices in the present can help push futures prices upwards.
Thus, rising prices in either the spot market or the futures market could end up reinforcing each other and further exacerbate inflation.
And there's more. There is mounting evidence that prices on futures markets are out of whack with what's happening in the real-world supply of the commodities being traded.
All other things being equal, the prices of expiring futures contracts should converge with the pricing on spot markets on the date of expiration--that is, the price of oil in June should be pretty close to the price of oil futures contracts trading today that expire in June. But there are huge divergences developing.
Why? Because there are too many investors chasing too few futures contracts, and this is creating demand for the underlying commodity that drives up the price of the commodity to be delivered in the future.
Thus, according to AgResource Co., total index fund investment in corn, soybeans, wheat, cattle and hogs amounts to $47 billion, up from $10 billion just two years ago.
Some of this is increase is to rising demand based on the boom in the world economy in the middle of this decade, as rising incomes in China, India and other developing countries spur greater consumption of foodstuffs.
But the rising prices have encouraged speculators to move in as well. The situation has grown all the worse as other financial markets falter. With interest rates low, inflation on the increase and stock markets in turbulence, growing numbers of investors are turning to commodities futures market in search of returns.
"There is a shortage of futures for sale amid an index fund business model for carrying long positions for extended periods," Richard J. Feltes, senior vice president and director of MF Global Research, wrote in a recent note. "Wall Street money flows in the long side of market exceed influence of short hedgers by many multiples...
"The answer to the 'mystery' is that grain futures contracts for some have become investment securities--not hedging instruments that offset either cash inventories or future usage."
WHAT'S THE outcome of all of this?
IN INDIA, the imbalances became so bad that the country last week moved to suspend futures trading in soybean oil, rubber, chickpeas and potatoes. This is an attempt by the government to reign in inflation. Chickpea futures jumped 89 percent in the past 12 months, while rubber rose 41 percent and soybean oil 21 percent. The Indian government already suspended trading on rice and wheat futures last year.
It's possible that other nations could follow suit with similar measures. It's also possible that in the U.S., regulators could try to limit the amount of over-the-counter trading occurring on unregulated markets or expand the powers of the CFTC. There have been hearings before the CFTC in recent weeks exploring the link between futures markets and the skyrocketing costs of fuel and food.
However, none of that is likely to happen very quickly, since there is little agreement as to how big a role futures markets are playing in the overall crisis. Meanwhile, this factor in the global food crisis will continue
Introduction to KOLKATA AAJ
INTRODUCTION
is a not a venture, not a business, its a dream , dream towards the society , towards the people of the west bengal, India. Amader Bangla, amader Bharat,amader swapner bangl amader swapner Bharat--- Sandeep Jain
I am not a person from media, or Journalism , I am just learning the journalism, from last few months, I am feeling that there is somthing missing in our kolkata. I dont know what is journalism but in last few months , ihave seen the worst part of it. Now people are taking it as the one of the fastes money , and fame making business
Journalism is something buying pain, it cant be a business, it is serving the people, and society.
Kolkata -Aaj is ventured by Gkm Media, a company , owned by its all members, who is running the company and working for the company. Its a joint venture of all the true - persons , those are working not only for the earning, but earning with truly serving the society.
Our New comming Publications:
Kolkata AAj ( By-weekly)
Indrani---Amra Bangali (amader Mulyo aur jeevan er Parichay , amader bharatiya Bangla)
GKM Financial Advisor ( true investment and taxation consultant)
Urgent Need
Journalist, content writers, district reporters from WB.
Click edit above to add content to this empty capsule.
Launching of the www.kolkataaaj.com , a complete information and news portal, everything about west bengal.
We are inviting the information ,news, writeups.
mail to: info@kolkataaaj.com
is a not a venture, not a business, its a dream , dream towards the society , towards the people of the west bengal, India. Amader Bangla, amader Bharat,amader swapner bangl amader swapner Bharat--- Sandeep Jain
I am not a person from media, or Journalism , I am just learning the journalism, from last few months, I am feeling that there is somthing missing in our kolkata. I dont know what is journalism but in last few months , ihave seen the worst part of it. Now people are taking it as the one of the fastes money , and fame making business
Journalism is something buying pain, it cant be a business, it is serving the people, and society.
Kolkata -Aaj is ventured by Gkm Media, a company , owned by its all members, who is running the company and working for the company. Its a joint venture of all the true - persons , those are working not only for the earning, but earning with truly serving the society.
Our New comming Publications:
Kolkata AAj ( By-weekly)
Indrani---Amra Bangali (amader Mulyo aur jeevan er Parichay , amader bharatiya Bangla)
GKM Financial Advisor ( true investment and taxation consultant)
Urgent Need
Journalist, content writers, district reporters from WB.
Contact Us
CONTACT US
Click edit above to add content to this empty capsule.
INDIAN JOURNALIST ASSOCIATION
KOLKATA AAJ
Thanks to GKM Office
70/2/1, SELIMPUR ROAD ,KOLKATA - 700031
EMAIL: info@kolkataaaj.com
Click edit above to add content to this empty capsule.
INDIAN JOURNALIST ASSOCIATION
KOLKATA AAJ
Thanks to GKM Office
70/2/1, SELIMPUR ROAD ,KOLKATA - 700031
EMAIL: info@kolkataaaj.com
Our Mission
True Journalism , true, honest, on time.
We need people to join us, as a member of the company. Money is important, to surviveand hece we are also starting a comercial wing of the Kolkata -AAj , we are also starting the web - solution to our clients.
But the mission is ----- true journalism
We need people to join us, as a member of the company. Money is important, to surviveand hece we are also starting a comercial wing of the Kolkata -AAj , we are also starting the web - solution to our clients.
But the mission is ----- true journalism
Saturday, January 24, 2009
KOLKATA, 24TH JANUARY, 2009
ITIHAS SANSAD Yearly Programme at AT RABINDRA BHARATI UNIVERSITY
INAUGRATION Sudarshan Rouchowdhury, HIGHER EDUCATION MINISTER, GOVERNMENT OF WEST BENGAL
SUDARSHAN DAS, CALCUTTA UNIVERSITY VC ,
SWAGATA LAKSHMI visited and prayed at Adhi Sidheswari Pith at Behala
http://hubpages.com/hub/KOLKATA-AAJ
INAUGRATION Sudarshan Rouchowdhury, HIGHER EDUCATION MINISTER, GOVERNMENT OF WEST BENGAL
SUDARSHAN DAS, CALCUTTA UNIVERSITY VC ,
SWAGATA LAKSHMI visited and prayed at Adhi Sidheswari Pith at Behala
http://hubpages.com/hub/KOLKATA-AAJ
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