I don't like your new look. The earlier format was perfect, you should have left it the way it was.
AR Shrestha
Kalimati
. Why did you shrink the Times? I had gotten used to the size and layout of the old one. It wasn't broke, why did you try to fix it?
Lalit R Sharma, email
. Congratulations on going full colour and 24 pages. Nepali Times looks fresher and livelier than before. And thanks for introducing new women columnists like Anagha Neelkantan and Neeta Pokhrel.
Renu Adhikari, Kathmandu
. There is much more to read in the new Nepali Times. Thank you for making the best Nepali paper even better. But I should point out that Newton's laws in your editorial (#177) are his laws of motion, not thermodynamics.
S Pokhrel, email
. I first thought Under My Hat got mistakenly printed in your page two editorial (#177) when I read about Newton\'s third law of thermodynamics. Should have been the third law of motion if my memory serves me right.
'Hemant', email
. I have been going through every issue of Nepali Times from the very beginning. I am one of those cover-to-cover readers, and I enjoy every article. And I really appreciate the selection you present every week. Being a transcriptionist by trade, I also read it very carefully (hazards of the profession, I guess) and found a spelling mistake in your Biz Brief section (#177). If you'd like I would be willing to go through the spellings in your forthcoming issues. That wasn't a bad try, was it?
Khem R Shreesh, email
. Third Law of Thermodynamics? It\'s Newton's Third Law of Motion, or just Newton\'s Third Law. Newton had nothing to do with thermodynamics. The third law of thermodynamics was formulated by Walter Nernst and states that it is impossible to cool a body to absolute zero by any finite process. But then even that wouldn't apply to Nepal, given how frozen the leadershp looks.
Tashi Tenzing, Washington DC