1886 Benz replica makes arduous trip from Coimbatore to Chennai….!!!

Except for a rear-mounted engine that put out a feeble .9 hp, there was little to tell between a horse carriage and the Benz Motorwagen. When it arrived in 1886 on three wheels, it was hailed as the first horseless carriage.

It has gone down in automobile history as the first car. It has another first to its credit. It is the first automobile to be taken out on a long journey. In 1888, Bertha Benz, wife of Karl Benz, who invented this odd-looking car by today’s standards, drove it from Mannheim to Pforzheim in Germany, covering over 190 km.

A replica of the 1886 Benz Motorwagen, made by Gedee Technical Training Institute and a key attraction at the Gedee Car Museum in Coimbatore, arrived at the city. This trip would, however, not detract from the greatness of Bertha’s.

C.S. Ananth, honorary consultant to the Gedee project to create Benz Motorwagen, says, “Bertha undertook that daunting trip when nobody trusted a vehicle that had an engine.”

According to G.D. Gopal, trustee of Gedee Car Museum, the features of the original car have been conscientiously retained. For example, the engine, just as feeble as ever, runs on benzene.

This car is one of the many Benz Motorwagen replicas that have been made at the Gedee institute.

“Last year, 21 students of the institute studied the parts of a replica that had been bought and dismantled; and then they set about making replicas of this iconic car themselves,” says Mr. Gopal.

Source….www.thehindu.com

natarajan

” Super Baby Days…” !!!

Babies are cute and adorable, but also bizarrely strong and capable of doing some extraordinary things. For instance, did you know how amazingly strong you were for your tiny size?  Or how you could control your breathing?  Or that you had a mustache for a while? Here is a collection of curiosities you didn’t know about your earliest, simplest, and cheekiest times – your super baby days.

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Baby facts

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

சிவனும் நக்கீரனும் – சிவாஜி தரும் வியப்பு…!!!

திருவிளையாடல்’ திரைப்படத்தில் வந்த சிவனையும் தருமியை நம்மால் மறக்கமுடியாது. அதற்குக் காரணம் சிவாஜியும் நாகேஷும்தான். தங்களது தெறிப்பான நடிப்பில் தமிழ் ரசிகர்களை திக்குமுக்காடச் செய்தவர்கள் அவர்கள்.

நாம் நினைத்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறோம், தருமி கதை வந்தது திருவிளையாடல் படத்தில்தான் என்று. உண்மையில், அதற்கும் பல ஆண்டுகள் முன்பே ஒரு திரைப்படத்தில் இக்காட்சி வந்துவிட்டது என்பது தெரியுமா?

தருமி, நக்கீரனுடனான சிவனின் திருவிளையாடலை தமிழ் சினிமா முன்னமே கண்டிருக்கிறது என்பது மட்டுமல்ல; அதிலும் சிவாஜி கலக்கியிருக்கிறார் என்பதுதான் ஆச்சரியம்.

இங்கு வீடியோவில் இடம்பெற்றுள்ள ‘நான் பெற்ற செல்வம்’ என்ற பழைய திரைப்படத்தில் வரும் இந்த ஒரு காட்சியில் நீங்கள் காணப்போவது ஒன்றல்ல… இரண்டு ஆச்சரியங்கள்!

Source….www.tamil.thehindu.com and http://www.youtube.com

Natarajan

” முதல் I.C.S. பெண்மணி …. சி .பி .முத்தம்மா ….”

இந்தியாவின் முதல் பெண் ஐபிஎஸ் அதிகாரி கிரண் பேடி என்று தெரியும். இந்தியக் குடிமைப் பணிகள் தேர்வு என்று அழைக்கப்படும் ஐசிஎஸ் தேர்வில் முதன்முதலாக வெற்றிபெற்ற பெண் யார் தெரியுமா? அவர்தான் சி.பி. முத்தம்மா.

கர்நாடகாவின் குடகு மாவட்டத்தின் விராஜ்பேட் நகரில் 1924-ல் பிறந்தவர் முத்தம்மா. தனது 9-வது வயதில், தனது தந்தையைப் பறிகொடுத்தார். எனினும், வைராக்கியம் கொண்ட அவரது தாய், தனது நான்கு குழந்தைகளையும் நன்கு படிக்க வைத்தார். மடிகேரி புனித ஜோசப் பெண்கள் பள்ளியில் பள்ளிப்படிப்பை முடித்த முத்தம்மா, சென்னை பெண்கள் கிறிஸ்தவக் கல்லூரியில் பட்டப்படிப்பை மேற்கொண்டார். மூன்று தங்கப் பதக்கங்களுடன் படிப்பை முடித்த அவர், சென்னை பிரெசிடென்சி கல்லூரியில் ஆங்கில இலக்கியத்தில் முதுகலைப் பட்டப் படிப்பை முடித்தார்.

1949-ல் ஐசிஎஸ் தேர்வில் வென்ற பின்னர், வெளியுறவுத் துறையில் சேர்ந்தார். ஆண் அதிகாரிகளின் ஆதிக்க மனப்பான்மைக்கு எதிராகப் போராடினார். சவால்களை வெல்வதைப் பழக்கமாகக்கொண்டிருந்த முத்தம்மா, பெண்களுக்கு எதிராக இருந்த அரசு விதிகளை எதிர்த்து நீதிமன்றத்தை அணுகினார். அந்த வழக்கை விசாரித்த வி.ஆர். கிருஷ்ணய்யர் தலைமையிலான மூன்று நீதிபதிகளைக் கொண்ட அமர்வு, அவருக்குச் சாதகமாகத் தீர்ப்பு வழங்கியது. இந்தியப் பெண்கள் வரலாற்றில் மிக முக்கியமான தீர்ப்பு அது. பின்னர், ஐரோப்பா, ஆசியா, ஆப்பிரிக்கா ஆகிய மூன்று கண்டங்களின் பல்வேறு நாடுகளில் இந்திய வெளியுறவுத் துறையில் பணியாற்றினார். 1970-ல் ஹங்கேரிக்கான இந்தியத் தூதர் பதவி அவருக்கு வழங்கப்பட்டது. 1982-ல் ஓய்வுபெற்ற முத்தம்மா, பல்வேறு விஷயங்களைப் பற்றிய கட்டுரைகளை எழுதினார். 2009 அக்டோபர் 14-ல் காலமானார்.

Source…. சரித்திரன்   in  www.tamil.thehindu.com
Natarajan

” Could you please tell me what is the english word for this situation ….” ?

Periyava_sitting

A family went to have the darshan of Maha Periyavaal. Along with them, they took one of their family friends who lived in the USA for some decades. The friend did not have any great faith in our religion, system and especially the monks wearing the saffron; he went along with him with utterly non-interested to meet Him. He was under the impression that Maha Periyavaal was a fundamentalist, an uneducated monk. This NRI had no great respect at all for Him. Not only that, he uttered such inauspicious things about Him, ‘what does He know? Does He know English?’.

There was a big throng of devotees at the Mutt and the family was standing in a decent distance from Him. As usual, Maha Periyavaal saw this family with His graceful eyes, and called all of them near to Him.

They all went near Him, the friend too.

After all the usual courteous enquiry towards the family, the Master looked at the NRI friend and asked about his details, including his name, whereabouts, his predecessors, where he is working etc etc.

Then He asked, ‘you are born in India, and you know Tamil; your wife was also born in India and should know the mother tongue. When you two converse will it be in Tamil or English?’

The friend replied ‘We never use Tamil at home, we use only English. The same goes for the kids also.’

Then Maha Periyavaal asked, ‘before speaking, you may have to think and conceive the sentence. Is the thought process in Tamil or English?’

The friend replied, ‘That too in English only’.

Some minutes later, an old lady came to have Maha Periyavaal Darshan.

Maha Periyavaal looked at the NRI person and said, ‘This old lady is now very poor, but once upon a time she was very rich. But even after she lost all the materialistic wealth her devotion towards the Mutt, Acharya and me has never changed even a bit. Could you please tell me what is the English word which will describe this unflinching devotion, which can’t be changed by external situations? I would like to know.’

The man was flummoxed. He thought and thought for a while but did not know that word.

Maha Periyaval smiled and told him, ‘please take your time and let me know’.

Even after some time, he could not come up with the required word.

Then Swamiji said, ‘Can I suggest one word? Could you please confirm whether the same can convey this meaning? EQUIPOISED’.

The man was spellbound and fell on Maha Periyavaal’s Feet to Pardon him for his ego..

source….www.mahaperiavaa.wordpress.com

Natarajan

Pictures of the Day…

Bill Clinton Young Kennedy

Bill Clinton (left) shakes hands with President John F. Kennedy at the White House in 1963. Image Source: www.vintag.es

Camel Yawn Pyramids Egypt

A camel yawns near the Great Pyramids of Giza, Egypt. Photo by Claire Thomas. Image Source: National Geographic

Colorado River Delta Aerial

The Colorado River delta in Mexico as viewed from above. Photo by Edward Burtynsky. Image Source: National Geographic

The Haunting Chinese Village Reclaimed By Nature

Houses Covered In Growth

Image Source: All That Is Interesting

Of the 400 islands that make up the Shengsi archipelago in the mouth of China’s Yangtze River, only 18 are inhabitable. And of those 18, one has recently slipped back into the control of Mother Nature in the most hauntingly beautiful way you could imagine. The houses that dot the hillsides of Goqui Island, once home to fishermen and their families, are now covered in lush, green growth that is truly stunning. See the houses become one with the hills in this photo set.

Goqui China Reclaimed By Nature

Image Source: All That Is Interesting

China House Reclaimed By Nature

Image Source: All That Is Interesting

By on October 2, 2015 in

John Kuroski

In addition to serving as the Assistant Editor of All That Is Interesting, John Kuroski is the Managing Editor of Elmore Magazine, a New York-based music publication.
Source….www.all-that-is-interesting.com
Natarajan

Ten legendary eateries in Madras you simply cannot miss …

It is Madras Day – the day a city celebrates its birthday. And what is a birthday without a party and great food? So along with a friend and a foodie Vasudevan,  I decided to get all nostalgic and celebrate by heading to some of the oldest eateries in the city that we personally like and recommend.

I am not too much of a lunch or a dinner person, but as a kid, it is the tiffin that has always fascinated me. So I decided to stick to just places we would go for breakfast or for a quick evening meal. While I have been to some of these eateries since childhood – food, being a great favourite of both my parents, it is Vasudevan who curated the list.

We just went to two areas mainly – Mylapore and Sowcarpet with a stop over at Triplicane. This is by no means an exhaustive list and we hope to add to it as we go by.

We also looked at eateries which are fairly old and are favourites with almost every citizen of Madras. The only street vendor we include is Amudha’s Bhajji stall in Mylapore. I dont think there is a name for the stall, but Amudha is in demand. She has an entire set up in Mylapore, near Kapaleeshwar temple on the road and she is flocked by people, even before she prepares her dough. I met her during the Myalpore Festival and I decided to feature her here.

Amudha at her bhajji stall

All these eateries mean more to us than just food. They have a story, a memory locked inside them. I am sure that all of you resonate with the thought as well. So let the emotions flow like the sambar as we go on this first food trail of Madras or Chennai as we know it today as we go on this tiffin trail.

 

Ratna Cafe, Triplicane

Our first stop of the day is to Triplicane, an area that fascinates me immensely for its heritage, its architecture, its melange of cultures and the food. I want to stop at the Parthasarathy temple for a quick darshan and the puliodharai, but we are a bit late. So we say a silent prayer and continue to one of the oldest eateries in Triplicane, a landmark by itself – Ratna Cafe.

Started in 1948 by a man from Mathura, Triloknath Gupta, the family still manage this very popular eatery. –

Idly at Ratna Cafe

If there is one moment that defines our breakfast in Ratna Cafe, it is this – the waiter brings a contraption that looks like a saucepan and he pours the hot red sambar on the fluffy white idlis, until they are soaked in it. We order a plate of idli and vadai and top it with a plate of crispy golden brown ghee roast dosai,  on the recommendation of a friend, Giridhar on Twitter.

The menu is packed in the evenings with so many dishes to choose from. A board announces the same right at the entrance.

Rayar’s  Mess, Mylapore

Our next halt. One of the oldest and humble abodes which is very popular with most citizens of Madras, the Rayar’s Mess which has been around for more than 75 years in Mylapore. If there is one dish that is the signature dish, it is the kara chutney. Every foodie, including my father and his friends swear by it. Vasudevan specifically likes the over fermented super soft idlis which literally melts in the mouth.

Breakfast at Rayar’s Mess is usually idli, vadai, pongal served with a variety of chutneys, including the famous kara chutney, sambar and molagai podi. Top it up with filter kaapi.  This is what I call elaipotta tiffin (tiffin served on a banana leaf).

Rayar Mess Tiffin

The eatery comes alive in the evening with bondas, rava dosai, kal dosai, adai, vadai, a variety of sweets and more dishes.

We speak to Kumar, the third generation owner, whose grandfather Srinivasa Rao started this. They were Kannadigas who had settled in Tamil Nadu ages ago and it reflects in the food – the recipes are probably the best of both worlds.

 

Karpagambal Mess, Mylapore

It feels like you are entering a temple. Right from the rangoli or the kolam on the steps to the large pictures of Gods and Goddesses on the walls to the various podis (powder) and pickles that is sold, everything about Karpagambal Mess is an ode to tradition.

Keerai Vadai at Karpagambal Mess

My earliest memory to the place was when it I could not say no to a sweet, Vasudevan recommends kasi halwa, but we finally have wheat halwa.  There is also rich badam halwa for those who want to binge further. We stop right here as we have another six more eateries to visit.

 

Mami’s Mess, Mylapore

Next to Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan in Mylapore is another famous eatery, popular with old timers and the young alike Mami’s Mess. Vasudevan and another friend on twitter – Degreekaapi recommends that we head there to taste thavala vada. But we are unlucky. However our appetite is satiated with the bhajjis and bondas around. Customers flock to buy Kozhukattai, a sweet dumpling made with rice flour filled with wheat and coconut. Although it was renovated recently it is still more than 50 years old.

Bondas at Maami Mess

The dish according to us, that you must eat here is keerai vadai. Vasudevan is also tempted by the vazhai poo adai served with avial, which is absolutely delicious.

Vasantha Mami apparently came from a small little village called Alvarkurichi in Tirunelveli which is very close to our ancestral village and she started this eatery in Mylapore. Her sons take care of it now.

 

Jannal Bhajji Kadai, Mylapore

            Bhajji Kadai was not open

In a little lane around the Kapaleeshwar temple is a small green grilled window on the wall that serves sinfully delicious bhajjis. You stand here and eat to your heart’s fill, be it bhajjis or upma or idlis. Sadly they were shut as they had a wedding in the family. Vasudevan says the Vazhakkai Bhajji is extremely good and my parents are a bit disappointed that I cannot not buy some bhajjis for home, but then, there is always another time.

 

Kalathi Stall, Mylapore

All in the same vicinity, it is very easy to miss this little news mart, a small shop hidden by trees. The headlines here scream of Rajinikanth and Sachin Tendulkar but what it does not scream about is the recipe of the rose milk which Mani and his family has safely guarded for over 80 years and sells it here fresh. I gulp glasses while Vasudevan buys the rose essence . A couple of women get off their two wheeler to drink panner soda, another speciality. Mani says celebrities have flocked to his shop.

Rosemilk at Kalathi Stall

 

Novelty Tea House, Mint Street

It is almost dark when we reach Mint Street and walking down the mini streets of Broadway and Parrys Corner is a delight in itself. As we navigate pedestrians, cows, cycle rickshaws, autos, tempos and cars, we find ourselves wondering if we are in Old Delhi or even Ahmedabad. Sowcarpet is one of the oldest locales in Chennai and my father who used to work here knows almost every eatery in the lanes.

Pudhina Dosa at Novelty

We head to Novelty Tea House at the recommendation of my uncle, Kannan and a mutual friend of Vasudevan and mine on Facebook – Sreemathy Mohan. The pudhina onion dosai is what she recommended and that is what we order. I definitely recommend it as well along with the pav bhajji.

Novelty Tea House started as a tea stall in the late 50s by Chandrakant Moolchand Shah and it is now managed by the third generation. They do have branches everywhere, but do not miss the oldest eatery in Mint Street. The atmosphere is an experience in itself.

 

Mehta’s Vada Pav, Mint Street

There is a branch near my house near Purasaiwalkam but Vasudevan tells me that the the original should not be missed. So in a little stall, barely enough to house a man and his delicacies, is one of the oldest stalls here which sells vada pav and mirchi bhajji. Bhavin Mehta who has been here for more than 50 years proudly says that his is the best. Vasudevan agrees . And you thought, Madras is all about idli and dosai.

Kachoris at Mehtas

 

Kakada Ramprasad, Mint Street

I know of them since I was a kid as my father used to bring sweets and savouries home. Yet, when I land there today I am surprised to find a huge building, selling everything from jalebis to fafdas, chaats to badam milk. We decide to try out two of their most famous specialities – the aalu tikki chaat and the hot hot jalebis. I am a loss for words. You just have to eat it, sorry, devour it to experience it.

Aloo Tikki at Kakada Ramprasad

 

Anmol Lassi, Mint Street

They say eat, drink and be merry. We are eating and we are merry, but the drink is missing. So next door to Kakada Ramprasad, is the a former wrestler who speaks flawless Tamil with a great sense of humour, who came to Chennai from Patiala 27 years ago. The board says “Anmol Mohit Patiala, specialist in Kesar Lassi.”  He also serves masala butter milk . He says he stands here everyday from morning till night, except on Sundays. ” My wife will divorce me otherwise, ” he says with a laugh as we gulp down the cold icy lassi down our throats.

Kesar Lassi

And finally the rains tumble down as we want to explore more eateries, but we run for cover and walk down the lanes to digest the entire spread from morning. I probably have to starve for the next couple of days and run miles to burn the calories, but then my love affair with Madras just got deeper. Bon appetite and enjoy the many flavours of the city.

If you have not visited all these stalls, you have not lived Madras yet. -!!!!!!!

This was originally posted here.

Source…..Lakshmi Sharath….www.thenewsminute.com

natarajan

 

 

A Lovely Little Ancedote About Gandhiji….

Gandhi …   A lovely little anecdote about one of life’s more interesting characters …cid:3BB2EBB9039A47DBA24F3A901B99E3F5@homeca5fe1f73f

When Mahatma Gandhi was studying law at the University College of London, a professor by the name of Peters disliked him intensely and always displayed animosity towards him.  And because Gandhi never lowered his head when addressing him, as he expected, there were always “arguments” and confrontations.

One day Mr Peters was having lunch at the University dining room when Gandhi came along with his tray and sat next to him. The professor said,”Mr Gandhi, you do not understand. A pig and a bird do not sit together to eat.” Gandhi looked at him as a parent would a rude child and calmly replied, “You do not worry, professor. I’ll fly away,” and he went and sat at another table.


Peters, red with rage, decided to take revenge on the next test paper, but Gandhi responded brilliantly to all questions.  
Unhappy and frustrated, Mr Peters asked him the following question:  “Mr Gandhi, if you were walking down the street and found a package, and within it was a bag of wisdom and another bag with a lot of money, which one would you take?”  
Without hesitating, Gandhi responded, “The one with the money, of course.”  Mr Peters, smiling sarcastically, said, “I, in your place, would have taken the wisdom.”  Gandhi shrugged indifferently and responded, “Each one takes what he doesn’t have.”


Mr Peters, by this time, was fit to be tied. So great was his anger that he wrote on Gandhi’s exam sheet the word “idiot” and handed it back to him.  Gandhi took the exam sheet and sat down at his desk, trying hard to remain calm while he contemplated his next move.  A few minutes later, Gandhi got up, went to the professor and said to him in a dignified but sarcastically polite tone, “Mr Peters, you autographed the sheet, but you did not give me the grade.”

Source…..input from a friend of mine

Natarajan