Pepsi CEO Indra Nooyi explains how an unusual daily ritual her mum made her practice as a child changed her life….

In 2006, Indra Nooyi became PepsiCo’s first female CEO, as well as its first CEO not born in the US.

At a “Women in Leadership Panel” at 92Y in New York on Tuesday, Nooyi said she’s always pushed back against adversity and her confidence is built upon an unusual daily habit her mother made her and her older sister, Chandrika, practice when they were just 8 to 11 years old.

Nooyi grew up in the socially conservative city of Madras (now Chennai), India. Her motheradhered to some traditional beliefs — she stressed the importance of seeking a good husband early — but she also instilled in her two daughters the belief that they could grow up to become whoever they wanted.

“Every night at the dinner table, my mother would ask us to write a speech about what we would do if we were president, chief minister, or prime minister — every day would be a different world leader she’d ask us to play,” Nooyi said to the 92Y audience. “At the end of dinner, we had to give the speech, and she had to decide who she was going to vote for.”

The winner of the debate then signed a piece of paper that stated they had become whatever the world leader of the day was. The girls and their mum would laugh and have fun with it, but Nooyi said she and her sister came to appreciate it, even after they became too cool for the ritual when they hit adolescence.

“Even though my mother didn’t work and didn’t go to college, she lived a life vicariously through her daughters,” Nooyi said. “So she gave us that confidence to be whatever we wanted to be. That was an incredibly formative experience in my youth.”

That confidence was reinforced by her paternal grandfather, a charismatic judge. If he asked her to do a job as a child and she later told him that she was unable to do it the way he wanted, he would make her write “I will not make excuses” 200 times on a piece of paper. She became grateful for this punishment when she grew older.

Nooyi’s confidence and work ethic helped her achieve an MBA from the Yale School of Management in 1980 and to start building a successful career. Early on, she said men wouldn’t make eye contact with her in meetings and would consistently check her answers with one of her male colleagues. But rather than wilt under the pressure, she began to call men out on their actions, and it wouldn’t take long for them to realise she was highly adept at her job.

“In my heart I said, ‘I can do this better than anyone else can, and if everything else fails, they’re going to come to me and say, ‘Fix it,’ because I know I’m that good,” she said. “Remember, I could be president of India!”

Source….Richard Feloni  in  ….www.businessinsider.com

natarajan

“உங்களுக்கு ஹனுமான் சாலீசா தெரியுமா …? “

ஒரு சிந்தனையாளர் நாம் பெரிதும் போற்றும் காஞ்சி முனிவரைச் சந்தித்தார். முனிவரிடம் பாகிஸ்தானுடன் நடந்துவரும் யுத்தம் பற்றி கூறியவர் மேற்கண்ட ஆபத்துக்களையும் எடுத்துக் கூறியதோடு, காஞ்சி முனிவரிடம் வருத்தத்தோடு ஒரு பெரும் கேள்வியையும் கேட்டார்.

அது என்ன தெரியுமா?

“எவ்வளவோ புண்ணிய ஸ்தலங்கள் இந்த பூமியில்… எத்தனையோ அருளாளர்களும் இந்த பூமியில்.. சகல பாவங்களையும் போக்கிடும் கங்கையும் பாய்ந்து செல்கிறது. மக்களும் பக்தி உணர்வுடன் வாழ்கிறார்கள். இப்படியிருக்க ஏன் இந்த மண்ணே எப்போதும் அடிமைப்படுத்தப்படுகிறது? ஏன் இந்த மக்களே கஷ்டப்படுகிறார்கள்? இதிகாசங்களும் இறவாப் புகழ் பெற்ற காப்பியங்களும் தோன்றிய இந்த மண்ணின்மீது தெய்வத்துக்கு கருணை இல்லையா… இல்லை பகுத்தறிவாளர்கள் கூறுவதுபோல தெய்வமே ஒரு கற்பனையா?’ என்பதுதான் அவர் கேட்ட கேள்வி.

காஞ்சிப் பெரியவரிடம் ஒரு மந்தகாசமான புன்னகை.

எப்பொழுதும் காய்த்த மரமே கல்லடி படும்… அதிலும் இந்த பாரத தேசத்தை ஞானத்துறவி விவேகானந்தர், “இந்த உலகம் என்பது ஒரு வீடானால் அதில் என் பாரத தேசம் ஒரு புனிதமான பூஜையறையைப் போன்றது’ என்றார்.

இந்தப் பூஜையறைக்குள் அருள் இருப்பதுபோலவே அதை சரியாகக் கொண்டாடாவிட்டால் இருள் வந்து சேர்ந்துவிடும். இருள் வந்தால்தான் அருள் ஒளியின் தன்மையை உணரமுடியும்.

நிழலருமை வெய்யிலில் அல்லவா தெரியும்?

இப்படிப்பட்ட சிந்தனைகளால் பெரியவர் முகத்தில் மந்தகாசப் புன்னகை தோன்றியதோ என்னவோ? மிகுந்த வருத்தமுடன் கேள்வி கேட்டவருக்கு அவர் வார்த்தைகளில் பதில் கூறவில்லை.

அவரிடம், “”உங்களுக்கு “அனுமன் சாலீசா’ தெரியுமா?” என்றுதான் கேட்டார். அவரும் “”கேள்விப்பட்டிருக்கிறேன்” என்றார்.

“”அனுமன் ஒரு மாவீரன்… தோல்வியே காணாதவன். பாரதப் போரில் அர்ஜுனன் தேரில் கொடியாகவும் திகழ்ந்தவன். அவன் இந்த பாரத தேசத்தை நிச்சயம் காப்பாற்றுவான். கவலைப்படாதீர்கள்” என்ற மகாபெரியவர், தனது சங்கரமட அமைப்பு மூலமும் அன்பர்கள் உதவியோடும் “அனுமன் சாலீசா’வை லட்சக்கணக்கில் அச்சிட்டார்… அச்சிட்டதை போர்முனைக்கு அனுப்பி ஜவான்கள் கையில் கிடைக்கும்படிச் செய்தார்.

“இதை பாராயணம் செய்யுங்கள். புதிய பலம் தோன்றும். செய்யத் தெரியாதவர்கள் இந்தஅனுமனே உடனிருப்பதாகக் கருதி சட்டைப் பாக்கெட்டில் வைத்துக்கொள்ளுங்கள். யுத்த களத்தில் உங்களுக்கு வெற்றியைத் தவிர வேறு எதுவும் ஏற்படாது’ என்கிற தகவலையும் அனுப்பினார்.

மகாபெரியவரின் நம்பிக்கை துளிகூட வீண்போகவில்லை. அதன்பின் மிக விரைவாக பாகிஸ்தானை ஓடஓட விரட்டியடித்தது பாரதம்.

அதைத் தொடர்ந்து நடந்த பங்களாதேஷ் யுத்தத்திலும் அனுமன் சாலீசா பல ஜவான்களிடம் பெரும்பங்கு வகித்தது.

Source….www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

 

 

Coimbatore Auto Driver’s Journey From Prison To The Venice Film Festival Is Inspiring…

A class 10 dropout, ran away from home, did time in prison, became an auto driver, started writing novels while waiting for passengers, and now a part of the Venice Film Festival for the screening of a film that is based on his first novel.

This is Combaitore’s auto driver M.Chandrakumar’s journey in a nutshell.

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Chadrakumar alias ‘Auto’ Chandran, a novelist in his spare time, penned a novel in 2006 narrating the brutality he suffered in a police lock-up in Andhra Pradesh. Little did he realise that 9 years later his work will take him to one of the best-known film festivals of the world.

What made him run away from home?

Due to a conflict with his family, he ran away from home. He slept on pavements, at bus stops, did odd jobs to earn a living. He travelled to Chennai, Madurai, Tuticorin, but it was the train journey to Hyderabad that changed his life.

“The train stopped at Vijayawada. That was the first time I clapped eyes on a river as vast as the Krishna. Smitten, I just hopped off the train to dive in.”

Apparently, he landed up in a prison for a ‘case of doubt’.

He started working as a hotel server in a village 42 km from Guntur, Andra Pradesh. In a cruel twist of fate, just when his life was sorted, he along with 3 of his friends were illegally detained by the police for nearly 13 days for a crime that he did not commit.

The horrifying 13-day experience inside the police lock-up influenced him to write his first novel ‘Lock Up’ after he was released.

Life in prison exposed Chandran to a whole new world. The 160-page novel described the atrocities meted out by the police on the prisoners.

He returned to Coimbatore in 1984 and published the novel in 2006. Few months later, the book received the ‘Best Document of Human Rights’ by a Human Rights Body headed by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer.

Produced by Dhanush, his novel inspired Tamil director Vetrimaaran to make a movie ‘Visaranai’ and it will be premiered at the 72nd Venice International Film Festival.

movie-poster

Not only is ‘Visaranai’ the only Tamil film among the 20 movies selected from a total of 2000 movies from 120 countries worldwide, but also it is the first Tamil film to be ever premiered at the reputed film festival.

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On the other hand, Chandrakumar does what he does best. He writes.

If you ever bump into his auto-rickshaw, you will find a bag. A bag stuffed with books and manuscripts behind his seat. :)

 

Source…Shuvro Ghoshal …www.storypick.com

Natarajan

” நான் அனுமனை சொல்கிறேன் …”

ராணி மைந்தன் எழுதிய, ‘சாவி – 85’ நூலிலிருந்து: பக்தவத்சலம் அப்போது தமிழக முதல்வராக இருந்தார். பதவியை துறந்து, கட்சி பணியாற்ற வேண்டும் என்ற, ‘காமராஜர் திட்ட’த்தின் கீழ், முதல்வர் பதவியில் இருந்து காமராஜர் விலகிய பின், முதல்வராக பொறுப்பேற்றார் பக்தவத்சலம். ‘தமிழக மக்களிடையே நல்ல பண்புகளும், பழக்க வழக்கங்களும் வளர வேண்டுமானால், நம் புராண இதிகாசக் கதைகளை கதாகாலட்சேபம், நாடகம் வாயிலாக, பட்டி தொட்டியெங்கும் பரப்பும் முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொள்ள வேண்டும்…’ என்ற யோசனையை, திருவையாற்றில் வெளியிட்டார் முதல்வர் பக்தவத்சலம்.
டில்லியில், காமராஜருடன் தங்கியிருந்த போது, பக்தவத்சலம் கூறிய இந்த யோசனை பற்றி சாவி குறிப்பிட்டு, ‘இதற்கு நீங்கள் தான் முயற்சி எடுக்க வேண்டும்…’ என்று கேட்டுக் கொண்டார். ‘என்ன செய்யலாங்கறீங்க?’ என்று கேட்டார் காமராஜர்.
‘நீங்க அனுமதி கொடுத்தால், தேனாம்பேட்டை காங்கிரஸ் மைதானத்தில், வாரியார் சுவாமிகளை வைத்து, ராமாயணக் கதை சொல்ல சொல்லலாம்; எஸ்.வி.சகஸ்ரநாமத்தை, அரிச்சந்திரா நாடகம் போடச் சொல்லலாம். அப்புறம், இதை தமிழகம் முழுவதும் கொண்டு போகலாம்…’ என்று, சாவி சொன்ன யோசனை, காமராஜருக்கு ரொம்பவும் பிடித்துப் போயிற்று.
‘சரி, நீங்களே செய்யுங்க; ஒரு கமிட்டி போட்டுக்குங்க…’ என்று, கணமும் தாமதியாமல் அனுமதி வழங்கி விட்டார் காமராஜர்.
சென்னை வந்ததும், இதற்கென ஒரு கமிட்டியை அமைத்தார் சாவி. ‘சத்திய சபா’ என்று பெயர் சூட்டப்பட்டது. அதன் தலைவராக இருக்கச் சம்மதித்தார் காமராஜர். செயலர் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றுக் கொண்டார் சாவி. வாசன் உபதலைவராகவும், ரத்னம் ஐயர், லிப்கோ சர்மா போன்றோர், கமிட்டி அங்கத்தினர்களாகவும் நியமிக்கப்பட்டு, அடுத்த நாளே வேலை வேகமாக ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்டது.
திட்டமிட்டபடி, காங்கிரஸ் மைதானம் மேடு, பள்ளங்கள் திருத்தப்பட்டு, மின் விளக்குகள் பொருத்தப்பட்டு விழாக் கோலம் பூண்டது. ஏ.வி.எம்.செட்டியார், முகப்பு வாயிலை, பிரபல ஓவியர் சேகரை கொண்டு, அலங்கரித்துக் கொடுத்தார். அவ்வையார் படத்துக்காக உருவாக்கப்பட்ட, மிகப்பெரிய பிள்ளையார் சிலையை, ராமாயணக் கதை நடக்கும் இடத்தில் வைத்துக் கொள்ள அனுமதி வழங்கினார் வாசன்.
பக்தவத்சலம் கொடியேற்றி வைக்க, விழாவைத் துவக்கி வைத்தார், அப்போது சென்னை கவர்னராக இருந்த மைசூர் மகாராஜா. ராமாயணக் கதைகளை, கலகலப்பாக சொல்ல துவங்கினார் வாரியார். தொடர்ந்து, 40 நாட்கள்… இடையிடையே, சகஸ்ரநாமத்தின் நாடகங்கள், தினமும் கூட்டம் அதிகமாகிக் கொண்டே போய், மைதானம் நிரம்பி வழிந்தது. எவ்வளவு பேர் வந்தும் என்ன… கதை கேட்க, காமராஜர் வராமலிருக்கிறாரே என்ற குறை சாவிக்கும், வாரியாருக்கும், மற்ற கமிட்டி அங்கத்தினர்களுக்கும் இருந்தது.
ஒருநாள் திடீரென, ‘இன்று கதை கேட்க காமராஜர் வருகிறார்…’ என்று டெலிபோனில் தகவல் வந்தது.
இதை வாரியாரிடம், சாவி சொல்ல, வாரியாருக்கு மகிழ்ச்சி தாங்கவில்லை. அன்று, அனுமன் ஆற்றல் பற்றி, விஸ்தாரமாகப் பேசினார் வாரியார்…
‘தன்னிடம் எந்தக் காரியத்தை ஒப்படைத்தாலும், அதை வெற்றிகரமாகச் சாதிக்க கூடியவர் அனுமர். காரணம், அவர் ஒரு பிரம்மசாரி. பிரம்மசாரிகள் எப்போதுமே, தங்களிடம் ஒப்படைக்கப்படும் பொறுப்புகளை, வெற்றிகரமாக செய்யக் கூடிய ஆற்றலும், வல்லமையும் பெற்றவர்கள்…’ என்று, அவர் சொல்லிக் கொண்டிருந்த தருணத்தில், அரங்கத்துக்குள் நுழைந்தார் காமராஜர்.
காமராஜர் வரும் திக்கு நோக்கி ஆவலோடு திரும்பிப் பார்த்து, ஆரவாரித்தனர் கூட்டத்தினர். ‘நான் அனுமனைச் சொல்கிறேன்… நீங்கள் யாரை எண்ணி மகிழ்கிறீர்களோ…’ என்று வாரியார், தமக்கே உரிய பாணியில் ஒரு போடு போடவும், கூட்டத்தினர் செய்த ஆரவாரமும், எழுப்பிய கரவொலியும் அடங்க வெகு நேரமாயிற்று!

Source…www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

Tipu, His Cycle and Daadi. This Story Will Make You Smile…..

Tipu, His Cycle and Daadi. This Story Will Make You Smile

mage Courtesy: Screengrab taken from YouTube video uploaded by Abbott

In case you’re still wondering whether you should pick up that musical instrument and finally learn how to play it, or read that book you’ve been putting off for later, or even take time out to go travelling, this daadi should be your inspiration.

A lovely new video on YouTube, featuring said daadi and her adorable pota Tipu, will help nudge you towards the goals you’ve shelved for far too long.

The video begins by showing daadi checking the tyre on her grandson’s bicycle. Tipu, meanwhile, has sabotaged the cycle by puncturing the tyre and seems to be avoiding daadi.

When daadi finally gets a hold of him, she drags him out for a bike ride.

Daadi, please nahi,” he says, walking the cycle. “Arrey tu chal chup chap… darpok kahin ka,” she dismisses him.

Girne se bahut chot lagegi,” he tries to argue. “Kuch nahi hoga, buddhu, main keh rahin hoon na,” she reassures him.

He tries a few more excuses, none of which hold up against the determined daadi. She ultimately wins this tussle and the coolest thing happens.

We’ll let you watch the video to see what actually transpires between the daadi, pota and their little bicycle. Trust us, you will not be disappointed.

https://youtu.be/-brBg6VoiDo
Source….www.ndtv.com and http://www.you tube.com
Natarajan

வணக்கம் ஆயிரம் என் அன்பு ஆசிரியருக்கு …

A Tribute to my Dear Teacher BRO.ANSELM  on TEACHERS DAY…5th September

Natarajan

Bro.Anselm ….My Teacher ….a Friend , Philosopher and Guide to me ….

Image

Dear Brother..

Every year , on this DAY..5 SEP….Teachers Day… i used to talk to you over Phone and seek your  Blessings …. For the third year in a row , I miss that call today .  I MISS YOU … Brother…

I send my Regards and Respests  to You on this TEACHERS DAY, …. thro ” this Blog Post .  I am sure  Your Blessings and Good Wishes are  always available in plenty to me  and my family  on this Day …and for many more days to come ….

with affectionate Regards,

Your “Raja’ ….Natarajan.

 

BRO.ANSELM … My Teacher

….In 1965 at my age of 15 he handed over my SSLC BOOK in person to me and wished me well….The bond between me and my teacher however  continued  further… I was so emotionally attached to him that we used to be in touch with each other till the  Christmas in 2012. …When i talked to him after receiving his affectionate Christmas card in DEC2012, he was telling me that he would be meeting me  in Feb 2013, at chennai when he  comes down to Chennai from Yercaud for his medical checkup.

 

Perhaps this is the first time , he was not able to keep up his words ….One of Santhome Montford Brothers called me on the night of 7 Jan2013  and told me that our affectionate BRO.ANSELM has  left all of us in lurch and merged with JESUS on 7th evening at Yearcud Montford School.

He was not only my Teacher….but a Good Friend, Philosopher and Guide at all times ….I am sure many of his students would miss him a lot like me.. on this DAY….

 

Here is a Poetical Tribute to that Great Personality.

அன்பும்  அறிவும் பண்புடன் பாசமும்
 ஒன்றுக்கு  ஒன்று குறையாமல்
 என்றும்  எங்க வாழ்வில் இருக்க
 அன்றே வழி காட்டிய ஆசான்  அய்யா  நீ !!!
 பள்ளி கணக்கில் கூட்டலும் கழித்தலும் உண்டு
 ஆனால் வாழ்க்கையின் ஒழுக்க  கணக்கில் கூட்டலும்
  பெருக்கலும்  மட்டுமே என்று   சொன்னவன் அய்யா நீ !!!!
 உன் மாணவன் நான் …இன்றும் உன் மாணவன்தான் !!!!
 நீ சொல்லி கொடுத்த ஒழுக்க கணக்கில் இருந்து  சிறிதும்
 வழுக்காமல் நான் இருக்க நீதானே காரணம் அய்யா !!!!!
 அழகான உன் கையெழுத்து   எவ்வளவு  பேர்
  தலை எழுத்தை  மாற்றி இருக்கு …உனக்கு தெரியுமா அய்யா !!!
  எந்த வயசிலும் உன் கண்டிப்பும் கனிவும் உனக்கு ஒரு அடையாளம் !!!!
  வருடம் தப்பாமல் எனக்கு கிடைக்கும் உன்னுடைய கிறிஸ்துமஸ்
  வாழ்த்து அட்டை , எனக்கு ஆண்டவன்  பிரசாதம் !!!!
  ‘ராஜா  ..ராஜா ” என்று  நீ என்னை கூப்பிடும்போது  உன்
  அன்பு  சாம்ராஜ்யத்தின் ராஜாவாக  நான் இருப்பேனே அய்யா !!!!
   உன்னுடைய   Presence   எப்போதும்  இருக்கும் என்று நான்
   எண்ணிய  வேளையில்  காலத்தின் கரும்பலகை சொல்கிறது
   எண்ணிய  வேளையில்  காலத்தின் கரும்பலகை சொல்கிறது
   எனக்கு…   நீ    ABSENT     என்று   !!!!!
  நீ  இல்லாத இந்த உலகம்   வெறுமை  வெறுமை ..இது
  நிச்சயம்  கொடுமை  கொடுமை !!!!
  பளிச்சென்று  ஒரு பதில் வேண்டும்  எனக்கு ….நீ
  எப்போ மீண்டும்    PRESENT       ஆவாய்  அய்யா!!!!!
Natarajan

How Dry Cleaning is Done and Who Invented it ….

What happens to clothes after being dropped off at the dry cleaners is a mystery to most. We know that our clothes come back a whole lot cleaner than when we dropped them off, but how? And who first got the bright idea to clean clothing without water?

The earliest records of professional dry cleaning go all the way back to the Ancient Romans.  For instance, dry cleaning shops were discovered in the ruins of Pompeii, a Roman city buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. Those cleaners, known as fullers, used a type of clay known as fuller’s earth along with lye and ammonia (derived from urine) in order to remove stains such as dirt and sweat from clothing. That process proved pretty effective for any fabric too delicate for normal washing or stains that refused to budge. (In fact, the industry was so prominent that there were taxes on collecting urine.  Fullers generally used animal urine and would also maintain urine collecting pots at public bathrooms.)

dry-cleaning

As for more modern methods, the biggest revolution in dry cleaning came around in the early 19th century.  Traditionally, Jean Baptiste Jolly of France is generally named the father of modern dry cleaning. The story goes that in 1825, a careless maid knocked over a lamp and spilled turpentine on a dirty tablecloth. Jolly noticed that once the turpentine dried, the stains that had marred the fabric were gone. He conducted an experiment where he bathed the entire tablecloth in a bathtub filled with turpentine and found that it came clean once it dried. Whether a maid and an accident really had anything to do with it or not, Jolly used this method when he opened the often claimed first modern dry cleaning shop, “Teinturerier Jolly Belin”, in Paris.

However a patent for a process called “dry scouring” was filed with the U.S. Patent Office in 1821, four years before Jolly’s discovery. A man by the name of Thomas Jennings was a clothier and a tailor in New York, and soon the first African American to be granted a patent in the United States. (Previous to this, it was ruled that slave owners were the rightful owner of any inventions made by their slaves and could then patent those inventions under their own names.  Jennings, however, was a free man.)

So while working as a clothier, he, like so many others in his profession, was familiar with the age old customer complaint that they could not clean their more delicate clothes once they’d become stained because the fabric wouldn’t hold up to traditional washing and scrubbing. Jennings, thus, began experimenting with different cleaning solutions and processes before discovering the process he named “dry scouring.” His method was a hit and not only made him extremely wealthy, but allowed him to buy his wife and children out of slavery, as well as fund numerous abolitionist efforts.

As for the exact method he used, this has been lost to history as his patent (U.S. Patent 3306x) was destroyed in an 1836 fire. What we do know is that after Jennings, other dry cleaners during the 19th century used things like turpentine, benzene, kerosene, gasoline, and petrol as solvents in the process of dry cleaning clothes. These solvents made dry cleaning a dangerous business. Turpentine caused clothes to smell even after being cleaned, and benzene could be toxic to dry cleaners or customers if left on the clothes. But all of these solvents posed the bigger problem of being highly flammable. The danger of clothes and even the building catching fire was so great that most cities refused to allow dry cleaning to occur in the business districts. In the United Kingdom, for example, dry cleaners had smaller satellite stores in the city where they took in customers’ clothes and then those clothes were transported to a “factory” outside of the city limits where the dry cleaning took place.

The major risk of clothes and buildings catching on fire because of the flammable solvents led to dry cleaners searching for a safer alternative. Chlorinated solvents gained popularity in the early 20th century, quickly leaving the flammable solvents in the dust. They removed stains just as well as petroleum-based cleaners without the risk of causing the clothes or factories to catch fire. That also meant dry cleaners could move their cleaning facilities back into cities and eliminated the need to transport clothes back and forth between two locations.

A chlorine-based solvent with the chemical name tetrachloroethylene, or sometimes called perchloroethylene, became the go-to solvent for dry cleaners in the 1930s. Originally discovered in 1821 by Michael Faraday, “perc” could not only be used in relatively compact dry cleaning machines, but also did a better job of cleaning than any of the other solvents of the day; it’s still the chemical of choice for most dry cleaners today.

While perc is considered much safer than most solvents used by dry cleaners in the past, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the United States is working to phase the solvent out of the industry. The EPA claims that while wearing clothes treated with perc does not appear to be dangerous, perc can be dangerous if accidentally released into the environment as it’s toxic to plants and animals. Additionally, the EPA also notes that sustained exposure to perc, such as by workers in the industry, can cause health issues with the nervous system, including potentially drastically increased chances of developing Parkinson’s Disease. There are also studies done by the EPA that indicate perc may be a carcinogen. The International Agency for Research on Cancer also classifies the chemical as a “Group 2A carcinogen,” meaning in their opinion, it’s probably carcinogenic.

So how exactly is this chemical used to dry clean clothes? The process of dry cleaning fabric can vary between dry cleaning companies; however, the general method is as so: before placing the clothing item in the machines, workers pre-treat stains by hand, as well as remove any materials that aren’t suitable for dry cleaning (for instance buttons made of materials that may dissolve in perc are removed). The machine works in a similar fashion to normal, in-home washing machines. It agitates the garments and adds in the solvents as it goes, cycling the solution through the machine and a filter as the clothing is agitated.  Temperature is also typically controlled at around 86 degrees Fahrenheit.

Next, the garments are either dried in the same machine or workers move them to a separate machine. During the drying cycle, the temperature is raised to about 140 degrees Fahrenheit, which helps the chemicals evaporate off the clothes faster, while still being low enough not to damage the clothing.  In the end, approximately 99.9% of the chemicals used are removed from the dry cleaned item and recycled for use again in cleaning.

Once the clothes are dry, workers press the clothes, potentially stitch back on any items that had to be taken off, and put the clothing into plastic bags for customer pick-up.

Bonus Facts

  • After the eruption of Mount Vesuvius and the covering of Pompeii in ash, Romans dug tunnels to explore (and loot) the city, long before archaeologists excavated the site.
  • Pliny the Elder, the famed author, naturalist, philosopher, and commander, died trying to rescue people stranded on the shores after the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius.    While attempting to sail his ship near the shore, burning cinders fell on the ship.  Rather than turn around, as his helmsman suggested, Pliny famously stated “Fortune favors the brave!  Steer to where Pomponianus is.”  He landed safely and was able to rescue his friends and others on the shore.  However, he never left.  Before they were able to set out again (they needed the winds to shift before they could safely leave), he died and ended up being left behind.  It is thought he died of some sort of asthmatic attack or by some cardiovascular event, possibly brought on by the heavy fumes and heat from the volcano.  His body was retrieved three days later buried under pumice, but otherwise with no apparent external injuries.  He was around 56 years old.
  • At temperatures over about 600 degrees Fahrenheit perc oxidizes into the extremely poisonous gas phosgene, the latter chemical being popularly used in chemical weapons during WWI.
  • The first widely used chlorine-based solvent was tetrachloromethane, or “Tetra” as it was often called, worked much better than petrol. However, the combination of being both highly toxic and highly corrosive on the dry cleaning machines led to it being phased out by the end of the 1950s.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

natarajan

Google’s new logo unveiled; A quick look at how the company’s logo evolved over the years….

 

Google’s new logo unveiled; A quick look at how the company’s logo evolved over the years

Google’s new logo unveiled; A quick look at how the company’s logo evolved over the years

Within a month from restructuring the new company Alphabet, Google has unveiled its new logo. The all-new sans-serif typeface, aligning it with Alphabet’s logo. The all new look has been designed keeping the mobile user in mind.

Take a look at the new logo above, which is evidently more crisp and clear. The company has also released a video showing the evolution of logos.

Let’s take a quick look at the Google logos in the past.

During Google’s humble beginning it was called Backrub and apparently this was their logo.

backrub.0

Google has changed its face several times over the past 17 years and this bright red is one of its early logos. This was the The Carl P logo for Google and according to Vox – it is unknown if it represented Larry Page’s father Carl page or his brother Carl Page Jr.

From red to green and different fonts, the Google logo has surely evolved. Look at this one which turns the two ‘O’ into eyes.

 

 

With the next logo, looks like Google tried to do something different. These can surely be called the biggest Google logo failures.

googlelogo

The company had also started experimenting with doodle way too early, but they were simple and artistic. Over the years, doodles have evolved with animations, videos and so on.

 

googlelogo002

In 1998, the coloured letters on plain paper symbolised what the company stands for.

 

2

Soon the colour combination had slight changes. You will remember the popular exclamation mark as a part of the logo.

 

3

The company later slightly changed the second O. By now, Google had gone far beyond the company name and logo, was used as a term to find content online – ‘Google it’ – we all said. This was the logo used for the longest duration.

 

4

It then saw a slight change in the ‘O’ and lesser shadow.

 

5

This one is 2013, showed more fattened letters and the shadows were removed.

6

Source…www.tech.firstpost.com

Natarajan

Retired post office clerk builds his own ‘Taj Mahal’….

Unlike the Mughal emperor’s monument that is a popular tourist destination, Faizul Hasan Qadri wants his Taj to remain just a shrine of his love for his wife. Manavi Kapur reports.

The residents of Kaser Kalan, a small village in Uttar Pradesh’s Bulandshahr district didn’t expect to have a new landmark in their village. But the “mini” Taj Mahal has become just that.

Visible from the main highway, this “monument” has made the tiny lane popular with inquisitive visitors, including a car from the sub-divisional magistrate’s office.

But 80-year-old Faizul Hasan Qadri, this “mini” Taj Mahal’s creator, says that people are mistaken.

“I never intended it to look like the Taj. Shah Jahan’s monument is eight-cornered with rooms inside. Mine is a simple four-corner structure with my wife’s grave in it,” says Qadri.

Despite his claims, the resemblance to one of the Seven Wonders of the World is striking.

A bare concrete structure stands in the middle of a green field, with four pillars around it, just like the famous monument in Agra.

When I reach Kaser Kalan to visit Qadri, he seems to be out on a stroll.

Ambaar Khan, the owner of a provision store, sends his workers to look for “Nawab sahib”.

A popular and well-loved resident, Qadri is greeted by shopkeepers from across the street as he makes his way with the help of a walking stick to meet me.

“Are you here from Lucknow?” he asks.

Akhilesh Yadav, the state’s chief minister, recently sought a meeting with Qadri after the media reported that he had run out of funds to complete the structure, but the meeting was rescheduled.

“I don’t think I will take his money, though. I have done all the hard work and just by giving a little money, they will claim it as theirs,” he says.

Unlike the Mughal emperor’s monument that is a popular tourist destination, Qadri wants his Taj to remain just a shrine of his love for his wife.

“I promised my wife that I will build a mausoleum for her and that’s all there is to it,” he says with a polite, clear diction peppered with English words.

Qadri married Tajammuli Begum, his maternal uncle’s daughter, in 1953 and remained married to her for over 58 years before she died of cancer in 2011.

Since the couple had no children, Begum insisted that Qadri build a mausoleum for both their resting places.

“Such forward planning comes with knowing that you have only a few years to live. I have already prepared a will and enlisted members of my family who will inherit all this land,” he says, waving towards the fields.

Much like Shah Jahan’s prison cell from where he could see the Taj Mahal, Qadri seems to have built the monument in a way that he can see it through his room’s window.

Pictures of his wife and the Maqbara Yadgare Mohabbat Tajammuli Begum, the official name for his “mini” Taj, are kept neatly on a shelf.

“Memories are all that remain,” he says with a smile.

Qadri has spent close to Rs 11 lakh and says that he still needs Rs 6-7 lakh to complete the project. He earns a pension of Rs 10,500 after he retired as a senior post office clerk, besides the agricultural income from his vast land.

A man well-versed with the ways of the world, Qadri speaks about the dollar rate, investments and cultivating high-yield fruit crops.

While his views on life and death have a touch of spirituality, he seems to be equally rooted in everyday reality.

“I could use plaster on the exterior, but I don’t want to saddle the family with its upkeep.”

Manavi Kapur

Source:
Natarajan

WHY DO THEY CALL GRANDFATHER CLOCKS BY THAT NAME?…..

J.Kaus asks: Why are Grandfather clocks called Grandfather clocks?

grandfather-clock

At first glance, the answer seems obvious. Think about it- when was the last time you saw a grandfather clock in the house of anyone under the age of 70?

Grandfather clocks- with their long cases, pendulums, echoing chimes, and Roman numerals- seem to belong to the world of courting parlors, Model-T Fords, silent movies, and going out on a date for an ice cream soda. In short, the world of grandparents.

Yes, this may seem logical and obvious, but the real reason these timekeeping devices (technically called “Longcase clocks”) picked up the grandfatherly nickname has nothing to do with grandparents per se.

So how did grandfather clocks get this name?  Here’s the scoop…

In 1875, an American songwriter named Henry Clay Work was visiting England. While there, he checked in to the George Hotel in North Yorkshire.

In the hotel’s lobby was a large pendulum clock. The clock had stopped long ago and just sat in the lobby, serving no apparent purpose. This unmoving clock fascinated Work and he asked about its history.

He was told a story by the proprietors, whether true or not (probably not) isn’t important to how grandfather clocks got their name. The story was that the clock had belonged to the inn’s previous two owners, the Jenkins brothers, both deceased. It seems the clock had kept perfect time during their lives, but when the first Jenkins brother died, the clock started becoming less accurate.

After this, the story went that the clock stopped completely dead- to the minute and second Jenkins brother had died.  Maybe because it was his job to wind it and nobody else wanted the task, you say? ;-) According to the story Work was told, it was actually because it broke.  Despite the best efforts of a host of repairmen supposedly hired by the new owners of the inn, they couldn’t get the clock going again.

Now, of course, what probably actually happened was the clock died and was prohibitively expensive to fix, but looked nice, so the new owners of the hotel came up with a great story for the clock to hide the fact that they maybe just didn’t want to pay to get it fixed nor have it hauled off.

Whatever the case, the bemused Work thought it was a great story.  Being a song writer, he then wrote a song about the incident. The song was called “My Grandfather’s Clock”, released in 1876.

The lyrics were as follows:

1. My grandfather’s clock was too large for the shelf, So it stood ninety years on the floor;

It was taller by half than the old man himself, Though it weighed not a pennyweight more.

It was bought on the morn of the day that he was born, And was always his treasure and pride;

But it stopp’d short – never to go again – When the old man died.

 

CHORUS

Ninety years without slumbering (tick, tick, tick, tick),

His life seconds numbering (tick, tick, tick, tick),

It stopp’d short – never to go again – When the old man died.

 

2. In watching its pendulum swing to and fro, Many hours had he spent while a boy;

And in childhood and manhood the clock seemed to know And to share both his grief and his joy.

For it struck twenty-four when he entered at the door, With a blooming and beautiful bride;

But it stopp’d short – never to go again – When the old man died.

(CHORUS)

 

3. My grandfather said that of those he could hire, Not a servant so faithful he found;

For it wasted no time, and had but one desire – At the close of each week to be wound.

And it kept in its place – not a frown upon its face, And the hands never hung by its side;

But it stopp’d short – never to go again – When the old man died.

 

(CHORUS)

 

4. It rang an alarm in the dead of the night – An alarm that for years had been dumb;

And we knew that his spirit was pluming for flight – That his hour of departure had come.

Still the clock kept the time, with a soft and muffled chime, As we silently stood by his side;

But it stopp’d short – never to go again – When the old man died.

The public went crazy over the song. “My Grandfather’s Clock” went on to sell over a million copies in sheet music, which was fairly unprecedented for the day (Work had previously set that precedent selling over a million copies of the song Marching Through Georgia, which is still commonly played by marching bands today).

The previous term for “grandfather clock”, the rather un-catchy “longcase clock”, was dropped almost immediately by the public in favor of the new moniker for the clocks.

With the advent of digital technology and atomic clocks, some clock lovers worry that the old pendulum-swinging grandfather clocks may not be long for the current timekeeping world. However, despite its inanity, H.C. Work’s song lives on. It was recorded multiple times in the 20th century, and as recently as 2004 by the R & B act Boys II Men. It’s a song that, like grandfather clocks, keeps on ticking.

Bonus Facts:

  • Henry Clay Work wrote and composed a total of 75 songs, most of which sold well.  The most popular of them, besides My Grandfather’s Clock and Marching Through Georgia, were: Kingdom Coming; Come Home, Father; Wake Nicodemus; and Thy Ship That Never Returned.
  • Besides composing music, Work also was an abolitionist, as was his father. Work’s family home was a popular stop on the Underground Railroad, helping runaway slaves get to Canada.  For this, Work’s father was imprisoned for several years.
  • Work was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970.
  • Work’s cousin, Frances Work, was the great-grandmother of the late Princess Diana of Wales.
  • The first grandfather clock was created around 1680 by British clockmaker William Clement.  These tall style clocks were made possible thanks to the anchor escapement system, which allowed for much smaller motion in the pendulum than used to be necessary.  Before this system, pendulums in clocks needed 80-100° of swing.  After this mechanism was invented in the 1670s, a swing of just 4°-6° was all that was needed.  The advantage of the longer pendulum and shallower swing is that less power, in the form of weights driving the clock, was needed, as well as slower beats and less wear on the moving parts.  All this makes for better long term accuracy of the clock.
  • Grandfather clocks classically were made in 8 day and 30 hour varieties (lasting this length of time when wound up).  Eight day clocks used two weights, one for the striking mechanism to cause a chime at the appropriate moment, and one for driving the clock.  This would then typically require two winding holes (where you’d stick the winding “key” to wind the weights back up).
  • 30 hour clocks were cheaper, using the same weight to power the clock and chimes, thus only needed one winding hole, but needed winding every day.  However, because people often wanted to make other people think they owned a more expensive 8 day clock, some 30 hour clocks featured two holes, one for the actual winding hole, the other a dummy winding hole to make guests think it was an 8 day clock.
  • An alternative design to the “key hole” system was to use a chain or cable driven system, so instead of winding the weight back up, you pull the chain to raise the weights back up to the top to power the clock.
  • The melody that the vast majority of grandfather clocks use for their chimes is Westminster Quarters.  This little tune is thought to have been borrowed/inspired by Handel’s Messiah during the 5th and 6th measures of “I Know That My Redeemer Liveth”.  As to the person who first put this little ditty in a clock, Dr. Joseph Jowett was hired to make the tune, possibly with the help of Professor of Music, Dr. John Randall and/or one of Jowett’s students, William Crotch.  Whatever the case, the piece of music was written in 1793 for the St. Mary the Great clock at the University Church in Cambridge.  It was later adopted for the “Big Ben” clock at the Palace of Westminster, which is what spawned its widespread popularity.
  • The specific note sequence for the melody is in E major and is as follows (varies in length based on the time of the hour, but the full length is): g♯, f♯, e, b | e, g♯, f♯, b | e, f♯, g♯, e | g♯, e, f♯, b | b, f♯, g♯, e

Source….www.todayifoundout.com

Natarajan