” நீ கபட சந்நியாசி பற்றி கேட்டிருக்கியா …” ?

கபட சந்யாஸி”

“பெரியவா கேட்ட காளிதாஸன் கதை”

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சொன்னவர்-ராமகிருஷ்ண தீக்ஷிதர்

தொகுத்தவர்-டி.எஸ்.கோதண்டராம சர்மா

தட்டச்சு-வரகூரான் நாராயணன்.

ஸ்ரீ மகாப் பெரியவாளிடம் பொழுது போக்குகளும்

நிறைய உண்டு.

ஒரு தடவை சென்னை திருமங்கலத்திலிருந்து

அம்பத்தூருக்கு சென்று கொண்டிருந்தோம்.

வழக்கப்படி, ஸ்ரீ பெரியவாள், மூன்று சக்கர

சைக்கிளைத் தொட்டுக்கொண்டே நடந்து வந்து

கொண்டிருந்தார். நாங்கள் ஏழெட்டுப் பேர்கள்,

உடன் சென்று கொண்டிருந்தோம்.

“நீலகண்டா, நீ கபட ஸந்யாஸியைப்

பார்த்திருக்கியா?”

“இல்லே”

“நாகராஜா….நீ”

“இல்லே..”

ஸ்ரீ பெரியவாள் என்னைப் பார்த்து, ” நீ கபட சந்யாஸியைப்

பற்றிக் கேட்டிருக்கியா?” என்று கேட்டார்.

“கேட்டிருக்கேன்…ராவணன்,அர்ஜுனன்…” என்றேன்.

“அவ்வளவு தானா?”

நான் தயங்கியபடியே, “காளிதாஸன்…” என்றேன்.

“காளிதாஸனா?..அவன் எப்போ கபட சந்யாஸி ஆனான்?..”

“பெரியவாளுக்குத் தெரியும்..பெரியவா சொன்னா,

நாங்க கேட்டுண்டே..நடப்போம்.

“இல்லை..நீயே சொல்லு..”

போஜராஜன் சபையில் ஆஸ்தான வித்வானாக இருந்த

காளிதாஸன், ஒரு நாள், சற்று மரியாதைக்குறைவான

சொல்லைக் கேட்டதும், சபையிலிருந்து வெளியேறி

கால் போன போக்கில் நடக்கத் தொடங்கினான்.

போஜனுக்கு, காளிதாஸன் இல்லாமல் பொழுது

போகவில்லை. அவனை எப்படிக் கண்டு பிடிப்பது?

ஒரு செய்யுளின்,முதல் இரண்டு அடிகளை எழுதிப்

பூர்த்தி செய்பவருக்குப் பரிசு கிடைக்கும் என்ற

முரசறைவித்தான்.

ஒரு தாசியின் வீட்டிலிருந்த காளிதாஸன், பரிசு பற்றி

எதுவும் அறிந்திராவிட்டாலும், செய்யுளைப் பூர்த்தி

செய்தான்.போஜனிடம் அந்த வரிகளைக் காட்டினாள் தாசி.

பின்னர்,அவளிடமிருந்து விபரங்கள் பெற்று,மாறுவேஷத்தில்

போஜன் புறப்பட்டுச் சென்றான். ஒரு மரத்தடியில் ஒரு

சந்யாஸியைப் பார்த்தபோது, ‘இவர் காளிதாஸனோ’

என்ற சந்தேகம் வந்தது.

பரஸ்பரம் பேச்சு ஆரம்பமாயிற்று.

துறவி, மாறுவேஷத்திலிருந்த போஜனைப் பார்த்து

“நீங்கள் யார்?” என்று கேட்டார்.

“நான்,போஜனிடம் அடைப்பக்காரனாக இருந்தேன்.

அவர் இறந்ததும், எனக்கு இருக்கப் பிடிக்கவில்லை.

வெளியே வந்து விட்டேன்…”

“ஆ!…. என் போஜன் இறந்துவிட்டானா?”

என்று வருந்தி சரம சுலோகம் பாடியதும்,

வேஷக்காரன் கீழே விழுந்து உயிர் விட்டான்.

அவன்தான் போஜன் என்பது சந்தேகமில்லாமல்

தெரிந்துவிடவே, அம்பாளைக் குறித்து,மனமுருகி

சியாமளா தண்டகம் பாடி, “இதோ,போஜன்

எழுந்துவிட்டான்!” என்ற பொருள்பட

இன்னொரு சுலோகம் பாடினான்.

உண்மையாகவே,போஜன் உயிர் பெற்று எழுந்தான்.

இந்தக் கதையை விளக்கமாகச் சொன்னேன்.

கடைசியில் “இந்த சந்தர்ப்பத்தில் தான் காளிதாஸன்,

சந்யாஸியாகக் கபட நாடகம் ஆடினான்…” என்றேன்.

பெரியவாள்,”ரொம்ப சுவாரஸ்யமா இருந்தது.

நடந்து வந்த களைப்பே தெரியல்லே!” என்றார்.

அம்பத்தூர் வந்துவிட்டது.

SOURCE:::: http://www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/8339/#ixzz3LVWMPB7a

” Miracles Of Aviation History …With Happy Endings” !!!

Dietmar Eckell travels the world to photograph plane wrecks where everyone survived. He told BBC Culture why he decided to find crashes with happy endings.

Fairchild C-82A Packet, Alaska

January 1965, Alaska. A Fairchild C-82 is flying above the Arctic Circle when it encounters trouble. “The plane’s electric system failed and they crash-landed in the night in the tundra forest, cutting down many trees. They survived at -45 degrees Celsius by making a big fire from the wood they had cut. It is very remote up there: they were really lucky that the fire was spotted by another plane three days later and they were rescued.” German photographer Dietmar Eckell is describing one of the stories he discovered while researching his Happy End project, which records plane crashes that had no fatalities. He has even been contacted by those who survived: raising the money to print a book of the photos last year, he was contacted by the pilot of this Fairchild C-82. “He sent me an email to thank me for writing down his story and documenting his plane almost 50 years after the crash.”

 

Cessna 310, Australia

Eckell became interested in documenting wrecks where everyone survived after he had his own crash: flying a paraglider with an engine to take aerial shots over the Mojave Desert in California, he went into a tailspin and landed alone with a broken ankle. “While recovering from surgery I had time to search the internet for crash landings in remote locations with no fatalities.” He makes sure they were happy endings before he documents them: “I found planes where all survived the landing but a few started walking and were never found – if [even] one passenger did not make it, the plane is not included in the series.”

Grumman Hu-16 Albatross, Mexico

He finds the planes online, via “pilot forums, archives, accident reports and websites about World War Two history”. Pinpointing the exact location can be tricky. “Once the story is confirmed I try to find it on Google Earth. If the resolution is not good enough I ask at the local airport and most of the time pilots can help. Sometimes I have to hire a plane to search from above. Then I hike out there.” This plane is on a beach 70km south of Puerto Escondido. Eckell photographed it in September 2010, six years after it crashed: “It was half sunk and already broken in two pieces. On the pictures I saw [online] from 2006 … the engines looked like they would still work. But in four years the Pacific had done massive damage.” He happened to be shooting when a storm was passing. “The clouds were changing every minute. The scenery looked unreal through the viewer of my camera … more like a painting – surreal – with different lines of clouds towards the horizon.” It might not be there for much longer. “With the force of the waves the wreck is disappearing fast.”

 

Bristol Type 170 Freighter, Northwest Territories, Canada

Eckell has even tracked down planes that locals don’t know about. “One time I needed a float plane to get to a lake 400km away and could not afford a charter. After three days I found a retired pilot who was willing to take me there – although he did not believe that I had the location of an abandoned plane that he had never heard of in his 30 years as a local pilot. He was very surprised when we found the plane in great condition resting on the side of the lake, where it had been since 1956.”

 

Avro Shackleton, Western Sahara

The journey on foot to a plane can be hard-going. “Physically the hikes through swamps with all your gear are tough because your feet are wet all day, there are mosquitos and every kilometre feels like 5km.” He remembers his attempt to reach this plane in Western Sahara as particularly dangerous. “It’s in an area that is controlled by Polisario rebels. After a 30-hour car ride from Morocco to Mauritania and a 26-hour ride on an ore train, I got to a mining town and there had to convince the local Polisario leader to take me over the border to the Western Sahara. I had the plane’s GPS location and we drove cross country to avoid getting caught by the Mauritanian military. We had a very old car and after an hour it developed a flat tyre; but everything worked out and I got great shots of an Avro Shackleton. What I found interesting was that the same rebel group also rescued the 19 passengers in 1994.”

 

Douglas C-53 Skytrooper, Australia

Happy End is part of a longer-term project, called Restwert. “It started in the days before GPS when I was riding my motorbike in the remote Sahara following track descriptions with a map and compass. Some of the described landmarks along the way were car wrecks.” After photographing these ‘landmark wrecks’, Eckell went on to document abandoned mobile homes in the Mojave Desert. “With my photography I try to create curiosity for the story behind the picture.” This is one of the planes he has photographed most recently. It was forced to land in 1942 when the pilot missed the airport and ran out of fuel.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Douglas C-47 Skytrain, Yukon, Canada

There is an eerie dissonance between the wrecks and the majestic landscapes in the background, one that Eckell exploits to tell his story. “My ‘restwert’ photography is about abandoned objects forgotten in nowhere. When viewers see a photograph of a plane resting on a mountain or a tank sitting on a coral reef they want to know what happened … ‘Restwert’ is German for ‘residual value’ – the material value is written off, but the beauty, stories, and associations they trigger remain. I document these objects before nature takes them back to preserve their memory.” Ten people survived when this plane flew into the side of a mountain in February 1950. Eckell has visited the site twice. “I spent two hours at the wreck and still cannot imagine how they survived in February 1950 with temperatures in the -40s up there.”

 

Curtiss C-46 Commando, Manitoba, Canada

He sees the wrecks as beautiful, both because they represent a happy ending and because many of the planes have survived the ravages of nature. “Old airplanes, like the DC-3 or Curtiss Commando, are design classics and timeless beauties. Aluminium does not erode so they still look pretty good even after 70 years in the bush.” Eckell draws on artists from a different age. “I was inspired by the shipwreck painters of the Romantic period and in my photography also look for dramatic skies, late light or fall colours.”

 

B-24 Liberator, Papua New Guinea

“The locals in Papua New Guinea called this wreck ‘Swamp Ghost’,” says Eckell, who photographed it in March 2013. “When we arrived a heavy rain started and we had to hide under the wing for over an hour.” Trying to get the shot he wanted from a high vantage point, he climbed a tree. “Soon after I noticed that it was the home of giant ants. By the time I could get to a decent shot position they were all over me and it was difficult to focus.” The B-24 was forced to land in a sago swamp in October 1943, after running low on fuel after a bombing mission. The crew successfully parachuted to the ground, and the two pilots were unhurt in the crash landing.

 

Curtiss C-46 Commando, Manitoba, Canada

“I was in Calgary documenting the abandoned Olympic Ski Jump,” says Eckell, describing his journey to photograph this plane, which crashed near Churchill in 1979. “I took my octocopter which got a lot of attention from the biologists on the train who work at the Polar Bear Research Centre in Churchill. It’s not a good idea to walk out to the wreck – this is polar bear country and they are hungry in summer because they haven’t eaten anything since the ice melted.” He got a lift from a local, and took the pictures quickly. “The plane is sitting on huge rocks – the crew was lucky to crash in November with snow softening the impact.”

SOURCE:::: Fiona Macdonald  in http://www.bbc.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

” Making Of a Musical Legend …” … M.S Subbulakshmi @ Music Academy !!!

  • M.S. Subbulakshmi gave her first public performance in Madras at a concert organised by the Indian Fine Arts Society on December 28, 1933
    The Hindu

    M.S. Subbulakshmi gave her first public performance in Madras at a concert organised by the Indian Fine Arts Society on December 28, 1933

Despite being a regular in the city’s concert circuit from 1933, earning a slot at the prestigious The Music Academy was not easy for M.S. Subbulakshmi

It was 81 years ago in 1933, when a 16-year-old M.S. Subbulakshmi moved from Madurai to the big city of Madras.

Madras city, up until then, unfamiliar with the young singer, witnessed her first public performance at a concert organised by the Indian Fine Arts Society on December 28, the same year.

Accompanied by T. Gururajappa on the violin and her mother on the veena, Subbulakshmi performed at Saundarya Mahal in George Town.

Despite receiving rave reviews and becoming a regular in the city’s concert circuit, earning a slot at the prestigious The Music Academy was not easy. M.S. had to prove herself before she could stake her claim to the Academy’s stage.

In 1934, M.S. enthusiastically participated in the theory sessions and lecture demonstrations during the Academy’s annual music conference. But, it was only in 1935 M.S. got an opportunity to showcase her talent at the Academy’s annual season.

The Hindu, on January 1, 1935, published a four-line listing of the concert in the ‘Engagements for tomorrow’ column on page 12 of the paper. It read, ‘5.30 p.m.–7.30 p.m. Sri Subbalakshmi of Madura – Vocal, Mr. Sankaranarayana Aiyer – Violin, Hamsa Damayanti – Mridangam…’

The performance proved to be a turning point for M.S., with even The Hindu’s ‘hard-to-please’ music critic K.V. Ramamchandran being impressed.

In a picture of the group of musicians who participated in the music conference, published days after the concert on January 3, 1935, one can spot the adolescent M.S. wedged innocuously between two female artistes.

At the time, the 18-year-old aspiring singer was probably oblivious to the fact that in the years to come, she would become one of the most celebrated cultural icons in the nation.

Therefore, being featured by The Music Academy during the Margazhi season, for the first time in 1935, may have seemed to the young girl, her biggest achievement yet, at that point of time.

Keywords: M.S. SubbulakshmiMusic AcademyCarnatic Music

SOURCE:::: http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

Good Bye 2014 !!!…Few ” Good Times ” and Inspirational Stories of 2014 !!!

Ladakh’s first female tourist guide

A top cardiac surgeon who didn’t let his humble roots come in the way of his success

A mother who has gone back to school for the sake of her daughters

Two young men who quit high-paying jobs in the US to fix India’s garbage problem

We look back at some of the most inspirational stories featured on Rediff Get Ahead in 2014.

As the year draws to a close, it seems an apt time to look back at some of the stories that brought a smile to our faces and inspired us to look beyond ourselves.

1. Sheetal Jain

Twenty-year-old Sheetal Jain is the daughter of a bar dancer and grew up in Mumbai’s red light district.

But she isn’t letting that define her identity.

Even as you read this, Sheetal is pursuing a course in drumming at the Levine School of Music in Washington DC.

Jain is part of Kranti, an NGO that earlier helped another young lady Shweta Katti to travel the US for further studies.

From being a victim of sexual abuse at the hands of her stepfather to being locked up for months because she had a boyfriend, Sheetal Jain has come a long way.

This is her story!

Photograph courtesy: Kranti


2. Thinlas Chorol

When tourism companies in Ladakh refused to employ her services as a travel guide because she was a woman, Thinlas Chorol decided them a suitable answer.

In 2009, when she was all of 27, Chorol started her own company, the Ladakhi Women’s Travel Company and became Ladakh’s first female tourist guide

Thinlas Chorol has been awarded by the Ladies’ Wing of the Indian Merchants’ Chamber and only employs women in her company.

Read the fascinating story about a young lady breaking traditions here!

Photograph courtesy: Ladakhi Women’s Travel Company


3. Dr Ramakant Panda

The biggest challenge was to keep away from getting astray,” Dr Ramakant Panda says as he recalls his childhood in Damodarpur in Odisha’s Jashpur district.

Panda, who would walk 7 km every day to and from school for six years, has done well for himself.

But being serious about studies in a village in the ’60s where education wasn’t necessarily on top of everyone’s mind was a challenge.

Dr Panda has come a long way from there.

He has performed more than 18,000 heart surgeries including one on the former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is the vice-chairman and managing director at Mumbai’s Asian Heart Institute, of one of India’s best cardiac care hospitals.

Do read his story!

Photograph courtesy: The Asian Heart Institute


4. Mani Vajipey and Raj Madangopal

The general filth and squalor in India deeply disturbed Mani Vajipey who was pursuing a doctorate in electrical engineering at the University of Delaware.

Along with Raj Madangopal, a friend with whom he bunked classes, Vajipey returned to his homeland and formed Banyan Nation, an organisation that aims to address the garbage crisis in India through technological innovations, better practices and grassroots activism.

Their inspirational story has been documented here!

Photograph courtesy: YourStory.com


5. Malvika Iyer

When she was 13, a freak accident cost Malvika Iyer both her hands and severely damaged her legs.

No one knew if she would ever be able to walk again.

But young Malvika braved the odds and emerged victorious.

She graduated in economics from the prestigious St Stephen’s College in New Delhi, met the then President, Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, went on to become a social worker and a motivational speaker.

Along the way, she also became a part of the Global Shapers Community, an initiative of the World Economic Forum.

If this story doesn’t inspire you, we really don’t know what will.

Photograph courtesy: Malvika Iyer


6. Pavithra YS

Vindhya E-Infomedia is a business processes outsourcing company based in Bengaluru.

With over 600 employees, Vindhya is probably just a speck in the booming BPO market.

What sets it apart is that everyone on its floor operations and most of its 600-plus employees are differently-abled.

Vindhya is the brainchild of Pavithra YS who started this unique company when she was all of 22!

This is her inspiring story!

Photograph courtesy: Vindhya E-Infomedia


7. Shadab Hassan

When he was a child, Shadab Hassan sold balloons and candies so he could go to school.

Hassan went on to complete his master’s course in business administration from the Birla Institute of Technology, Mesra.

But instead of taking up a plush corporate job in an MNC, he decided to start a school in his hometown in Ranchi where so no child would ever have to sell balloons and candies for their school fees.

More on that here!

Photograph courtesy: HH High School’s Facebook page


8. Jayashree Kanam

Seven years after the Mumbai floods of July 26, 2005 took her husband away from her,Jayashree Kanam decided to pick up the pieces of her life and move on.

So, she went back to school and started where she had left from more than 20 years ago.

If you thought your life was difficult, this story of a mother returning to school so she can give her daughters a better future is what you should be reading!

Photograph courtesy: Abishek Mande Bhot/Rediff.com


9. Mehvish Mushtaq

Information in Srinagar is difficult to come by.

Mehvish Mushtaq learnt it when she wanted to telephone a cousin’s school some years ago.

The school’s website was down.

She didn’t have a phone book handy and there weren’t any directory services that could help her with it.

After considerable search, that included calling up the cousin’s classmates, she finally got the number.

Then there were occasions when a hospital’s number wasn’t easy to come by.

Each time a situation arose, she would scramble for information.

So when Mehvish Mushtaq was asked to create an app as part of an online course in Android application development, she knew just what she wanted to make.

She created Dial Kashmir that lists out everything there is to know about Jammu & Kashmir — from phone numbers and addresses of essential services and tourist attractions to contact details of local business and prayer timings.

This is the story of Mehvish Mushtaq, the first Kashmiri girl to develop an Android app. Do read!

Photograph courtesy: Mehvish Mushtaq


10. Chitra Vishwanathan

Chitra Vishwanathan is better known to her readers as Chitvish.

On her eponymous app, Chitvish dishes out recipes, kitchen advice and handy tips for amateur cooks.

Chitvish, as you would have gathered from the picture above, isn’t your typical Internet wizkid.

How did this 75-year-old take her passion for cooking to the Internet and break a few hundred stereotypes along the way?

We leave you with this fascinating story of Chitra Vishwanathan, which will teach you that you are never too old to learn anything new.

Photograph: Sreeram Selvaraj

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

10 Common Items That Were Invented by Accident …!!!

1) Teflon: Roy Plunkett, a chemist who worked for DuPont in the early 20th century, accidentally stumbled across the non-reactive, no stick chemical while experimenting with refrigerants, specifically looking for a non-toxic chemical to use for a refrigerant. After storing tetrafluorethylene (TFE) in gas form in small cylinders and having it frozen, the gas unexpectedly turned into a waxy solid.  Further experimentation showed this wax had some interesting qualities, such as the most well known one, it is one of the slipperiest substances known to man.  Dupont quickly patented it and today we know it as Teflon.

2) Post-It Notes: In 1968 Spencer Silver, a chemist working for 3M, stumbled across a “low-tack” adhesive while he was trying to make a super strong adhesive for use in airplane manufacturing. Silver thought the low-tack adhesive that left no residue and was somewhat reusable had value, but nobody agreed with him. He campaigned for its use for 5 years before someone at 3M listened and even then it took another 7 years of development, 3 of which where the Post-It Notes were made, but were just used internally because management at 3M thought they had very little commercial value.  Finally, they tried some test markets to sell the Post-It Notes and they flopped in the four test cities.  Nobody wanted them.  They tried one last ditch effort, giving them away for free to numerous businesses.  After that, everybody wanted them and today Post-It Notes are one of the most purchased office products in the world.

3)  Plastic:  In the early 1900s, shellac was the material of choice when it came to insulation. But due to the fact that it was made from Southeast Asian beetles, the material was not the cheapest thing to import. For this reason, chemist Leo Hendrik Baekeland thought he might be able to make some money by producing an alternative. What he came up with, however, was a moldable material that could be heated to extremely high temperatures without being distorted… plastic.

4) Microwave: Every single guy in the world should be grateful to Percy Spencer, a true genius who was an orphan and didn’t even finish grammar school (as an adult, though, he self educated himself to an amazing extent, teaching himself everything from calculus to metallurgy, and becoming one of the world’s leading experts in radar tube design).  While working as a radar specialist, he was tinkering around with microwave emitters and standing in front of one when he noticed the chocolate bar in his pocket had melted.  He soon ran some experiments, including exploding an egg, and realized the potential for microwaves to cook things. The year was 1945 and the world, or rather the kitchen, hasn’t been the same since.

5) Vulcanized Rubber: Charles Goodyear had spent ages trying to find a way to make rubber resistant to heat and cold. After a number of failed attempts, he finally stumbled across a mixture that worked. Before turning out the lights one evening, he accidentally spilled some rubber, sulfur, and lead onto a stove resulting in a mixture that charred and hardened but could still be used.

6) Play-Doh: Maybe it comes as no surprise that the smelly, gooey stuff kids have been playing with for decades was originally used as wallpaper cleaner. In the mid-20th century, however, people quit using coal to heat their homes which meant their wallpaper stayed relatively clean. Luckily for Cleo McVicker, the owner of the company that made this wallpaper cleaner (they had previously just copied the recipe from a common homemade wallpaper cleaner), his sister-in-law discovered another use while teaching children – modeling clay.  At her suggestion, they took out the detergent ingredient, added the almond scent and coloring and Play-Doh was born.

7) Super Glue: While developing plastic lenses for gun sights, Harry Coover, a researcher at Kodak Laboratories, stumbled across a synthetic adhesive made from cyanoacrylate. At the time, however, he abandoned his discovery. Nine years later, though, it was “rediscovered”, again by accident, this time Coover was supervising a project to try to develop heat resistant acrylate polymer.  During this project, one of his underlings, Fred Joyner, rediscovered super glue after making it and accidentally sticking two prisms together.  This time, when Coover heard of Joyner’s “discovery”, he decided not to abandon it and Super Glue, as a commercial product, was born.

8) Slinky:  During World War II, when navy engineer Richard James was developing a horsepower monitor for battleships which employed special springs to keep the instruments steady when out in the ocean, he accidentally dropped one of them. To his amusement, the spring “walked” from his desk onto a stack of books, and landed upright on the floor.  He and his wife immediately saw the potential for a toy.  He perfected the tension on the spring and the Slinky was the result. Like Post-It Notes, though, people needed to be shown what it did before they bought into it.  After making about 400 Slinkies, funded off a loan, and convincing a store to display them at Christmas, not a single one sold.  After several days, James himself went to the store to demonstrate the product.  All 400 Slinkies sold within 90 minutes of him doing this.

9)  Popsicles:  It was 1905 and soda pop had just become the most popular drink on the market. 11 year old Frank Epperson decided he wanted to try saving some money by making his own at home. Using a combination of powder and water, he got pretty close but then absentmindedly left the concoction out on the porch all night. Temperatures ended up dropping severely and when he came out in the morning he found his mixture frozen with the stirring stick still in it.  At first he didn’t do anything with this other than make himself tasty Popsicles every now and again, he was 11 after-all.  But 17 years later, he realized the commercial potential of Popsicles after he served them at a Fireman’s ball and everybody loved them.  A year later, he made a business out of it, and the rest is history.

10) Saccharin:  You know that pink packet of fake sugar that’s always sitting on the restaurant table? Well, as sweet as it is, you may be surprised to know where it came from. In 1879, Constantin Fahlberg, a chemist trying to find alternative uses for coal tar, came home after a long day of work only to notice that his wife’s biscuits tasted a lot sweeter. After asking her about it, he realized he hadn’t washed his hands after work, and voila, artificial sweetener.

SOURCE::: http://www.todayifoundout.com

Natarajan

” Pencil Sketch of Maha Periavaa… “

Today is Guruvara Pradhosham. On this auspicious occasion, we are pleased to share a beautiful pencil sketch on Sri Maha Periva, by our respected moderator and artist Sri Narayanan Bala (anusham163)

Jaya Jaya Shankara, Hara Hara Shankara !

SOURCE:::: http://www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/8344/guruvara-pradhosham-pencil-sketch-periva#ixzz3KuhMh8d8

World’s Oldest Airports ….

The world's oldest airports

LaGuardia Airport opened in New York 75 years ago today, and has since handled countless millions of passengers – including Marilyn Monroe – and 26,722,183 in 2013. But it’s still some way off being the world’s oldest.

 

The world's oldest airports

Albany International

Founded: 1928

Passengers in 2013: 2,393,506

While an airport was established in Albany, New York, in 1909, with early aviation pioneers such as Amelia Earhart and Charles Lindbergh stopping there, the airport was moved to the current site in 1928.

 

The world's oldest airports

Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, US

Founded: 1920

Passengers in 2013: 33,897,335

Visited by Howard Hughes on his round-the-world flight in 1938, Minneapolis-St. Paul is currently served by 14 airlines, with Delta being by far its biggest customer.

 

The world's oldest airports

Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport, Australia

Founded: 1920

Passengers in 2013: 36,964,734

Established in 1920, with regular flights starting in 1924, Sydney Kingsford Smith remains the only major hub to serve the city and is the headquarters of Qantas.

 

Paris-Le Bourget Airport, France

Founded: 1919

Passengers in 2013: general aviation traffic only.

The French capital’s only airport until work began on Paris-Orly in 1932, Le Bourget is where Hitler began his one and only tour of Paris in June 1940. It closed to international traffic in 1977 and regional traffic in 1980, but hosts the Paris Air Show every two years. Pictured here is Charles Lindbergh.

 

The world's oldest airports

Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, The Netherlands

Founded: 1916

Passengers in 2013: 52,527,699

The busiest of the world’s elderly airports, Amsterdam Schiphol was established as a military airbase in 1916 and has been used by civilian aircraft since 1920.

 

The world's oldest airports

Rome Ciampino Airport, Italy

Founded: 1916

Passengers in 2013: 4,749,251

Opened in 1916 and here seen welcoming Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, Ciampino suffered decades of stagnation following the opening of Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport in 1960, but was revitalised by low-cost carriers. Ryanair now operates almost every service to and from the airport.

Picture: GETTY 

The world's oldest airports

Don Mueang International Airport, Bangkok, Thailand

Founded: 1914

Passengers in 2013: 16,479,227

A major US command hub during the Vietnam War, Don Mueang was closed for several months in 2011 due to flooding.

 

The world's oldest airports

Bremen Airport, Germany

Founded: 1913

Passengers in 2012: 2,447,001

Early customers at Bremen included KLM, the world’s oldest airline. It was used as an airbase by the US army from 1945 until 1949.

 

The world's oldest airports

Bucharest Aurel Vlaicu Airport, Romania

Founded: 1912

Passengers in 2013: 6,036  The hub for the airline TAROM during the communist period, Aurel Vlaicu is now solely used by charter flights and private jets.

 

The world's oldest airports

Shoreham Airport, UK

Founded: 1911

Passengers in 2013: 1,500 (approximately)

Britain’s oldest continuously operating airport, found in Sussex, is now used solely by light aircraft.

Note: the site of Blackpool Airport was first used for aviation in 1909, but soon became a racecourse and then a military hospital. Flights did not resume until the 1930s.

 

The world's oldest airports

Hamburg Airport, Germany

Founded: 1911

Passengers in 2013: 13,502,939

Opened in January 1911, Hamburg Airport was used as a staging area during the Berlin Airlift in 1948.

 

 

The world's oldest airports

College Park Airport, Maryland, US

Founded: 1909

Passengers in 2013: general aviation traffic only.

Known as “the cradle of aviation”, this was where the first aeroplane – a Wright Type A biplane – was uncrated and assembled on October 7, 1909.

 

 

SOURCE:::: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

Natarajan

 

” தொகை ரொம்ப பெரிசு …நீ எப்பிடி பண்ணுவே…” ?

பகவானே தன் பக்தர்களோட நேர்லவந்து பேசின சம்பவம் எல்லாம் புராண காலத்துல நிறைய நடந்திருக்கு.
மகாபெரியவாளோட வாழ்க்கைலயும் அப்படி எத்தனையோ சம்பவங்கள் நடந்திருக்கு. அதுல ஒரு ஆச்சர்யமான சம்பவத்தையும், ஸ்ரீரங்கம் கோயிலைப் பத்தி பலருக்கும் தெரியாத ஒரு விஷயத்தையும் இப்போ சொல்றேன்.


1983ம் வருஷம் வாக்குல நடந்த சம்பவம் இது. அப்போ மகாராஷ்ட்ரா மாநிலத்துல இருக்கற சதாராவுக்கு விஜயம் பண்ணியிருந்த மகாபெரியவா, அங்கே மஹாகாவ் என்கிற கிராமத்துல தங்கியிருந்தார்.
ரொம்ப எளிமையான இடத்துல ஒரு சின்ன அறை பெரியவா நித்யபடி பூஜை. அனுஷ்டானங்களை செய்யறதுக்கு ஒதுக்கப்பட்டிருந்துது. அதுக்கு கதவுகூடக் கிடையாது. ஒரே ஒரு ஜன்னல் மாத்திரம் இருந்தது. மத்தபடி எல்லாருக்கும் தரிசனம் தரவும் மத்தவா தங்கிக்கவும் மாட்டுக் கொட்டகை ஒண்ணுதான் சுத்தப்படுத்தி ஒதுக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.
அங்கே ஒருநாள் மகாபெரியவா தினசரி அனுஷ்டான பூஜையை ஆரம்பிச்ச சமயத்துல எங்கே இருந்தோ ஒரு பெரிய கருநாகம் வேகவேகமா வந்து, பெரியவா தங்கியிருந்த அறை வாசலை மறைச்சமாதிரி படத்தை விரிச்சுகிட்டு நின்னு ஆட ஆரம்பிச்சது. எல்லாருக்கும் ஒரே அதிர்ச்சி! கூடவே பயம்!
உள்ளே பெரியவா மெய்மறந்து பூஜை பண்ணின்டு இருக்கார். கூப்பிட்டுச் சொல்லவும் முடியாது. பாம்பை விரட்டலாம்னா, அதோட உருவமே கிட்டே நெருங்க முடியாத அளவுக்கு பயங்கரமா இருந்துது. என்ன பண்றதுன்னு புரியாம எல்லாரும் தவிச்சுண்டு இருந்த சமயத்துல அந்த பாம்பு மெல்ல நகர்ந்து ஜன்னல்ல ஏறி உள்ளே நுழைங்சு பூஜை பண்ணின்டு இருந்த பெரியவா பக்கத்துல போய் கொஞ்ச நேரம் அப்படியே ஆடாம அசையாம நின்னுது. “புஸ்.. புஸ்’னு அது எழுப்பின் சத்தம் எதிரொலி மாதிரி கேட்டுது. சுத்தி நின்னவாளோட இதயம் லப்டப்னு அதுக்கு ஈக்வலா அதிர்ந்துது. இத்தனை ஆரவாரத்துலயும் பெரியவா முகத்துல துளி சலனம் இல்லை. கருமமே கண்ணா, பூஜை பண்ணிண்டு இருந்தார் அவர்.
எல்லாம் ஒரு சில நிமிடங்கள்தான். வந்த வேலை முடிஞ்சுதுங்கற மாதிரி அந்தப் பாம்பு சரசரன்னு வெளியில வந்து சட்டுன்னு எங்கேயோ போய் மறைஞ்சுடுத்து.
அதுக்கு அப்புறம் ரொம்பநேரம் கழிச்சு, பூஜையை முடிச்சுட்டு எழுந்தார் ஆச்சார்யா. எல்லாரும் பதட்டமும் பரபரப்புமா பாம்பு வந்துட்டு போன விஷயத்தை அவர்கிட்ட சொன்னாங்க. ஆனா, கொஞ்சம்கூட ஆச்சர்யமோ, அதிர்ச்சியோ இல்லாம எல்லாம் தெரியும்கிற மாதிரி அமைதியா கேட்டுண்டு ஒரு புன்னகை மட்டும் செஞ்சார் பெரியவா.
அவரோட அந்த தெய்வீகச் சிரிப்புக்கு என்ன காரணம்னு அடுத்த நாள் தெரியவந்துது. அன்னிக்கு மத்தியானம் பெரியவாளை தரிசிக்க வந்தவாள்ல இருந்த ரெண்டுபேர் ரொம்பவே பரபரப்பா இருந்தாங்க. அந்த ரெண்டுபேர்ல ஒருத்தர், ரொம்ப பிரபலமான இசையமைப்பாளர், இன்னொருத்தர் தெய்வீக ஓவியர். இசையமைப்பாளர், ஓவியர்கிட்டே பேசறச்சே, பரமாசார்யார்கிட்டே இருந்து ஏதோ உத்தரவு கிடைச்சிருக்கிறதாகவும், அதை நிறைவேத்தறதா வாக்குறுதி தரவே வந்திருக்கிறதாகவும் சொல்லிண்டு இருந்தார். யார் அவங்க, என்ன வாக்குறுதின்னு சொல்றதுக்கு முன்னால ஒரு முக்கியமான விஷயத்தை சொல்லிடறேன்.
ஸ்ரீரங்கத்துக்கு ராஜகோபுரத் திருப்பணி நடந்துண்டிருந்த காலகட்டம் அது. பதிமூணு நிலைகளோட கம்பீரமா அமைக்கத் திட்டமிட்டிருந்தாங்க. ஆனா, அதுக்கான செலவு ரொம்பவே அதிகமா இருந்துது. ஒவவொரு நிலையையும் கட்ட ஒவ்வொருத்தர் பொறுப்பு ஏற்றுக்கிட்டு இருந்தாங்க. அந்த சமயத்துல ஒர நிலைக்கான செலவை ஏத்துண்டிருந்தவர்கஙளால தவிர்க்க முடியாத காரணத்தால அதை செய்ய முடியாத சூழல் ஏற்பட்டுது. அதனால, அந்தப் பொறுப்பை வேறயாருக்காவது தரவேண்டிய கட்டாயம் வந்துது. இதையெல்லாம் விளக்கி அப்போ இருந்த ஜீயர் சுவாமிகள் மகாபெரியவாளுக்கு கடிதம் எழுதியிருந்தார். லெட்டர் வந்ததுமே, அந்தப் பொறுப்பை யார்கிட்டே ஒப்படைக்கிறதுன்னு யோசிச்சார் மகாபெரியவா. மடத்துல இருந்தவங்க ஆளுக்கு ஒரு பெரிய மனுஷா பெயரைச் சொன்னாங்க. ஆனா, பெரியவா சினிமாவுல இசைத்துறையில பிரபலமான ஒருத்தர் பேரைத்தான் தேர்ந்தெடுத்தார்.
சரி, ஆளை தேர்ந்தெடுத்தாச்சு, அவர்கிட்டே எப்படிச் சொல்றது? அவர் சம்மதிப்பாரா மாட்டாரா? இப்படி எதுவுமே தெரியாத நிலையில தான், எங்கேயோ ஒரு கிராமத்துல போக்குவரத்துக்கே கஷ்டமான பகுதியில தங்கியிருந்த பெரியவளை தரிசிக்க வந்திருந்தார் மகாபெரியவா தேர்ந்தெடுத்த அதே பிரபலமான இசையமைப்பாளர். வரிசையில் வந்த அவர், பெரியவாளை தரிசிச்சு, நமஸ்காரம் பண்ணினார். எதுவும் சொல்லாம அவரை ஆசிர்வதிச்ச ஆசார்யா, “ராத்திரி நேரமாகப் போறது, இன்னிக்கு இங்கேயே தங்கிட்டு நாளைக்குப் புறப்படுங்கோ!’ அப்படின்னு சொன்னார்.
அன்னிக்கு ராத்திரி வழக்கமான தரிசனமெல்லாம் முடிங்சப்புறம் பெரியவா அந்த ரெண்டு பேரோடயும் பேசிண்டு இருந்தார். அப்போ இசைத்துறை சம்பந்தமா, ஓவியம் சார்ந்ததா, வானத்துல இருக்கிற நட்சத்திரங்களை பத்தின்னு ஏராளமான விஷயங்களை அவாகூட பேசிண்டு இருந்தார் ஆசார்யா. ஆனா, கோபுரம் கட்டவேண்டிய விஷயத்தைப்பத்தி பெரியவா எதுவமே அப்போ சொல்லலை.
மறுநாள், நித்யகர்மா எல்லாம் முடிங்சுது. அந்த ரெண்டுபேரும் பெரியவாளை தரிசிக்க வந்தாங்க. “பெரியவா, என்னை நம்பி பெரிய பொறுப்பை ஒப்படைக்கப்போறதா ஒரு தகவல் கிடைச்சது. இது என்னோட பாரம் இல்லை. உங்க பாரம்! இதை எப்படி நடத்திக்கணுமோ, அப்படி நீங்களாவே நடத்திப்பீங்கன்னு தெரியும். உங்க கட்டளையை நான் ஏத்துக்கறேன்’ அப்படின்னார், இசையமைப்பாளர்.
“கிட்டத்தட்ட எட்டுலட்சம் ஆகும்கறா. தொகை ரொம்ப பெரிசு. நீ எப்படிப் பண்ணுவே?’ கேட்டரா ஆசார்யா.
“இதுக்குன்னே தனியா ரெண்டு இசை நிகழ்ச்சி நடத்தலாம்னு இருக்கேன். வர்றதை அப்படியே குடுத்துடறேன். நிச்சயமா முடியும்?’
சொன்ன இசையமைப்பாளருக்கு ஆசிர்வாதம் பண்ணி ஒரு மாம்பழத்தைப் பிரசாதமா குடுத்துனுப்பினார் ஆசார்யா.
ரொம்ப சந்தோஷமா புறப்பட்டாங்க அவங்க ரெண்டு பேரும். சொன்னபடியே செஞ்சு முடிச்சார். அந்த இசையமைப்பாளர். ஸ்ரீரங்கம் கோபுரத்தோட ஆறாவது நிலை, அவரோட கைங்கரியமா கட்டப்பட்டுது.
எல்லாம் முடிஞ்சு ஸ்ரீரங்கம் கோபுரம் கட்டி முடிச்சு கும்பாபிஷேகம் நடந்த சமயத்துல மடத்துக்கு பிரசாதம் வந்துது. அன்னிக்கும் ஒரு பாம்போட நடமாட்டம் கண்ணுல பட்டதா எல்லாரும் சொல்லிண்டாங்க. அப்போதான் புரிஞ்சுது, மஹாகாவ்ல பெரியவா பூஜை பண்ணின சமயத்துல பெரிய பாம்பு வந்தது. ஸ்ரீரங்கத்துல இருக்கற அரங்கநாதரே தன்னோட அணையாக இருந்த ஆதிசேஷனை அனுப்பி, தனக்கு வேண்டியதை தானே கேட்டு வாங்கிக்க பெரியவாகிட்டே பேசியிருக்கலாங்கறது.
எல்லாம் சரி, ஸ்ரீரங்கம் கோபுரத்துல ஒரு நிலையை மகாபெரியவா ஆணைப்படி கட்டித்தந்த அந்த இசையமைப்பாளர் யார்? அவர்கூட சேர்ந்து பெரியவாளை தரிசிக்க வந்த ஓவியர் யாருன்னு சொல்லவே இல்லையேன்னுதானே கேட்கறீங்க?
இசைஞானி இளையராஜாவும், தெய்வீக ஓவியர் சில்பியும்தான் அவங்க.

பி. ராமகிருஷ்ணன் in Kumudam Bhakthi 

Natarajan

” A Football Legend Goes Undercover… See What he Does … ” !!!

 

Football Legend Goes Undercover, Amazes Everyone

This group of friends were playing football (soccer), when old grandfather Memo came and insisted to be given a place on one of the teams. While they didn’t want to disrespect their elders, they weren’t happy about this. That is, until this old man gives the game a real twist.

In reality, this old man is a freestyle football legend who has gone through hours of make-up to make him look 30 years older. Find out what happened on the court, as he shocks everyone in sight, and will even cast a spell on you, because this guy – he’s good.

SOURCE:::: http://www.ba-bamail.com and You Tube
Natarajan

Historical Images For the Weekend … !!!

5.) Sweden switched to driving on the right side of the road in 1967. This was the result on the first morning.

Sweden switched to driving on the right side of the road in 1967. This was the result on the first morning

 

This Austrian boy got a new pair of shoes in World War II.