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A man and woman had been married for more than 60 years. They had shared everything. They had talked about everything. They had kept no secrets from each other except that the little old woman had a locked chest on top of her closet that she had cautioned her husband never to open or ask her about.
For all of these years, he had never thought about the chest, but one day the little old woman got very sick and the doctor said she would not recover.
![]() In trying to sort out their affairs, the little old man took down the chest and took it to his wife’s bedside. She agreed that it was time that he should know what was in the chest. When he opened it, he found two crocheted dolls and a stack of money totalling $95,000.
He asked her about the contents.
‘When we were to be married,’ she said, ‘ my grandmother told me the secret of a happy marriage was to never argue. She told me that if I ever got angry with you, I should just keep quiet and crochet a doll.’
The little old man was so moved; he had to fight back tears. Only two Precious dolls were in the chest. She had only been angry with him two Times in all those years of living and loving. He almost burst with Happiness.
‘Honey,’ he said, ‘that explains the doll, but what about all of this money? Where did it come from?’
‘Oh,’ she said, ‘that’s the money I made from selling the other dolls.‘
Source…..www.ba-bamail.com
Natarajan
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Art
Image of the Day… Mars’ Early Atmosphere…Image Credit NASA
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This view combines information from two instruments on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to map color-coded composition over the shape of the ground in a small portion of the Nili Fossae plains region of Mars’ northern hemisphere.
This site is part of the largest known carbonate-rich deposit on Mars. In the color coding used for this map, green indicates a carbonate-rich composition, brown indicates olivine-rich sands, and purple indicates basaltic composition.
Carbon dioxide from the atmosphere on early Mars reacted with surface rocks to form carbonate, thinning the atmosphere by sequestering the carbon in the rocks.
An analysis of the amount of carbon contained in Nili Fossae plains estimated the total at no more than twice the amount of carbon in the modern atmosphere of Mars, which is mostly carbon dioxide. That is much more than in all other known carbonate on Mars, but far short of enough to explain how Mars could have had a thick enough atmosphere to keep surface water from freezing during a period when rivers were cutting extensive valley networks on the Red Planet. Other possible explanations for the change from an era with rivers to dry modern Mars are being investigated.
This image covers an area approximately 1.4 miles (2.3 kilometers) wide. A scale bar indicates 500 meters (1,640 feet). The full extent of the carbonate-containing deposit in the region is at least as large as Delaware and perhaps as large as Arizona.
The color coding is from data acquired by the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM), in observation FRT0000C968 made on Sept. 19, 2008. The base map showing land shapes is from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera. It is one product from HiRISE observation ESP_010351_2020, made July 20, 2013. Other products from that observation are online at http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_032728_2020.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has been using CRISM, HiRISE and four other instruments to investigate Mars since 2006. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Maryland, led the work to build the CRISM instrument and operates CRISM in coordination with an international team of researchers from universities, government and the private sector. HiRISE is operated by the University of Arizona, Tucson, and was built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colorado.
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Project for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the orbiter and collaborates with JPL to operate it.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/JHUAPL/Univ. of Arizona
Thalassemia Could Not Stop Her from Achieving Her Dream of Becoming a Novelist…. Meet This Dynamo….
Jyoti is a thalassemia patient. But, she says, she is more than an illness—she believes in her identity as a novelist, a blogger, a speaker, and a woman.
Jyoti’s childhood was different in many ways. She remembers reading books under a small lamp while her sisters slept. She also remembers going for regular blood transfusion while her friends went to school.
Jyoti Arora was three months old when she was detected with thalassemia, which was long before she understood the full meaning of her ailment. Her parents, though shell shocked, wanted Jyoti to have a happy and fulfilling childhood.
They sent her to the same school that all the neighbourhood children went to. Her school was disrupted often, and for days together, when she had to be admitted to the hospital.
This continued for a few years and when Jyoti was in Class 7, she had to drop out of school. This was a huge setback. But Jyoti was not going to let her illness win over her. She not only completed her school through correspondence but also got a Master’s in English and Applied Psychology.
Jyoti loved reading. Books were her best friends and she devoured every genre; she would submerge herself in classics that were written hundreds of years ago. She would dream about stories, about writing stories, about other children reading her stories. While thalassemia stunted her growth and regular blood transfusions increased the iron content in her body, what did not change was her love for books. She started nurturing a dream, a dream to write her own book.
Jyoti started her professional career as an English tutor, while simultaneously writing articles for a couple of magazines. After that, she worked for a few years as a freelance writer and content developer. Her primary role was to abridge classics and make them suitable for pre-teens to read. She also wrote fiction/adventure books for children. After working in the freelancing space, Jyoti took up full time employment with a US-based recruitment firm where she was awarded the best employee of the year award for 2014.
The battle with thalassemia continued. However, there was no stopping Jyoti. She was convinced that her soul lies in writing and her first novel — Dream’s Sake — was published in the year 2011. –

The novel is based on the psychological conflict of physically challenged people. She went on to self-publish her second novel — Lemon Girl — in the year 2014. The theme of Lemon Girl is women’s abuse and oppression. Both her novels have garnered positive reviews from readers as well as critics. While her love for reading and writing is second to none, she is fascinated by technology too, and writes about various gadgets and products at http://www.technotreats.com.
Jyoti’s undefeatable grit and go-getter attitude have won her many laurels. She was recently invited to be a speaker at an event on World Thalassemia Day on May 8, 2015, which incidentally is also her birth date.
Jyoti used that platform as an opportunity to talk about thalassemia, and today advocates awareness about thalassemia on various other forums. –

Jyoti feels that even today, awareness about thalassemia and its prevention is minimal. Thalassemia is a genetically inherited disease, is not infectious, and cannot be passed on from one individual to another through personal or any other contact. In India, about 3.9 percent of people are carriers. Thalassemia Major patients require life long blood transfusions and costly medicines for their survival. Often, the blood transfusion needs to be carried out on monthly or even fortnightly basis.
Apart from regular blood transfusions and costly medicines, thalassemia patients are also given Desferal injections that need to be infused over a period of several hours. This means that the patient has to keep the injection and the infusion pump attached to the body over a period of ten-twelve hours, several days a week. The only treatment available for this disease is a bone marrow transplant, which is very expensive and risky.
While the treatment of thalassemia can get complicated and expensive, the best solution is to prevent the occurrence of the disease. In fact, a child can be Thalassemia Major only when both parents are Thalassemia Minors. The probability of the child being a Thalassemia Major in such a case is 25 percent and can be detected during the early stages of pregnancy.
Jyoti feels that society at large needs to accept and assimilate people like her in the mainstream. She is not sick or feeble or unintelligent just because she is a thalassemia patient. She, in fact, advocates the importance of considering herself equal to one and all. Jyoti feels that she is more than an illness—she believes in her identity as a novelist, a blogger and a woman.
For more information, write to Jyoti at: write2jyoti@gmail.com
About the author: Neha Dua is a graduate from St Stephen’s College, Delhi and completed her MBA degree from MDI, Gurgaon. She is currently working with a large Indian MNC bank. She is an avid reader, dance enthusiast and likes to write. Her personal blog can be accessed at: http://www.allexpressions.blogspot.com. In her pursuit to write beyond her personal experiences, she has volunteered to be a writer of happy and inspiring stories of The Better India. –
Source….Neha Dua …. http://www.thebetterindia.com
Natarajan
Image of the Day… ” Good Night From Space…”
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Earth’s thin atmosphere stands out against the blackness of space in this photo shared on Aug. 31, 2015, by NASA astronaut Scott Kelly on board the International Space Station. The station’s solar panels can be seen in darkness at the right of the image.
Kelly, in the midst of a year-long stay on the orbital outpost, shared the photo in a tweet: “Day 157. At the end of the day, #sunrise will come again. Good night from @space_station! #YearInSpace.”
Source…..www.nasa.gov.
Natarajan
Message for the Day…” What is True Friendship …” ?

True friends are those who help in uplifting your life by cleansing your ideals and emotions. Those who drag you into pomp, pedantry, paltry entertainment and petty pranks are enemies, not friends. True friends cannot be won by social status, external scintillation or verbal assertions. A friendship knit by monetary bonds is disrupted as soon as you ask the loan to be repaid. So, when you oblige your friend with a loan, the friendship too is broken at that very moment. How can friendship be cemented by words or by coins? The feeling of friendship must activate every nerve, permeate every blood-cell, and purify every emotional wave; it has no place for the slightest trace of egotism. The companionship which seeks to exploit or fleece for personal benefit cannot be elevated into the noble quality of friendship. Perhaps, the only friend who can pass this rigorous test, is God.
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.)

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

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.

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.

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.

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

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

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.

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

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

Source…www.tech.firstpost.com
Natarajan
ஆஸ்திரேலியா ஸ்பெல்லிங் பீ போட்டி: கலக்கிவரும் தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இரட்டையர்கள்….

ஆஸ்திரேலியாவில் ஸ்பெல்லீங் பீ நிகழ்ச்சியில் தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இரட்டையர்கள் பட்டையை கிளப்பி வருகின்றனர்.
ஆஸ்திரேலியா தொலைக்காட்சி நிறுவனம் ஒன்று ஸ்பெல்லீங் பீ என்ற நீண்ட ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகளின் எழுத்துகளைச் சரியாக சொல்லும் போட்டியை நடத்திவருகிறது. இதில் நாடு முழுவதிலும் இருந்து 3000 குழந்தைகள் கலந்துகொண்டார்கள். மூன்று கட்ட தேர்வுகளுக்குப் பிறகு 50 குழந்தைகள் இறுதி போட்டிக்கு தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டனர். தற்போது இவர்களில் இருந்து 12 பேர் மட்டும் இறுதி போட்டிக்கு தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.
இந்த 12 பேரில் தமிழகத்தின் வேலுரை பூர்வீகமாகக் கொண்ட இரட்டையர்களான ஹார்பிதா மற்றும் ஹார்பித்தாவும் அடங்குவார்கள். இருவரும் 50 ஆயிரம் வார்த்தைகளுக்கு மேல் தெரிந்து வைத்துள்ளனர். இறுதி போட்டி இன்னும் 2 வாரங்களில் நடைபெறவுள்ளது.
இது பற்றி இரட்டையர்களான ஹார்பிதா மற்றும் ஹார்பித் ஆகிய இருவரும் கூறும் போது இதற்காக நாங்கள் எந்தவித சிறப்பு பயிற்சிக்கும் செல்லவில்லை. நான்கு வயது முதல் வீட்டில் அப்பாவின் ஐ.பேடில் ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகளை உச்சரிக்கும் விளையாட்டை விளையாடுவோம் எனத் தெரிவித்தனர்.
இவர்களின் சாதனை குறித்து தந்தை அண்ணாமலை தெரிவிக்கையில், குழந்தைகளுக்கு சுதந்திரம் தந்து அவர்களை சொந்தமாக கற்றுக்கொள்ள அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும் என்றார்.
Source….Parvathi Arunkumar, சிட்னி…www.dinamani.com and http://www.newindianews.com
Natarajan
Meet the Two Security Guards Who are Giving Everyone Life Goals….

Two separate posts on Facebook describe the inspiring security guards – Balinder Singh on the left and Sagar Ashokrao Bhagat on the right.
Facebook users Harsh Vats and Sreejesh Krishnan from Haryana and Mumbai respectively narrate their experiences of meeting these two inspiring security guards in separate posts.
Harsh Vats bumped into 20-year-old Balinder Singh, reading a book under a street light, when he went to an ATM to withdraw cash before Raksha Bandhan.
Curious, he asked the security guard what he was reading. Turns out he was preparing for a set of upcoming entrance exams.
Very moved by the 20-year-old, Harsh posted on Facebook asking people to share study material to help the security guard further his dream. So far, his post has been shared by more than 10,000 people.

In his post, Sreejesh Krishnan explains he met Sagar when he noticed him reading a book stealthily placed between the complex’s vehicle entry register. It was a book on Java programing.
Sagar informed Sreejesh that he was in fact an engineer with a BE degree and was working as a security guard “to keep things going” while he looked for a suitable job.
An impressed Sreejesh also asked him for a resume. Many of those who’ve seen the post have requested Sagar’s CV so as to help him a better job.

Message for the Day…” Trust in the God and March to the best of your Ability…”

Virtues must be cultivated in each home; each member sharing in the joy with the rest, each one seeking for opportunities for helping others. This attitude must be stuck to, so that it may stay as character. How can a vessel kept with a closed lid be filled with water? It must be open to receive good impulses! In all your efforts, trust in a Higher Power which is ever ready to help you. Then your work is made easy. This comes out of devotion, and reliance on the Lord who is the source of all Power. When you travel by train, you only have to purchase the ticket, board the proper train and take a seat, you can leave the rest to the engine. Do you carry your luggage on your head? So too, trust in the Lord and march to the best of your ability. Have faith and earn the Lord’s grace by using the intelligence and the conscience He has endowed you with.

