Clingstone: The House on The Rock…!!!

Perched on top of a small, rocky island in Narragansett Bay, near Jamestown, Rhode Island, the United States, is a three-story, cedar shingle mansion built by Philadelphia socialite Joseph Lovering Wharton in 1905. Wharton had built the house as an act of defiance after the government seized his land and summer home that he had in the Fort Wetherill area in south Jamestown, to enlarge the fort at the end of the 1800s. Angered at being ousted from his property, Wharton decided to build a house where no one could bother him, and Clingstone happened. One source claims that the name “Clingstone” was suggested when someone remarked that it was “a peach of a house”. Clingstone is a botanical term for fruits that has a hard stone-like seed inside. Or perhaps, the name is a reference to the way the house clings to the rock.

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Photo credit: mansion-homes.com

In spite of its perilious location in the sea, the Clingstone has managed to survive more than a hundred years, weathering countless storms and hurricanes. Originally there was a long stone jetty with gymnasts’ rings and bars, but it was blown away by the Great Hurricane of 1938. The house itself, which sits only 20 feet above sea level, survived with minimal damage. Now Clingstone’s current owner, Henry Wood, a distant cousin of Wharton, regularly goes out to Clingstone with his three grown sons to watch the yearly hurricanes in action.

Henry Wood, who is a Boston-based architect, had bought the house in 1961. It had been lying vacant for two decades after the death of Wharton’s widow in 1941. When Wood acquired it, the house was in a shabby condition with all its windows smashed, the floors rotten and covered with pigeon droppings, and the roof mostly gone.

Wood and his sons take pride in their environment-friendly renovations of the house. The house is totally off the power grid. A windmill on the roof provides electricity, while photovoltaic cells charge a bank of batteries in the basement for additional power. Rainwater collected from the roof into a 3,000-gallon cistern provide water for washing and cleaning. Drinking water comes from a sea-water filtration system. Water is heated by solar panels. The house even has a composting toilet. The compost is then used to fertilize the garden.

Although refitting the house with green technology has certainly been expensive, Wood has managed to cut corners by acquiring furnishings from thrift shops or yard sales. Windows, light fixtures and doorknobs were scavenged from old buildings that were torn down. The long cypress dining room table was retrieved from the bottom of a cistern.

Today, the house has 23 rooms, including 10 bedrooms and five bathrooms. Visible from the shores, the house is known by locals as “The House on a Rock”.

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Photo credit: mansion-homes.com

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Photo credit: G.E.Long/Flickr

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Photo credit: mansion-homes.com

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Photo credit: Eric Jacobs

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Photo credit: mansion-homes.com

Source…..www.amusingplanet.com

Natarajan

 

Image of the Day…”Moonset Viewed From the International Space Station”

Earth's moon photographed from low Earth Orbit with blue at bottom of frame

Expedition 47 Flight Engineer Tim Peake of the European Space Agency took this striking photograph of the moon from his vantage point aboard the International Space Station on March 28, 2016.  Peake (@astro_timpeake) shared the image on March 30 and wrote to his social media followers, “I was looking for #Antarctica – hard to spot from our orbit. Settled for a moonset instead.”

Image Credit: ESA/NASA

Source….www.nasa.gov

Natarajan

Top 10 Airports in the World ….Singapore Changi International Airport takes the Crown for the 4th Year in row…

1. Singapore Changi International Airport (SIN)Yearly passengers: 54 million

Previous rank: 1

Why it’s awesome: For the fourth year in a row, Changi takes the crown as the world’s best airport. Changi serves as home to Singapore Airlines, Silkair, and Tigerair and is the 16th busiest airport in the world.

The Singaporean airport has received praise from flyers for its beautiful architecture, efficient operation, luxurious amenities, and broad offering of dining and shopping options.

Flyers passing through are treated to movie theaters, a multimedia entertainment deck, spas, and a wild corkscrew slide.

2.. Incheon International Airport (ICN)

Yearly passengers: 41.7 million

Previous rank: 2

Why it’s awesome: Once again, Incheon is the world’s second best airport. Located on an island just outside of the South Korean capital, Incheon is home base to Korean Air and is the 24th-busiest airport in the world. It opened in 2001.

Incheon’s highly regarded facilities feature an array of shopping and dining options, in addition to a bevy of cultural performances. The airport even has a Korean culture museum.

3. Munich Airport (MUC)

Yearly passengers: 38.7 million

Previous rank: 3

Why it’s awesome: Located northeast of downtown Munich, MUC is one of the busiest airports in Europe and the second-busiest in Germany, after Frankfurt.

Munich serves as a major hub for Air Berlin, Lufthansa, and Condor and it features airy glass-heavy architecture. A nearby visitors park features minigolf and a display of historic aircraft.

4. Tokyo Haneda International Airport (HND)

Yearly passengers: 72.8 million

Previous rank: 5

Why it’s awesome: Haneda is one of two major international airports that serve the Tokyo area. Located a few miles away from the heart of the Japanese capital, Haneda has proved to be a popular port of entry for business travelers and tourists.

The world’s fourth-busiest airport, Haneda is know for its service efficiency, cleanliness, and shopping.

5. Hong Kong International Airport (HKG)

Yearly passengers: 63.1 million

Previous rank: 4

Why it’s awesome: Built on an artificial island off the coast of Hong Kong, HKG has become one of the most popular facilities in the world since it opened in 1998.

One of the busiest airports in Asia, Hong Kong International serves as the home to Cathay Pacific, Hong Kong Airlines, and Dragonair.

Be sure to play a round at the SkyCity Nine Eagles golf course near Terminal 2.

6. Central Japan International Airport (NGO)

Yearly passengers: 9.8 million

Previous rank: 7

Why it’s awesome: Built on an artificial island in the middle of Ise Bay near the city of Nagoya, Central Japan International — also known as Centrair — serves as a focus city for Japan Airlines and ANA.

Centrair holds the distinction as the best regional airport in the world.

It has a 1,000-foot-long sky deck where passengers can watch ships sail into Nagoya Port. There’s also a traditional Japanese bathhouse where you can have a relaxing soak while watching the sunset over the bay.

7. Zurich Airport (ZRH)

Yearly passengers: 25.5 million

Previous rank: 6

Why it’s awesome: Just eight miles from the heart of Zurich, the airport serves as the home for Swiss International Air Lines and as a hub linking Switzerland’s largest city with the rest of the country.

For passengers with an extended layover, Zurich Airport offers bicycle and inline-skate rentals and excursions to the Swiss Museum of Transport Lucerne.

8. London Heathrow Airport (LHR)

Yearly passengers: 73.4 million

Previous rank: 8

Why it’s awesome: Heathrow is the world’s third-busiest airport and the largest of the five primary airports serving London.

Heathrow is in the midst of a major renovation with the addition of a brand new Terminal 2 building. It’s eight-year-old Terminal 5 building was named the best airport terminal in the world by Skytrax.

Heathrow serves as the main hub for British Airways and Virgin Atlantic.

9. Kansai International Airport (KIX)

Yearly passengers: 20 million

Previous rank: 12

Why it’s awesome: Located on an artificial island in the Osaka Bay, Kansai International is a major hub for ANA and Japan Airlines.

Reviewers on Skytrax praised Kansai for its modern architecture, spotless facilities, and helpful staff. The airport also boasts a Sky View observation deck that affords passengers spectacular views of incoming and outgoing flights.

10. Doha Hamad International Airport (DOH)

Yearly passengers: 30 million

Previous rank: 22

Why it’s awesome: Hamad International opened for business in 2014 and is now home to Qatar Airways.

The airport and its two terminals sit on 5,400 acres of land and cost $16 billion to construct. Skytrax describes the facility as the “the most architecturally significant terminal complex in the world, as well as being the most luxurious.

Source: Skytrax World Airport Awards

http://www.worldairportawards.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை ….” வாக்கு உன் செல்வாக்கு ” !

வாக்கு  உன்  செல்வாக்கு !
…………………..
உன் கையில் தான் இருக்கு தம்பி இந்த
நாட்டின் நம்பிக்கை …
வாக்குறுதி   பல கொடுத்து பல  பேர் வாக்கு கேட்டாலும்
யாரும் அரியணை ஏற முடியுமா உன் செல்வாக்கு இல்லாமல் ?
பலர் சொல்லும் வாக்கை மட்டும் நம்பி உன் வாக்கை ஒரு செல்லாத வாக்கு
ஆக்கிவிடாதே  தம்பி …ஒன்று மட்டும் உறுதி தம்பி !
உன் செல்வாக்கின் முன் மற்றெல்லாம் ஒரு செல்லா காசுதான் !
இதோ வந்து விட்டது தருணம் ..உன் செல்வாக்கை மற்றவர்
தெரிந்து கொள்ள …புரிந்து கொள்ள !
மறக்காமல் பறை சாற்று உன் செல்வாக்கு  என்னவென்று !
Natarajan
5 april 2016

The Black Dot: A Beautiful and Inspiring Story…!!!

This beautiful story has a simple, yet important message. I hope as many people as possible give it a read. I know I am happy I read it, as it gave me a few things to think about in my own life. Sometimes it is the simplest of stories that make us ponder the most.

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Source…..www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Your heart is the lock and your mind is the key …”

Sathya Sai BabaThough it is hard to restrain the mind, it can be diverted. When the mind steeped in the secular world is diverted toward Divinity, it gains in moral strength. The mind steeped in the worldly matters makes you a prisoner of the world, whereas a mind steeped in God secures liberation for you. Your heart is the lock and your mind is the key. When you turn the key to the left, it locks. But if you turn the key to the right, it unlocks. It is the turning of the key that makes the difference. Hence the mind is the cause for your liberation as well as bondage. What then is liberation (Moksha)? It is not an air-conditioned mansion, but a state devoid of delusion (Moha). Majesty and morality lie in diverting the mind from the world to God. It is this simple and powerful concept that really contributes to your progress and prosperity.

Secret Rooms Inside Abandoned Sewers….!!!

Italian street artist Biancoshock has just finished installing a couple of secret, miniature rooms, hidden under manhole covers, inside an abandoned sewer somewhere in the streets of Milan. This satiric “intervention” —a word that the artist uses for all his artworks— was inspired by the hundreds of people who are forced to live in extreme conditions, such as inside sewers, as in Bucharest where some 600 people live underground. Biancoshock calls this tiny project “Borderlife”.

If some problems can not be avoided, make them comfortable. -Biancoshock

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via Colossal

Source…..www.amusingplanet.com

Natarajan

He is 24, blind, and CEO of a Rs 10-crore company…Meet Srikanth Bolla !

Srikanth Bolla, CEO of Bollant Industries, has set his sights on changing lives

Get rid of him. That was the first thing that neighbours told Srikanth Bolla’s parents when they came to see him soon after his birth in a remote village in the east coast of Andhra Pradesh 24 years ago. Bolla was born sightless.

That’s what, he says, scores of parents ordinarily did and still do – abandon babies born with disabilities. Instead, Bolla’s parents, who owned a small piece of land in the village and earned only about Rs 20,000 a year, chose to give him an education.

Today, Bolla is the CEO of Hyderabad-based Bollant Industries, a company with a turnover of around Rs 10 crore that employs uneducated and physically challenged people to manufacture eco-friendly, disposable consumer packaging solutions out of natural leaf and recycled paper.

Recently, Ratan Tata invested an undisclosed amount in the company. Other investors include Srini Raju of Peepul Capital, Satish Reddy of Dr Reddy’s Laboratories and Ravi Mantha, one of India’s more prolific angel investors.

Bolla started out by accompanying his father to the farm but found he could not be of much help. So his father decided to send him to school, which was some 5 km away from home. For two years, he says, nobody acknowledged his presence in school and he was made to sit on the last bench. Fellow students did not accept him during physical training periods.

For the first time in his life, he says, he felt he was the poorest child in the world because he was so lonely.

His father then moved him to a school for special children in Hyderabad, where he started topping his class and also played chess and cricket. Later, he worked with former president APJ Abdul Kalam on the Lead India project, a movement to empower the youth through value-based education.

However, despite scoring 90 per cent in Class X, he was not allowed to take up the science stream because, he claims, he was blind. “I was made blind by the perception of people,” he says. With the option of science refused to him, everybody thought he would settle for the commerce stream. Instead, Bolla sued the state government. “Moving away from the problem is not in my blood,” he says.

After six months of fighting it out, he was allowed to take up science with the rider that he was doing so “at his own risk”. By this time, half of the academic year was over and Bolla did not have books or any other study material.

A mentor at the college he joined converted all lessons into audio books. Bolla passed with 98 per cent. But another hurdle followed. He says he was not allowed to apply for competitive exams because he was blind.

So, he started applying to universities in the United States and got admission in four of them, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Stanford University. He opted for MIT and was its first international blind student.

In 2012, after graduating from MIT, he launched Bollant Industries. The company now has around 450 employees, 60 per cent of whom are differently-abled.

The company, with five plants in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka, has started work to set up a larger facility at Sri City in Andhra Pradesh with an investment of Rs 10-15 crore. It currently exports 10-15 per cent of its produce to the US, Australia and Germany.

Life, he says, has taught him many lessons. Compassion is one of them. “Compassion,” he says, “is not about giving a coin to a beggar at the traffic signal. It’s showing somebody the way to live and giving them the opportunity to thrive.”

The world looked at him and said you can do nothing, says Bolla. “But I look up at the world and say I can do anything.”

Photograph, kind courtesy: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…”What is the best way parents can show their love for their children…”?

What is the origin of pride? Is it knowledge? No! It is ignorance. What is the cause of ignorance? It is the feeling of duality. Where did duality originate? From attachment and hatred (Raga and Dwesha). What is the origin of these two? They are the products of circumstances. How did circumstances come about? ThroughKarma (past deeds). What is the cause of Karma? Birth! Thus be clear that birth is the cause of all sorrow. Only by seeking freedom from birth that you can free oneself from sorrow. The opportunity of a human birth must be used for realising this supreme goal. The duty of parents is to set children on the right path from their early years. They should not hesitate to correct them and even punish them when the children take to wrong ways. The best way parents can show their love for their children is to do everything necessary to lead them on the righteous path.

Sathya Sai Baba

Captain of India’s Blind Cricket Team on His Love for the Game, His Team and More…

For these men in blue, vision impairment could never act as a hurdle in their path towards fulfilling their dreams – their inspiring passion for the game of cricket and their desire to be a part of it. The Indian Blind Cricket team has been making the country proud for years now.

The team won the Blind World Cup in 2014 by beating Pakistan in the finals. In 2012, India won the first T20 world cup in Bengaluru, and is the only blind team in the world to have won all three championships – T20, ODI and Asian championship.

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Formed in 1998, it is managed by the Cricket Association for the Blind in India (CABI), which is associated with the World Blind Council. Here, Captain Ajay Kumar Reddy talks about his love for cricket, his team, and how ordinary citizens can help them in their game:

Q: Tell us about how you developed a love for cricket and how you started playing the game?

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Ajay Kumar Reddy

A: I used to enjoy cricket and had the desire to play as well. But it was not possible because of my vision. When I joined blind school, I came to know that cricket is played by the visually impaired too. Soon, I developed my skills with the desire to play at a higher level. After watching my performance, the sports teacher encouraged me to train and also coached me. I concentrated on my performance thereafter.

Q: How does the team come together and train? How often do you train?

A: Every player practices in his own state and they come together for a coaching camp at a particular venue only before an international match.

Q: Which match has been your most memorable one?

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A: The ODI final at Cape Town in December 2014. India needed 141 runs in 11 overs against Pakistan in the finals. After the loss of five wickets, Prakash and I formed a partnership, ending the match in a win.

Q: Can you share some interesting anecdotes about any of your team members?

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A: The vice-captain, Prakash Jayaramaiah sits on my shoulders in sheer joy when we get a wicket – so we do have a bit of fun in those terms.

Q: Are there are any special requirements for training or preparing for the matches?

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A: We need a turf wicket and a ground covered with grass which is not always available. Training kits are also required.

Q: If a visually impaired person wants to pursue cricket, how should she/he go about doing so?

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A: They should start from the grass root level, which is at school or district levels, and thereafter state and zonal levels. This is easier if they study in schools for the blind where they can showcase their talent to reach the higher league. There are associations in each and every state as well, which can be approached if they wish to play cricket.

Q: How do you think ordinary citizens can help the team, besides just supporting it in matches?

A: They can act as volunteers, help with providing cricketing gear, or through individual donations.

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan