நேற்று தொழிலாளி; இன்று தொழிலாளர் ஆணையர்…

 

மெஸ்ஸில் அம்மாவுக்கு உதவியாக தொழிலாளி போல் இருந்த ஒருவர், மத்திய அரசின் தொழிலாளர் உதவி ஆணையராக இன்tறைக்கு உயர்ந்திருப்பது வழக்கமான ஒரு வெற்றிக் கதையல்ல.

மணிகண்டனின் (32) ஊர் திருவண்ணாமலை மாவட்டம் செய்யாறு. அவரது தாய் ஓட்டல் சரஸ்வதி மெஸ் என்ற பெயரில் சிறிய உணவகத்தை நடத்தி வந்தார். தாய் நடத்திய ஓட்டலில் அவருக்கு ஒத்தாசையாக இருந்துவந்தார். மளிகைப் பொருட்களையும் காய் கறிகளையும் வாங்கி வருவது, ஓட்டலில் சப்ளை செய்வது எனப் பம்பரமாகச் சுழன்ற அவர் ஒரு தொழிலாளியாகவே தனது நாள்களை நகர்த்தினார். கணவனால் கைவிடப்பட்ட தாய்க்கு உதவிவந்த அவருக்கு ஒருநாள் தான் தொழிலாளர் கமிஷனர் ஆவோம் என்பது அப்போது தெரிந்திருக்க நியாயமில்லை. ஆனால், காலச் சக்கரத்தின் சுழற்சியில் அவர் மேலே வந்தார். அவரை உயர்த்தியது அவரது கல்வியும் தளராத முயற்சியும்.

மணிகண்டன், மத்திய அரசுப் பணியாளர் தேர்வாணையம் (யூ.பி.எஸ்.சி.) நடத்திய தேர்வில் வெற்றிபெற்று மத்திய தொழிலாளர் உதவி கமிஷனர் பணிக்கு நேரடியாகத் தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளார். இப்பணிக்கு இந்திய அளவில் மொத்தம் 57 பேர் தேர்வுசெய்யப்பட்டனர். தமிழ்நாட்டிலிருந்து தேர்வான ஐந்து பேரில் மணிகண்டன் முதலிடத்தைப் பிடித்துள்ளார்.

மணிகண்டன் செய்யாறு ஆர்.சி.எம். பள்ளியிலும், அங்குள்ள அரசு ஆண்கள் மேல்நிலைப்பள்ளியிலும் பள்ளிப்படிப்பை முடித்தார். சென்னை டாக்டர் அம்பேத்கர் சட்டக் கல்லூரியில் பி.எல். முடித்தார். சென்னை ஹைகோர்ட்டில் வழக்கறிஞராக இருந்தபோதே டி.என்.பி.எஸ்.சி. தேர்வுக்குத் தயாரானார். குரூப்-2 தேர்வில் வெற்றிபெற்றார்; பணி கிடைத்தது. ஆனால் அப்பணியில் சேர அவர் விரும்பவில்லை, அதைவிடப் பெரிய பணி அவரது கனவாக இருந்தது.

கடந்த 2013-ல் டி.என்.பி.எஸ்.சி. நடத்திய தொழிலாளர் அதிகாரி தேர்வில் அவர் நூலிழையில் வெற்றிவாய்ப்பை இழந்தார். டி.என்.பி.எஸ்.சி. கைநழுவிய வேளையில் மத்திய உதவி தொழிலாளர் கமிஷனர் காலிப் பணியிடத்தை நிரப்ப யூ.பி.எஸ்.சி. தேர்வு அறிவித்ததை அறிந்து விண்ணப்பித்தார்.

காலை முதல் மாலைவரை கன்னிமாரா நூலகமே கதி எனக் கிடந்தார். அயராத உழைப்பு அவரை அகில இந்திய அளவில் 10-ம் இடம் பிடிக்கச் செய்தது.

வெற்றிபெற்ற மணிகண்டனிடம் பேசியபோது, பள்ளியில் படிக்கும் பருவத்தில் தாய்க்கு உதவியாக இருந்ததை நினைவுகூர்ந்தார். சுவாமி விவேகானந்தரின் பொன்மொழிகளை ஆர்வத்துடன் படித்துள்ளார் மணிகண்டன்.

“சிறு வயதில் இருந்தே தினமும் காலையில் தியானம், யோகா, பிராணாயாமம் செய்து வருகிறேன், எனது வெற்றியில் இவற்றுக்கும் பெரும்பங்கு உண்டு” என்று சொல்லும் மணிகண்டன், படிப்பிற்கு உறுதுணையாக இருந்த தன் அண்ணன் செந்தில்குமாரை வாழ்க்கையில் மறக்கவே முடியாது என்கிறார் நன்றிப் பெருக்குடன்.

நேரடியாக மத்திய உதவி தொழிலாளர் கமிஷனர் பணிக்குத் தேர்வுசெய்யப்பட்டுள்ள மணிகண்டன், மண்டல தொழிலாளர் கமிஷனர், துணை தொழிலாளர் கமிஷனர் என அடுத்தடுத்து உயர் பதவிக்குச் செல்ல முடியும். பொதுத்துறை நிறுவனங்களில் தொழிலாளர் பிரச்சினைகளுக்குத் தீர்வு காண்பது, ஊதிய உயர்வு, போனஸ் பேச்சுவார்த்தை உள்ளிட்ட பணிகளை மத்திய தொழிலாளர் அதிகாரிகள் கவனிக்கிறார்கள்.

“திட்டமிட்ட கடின உழைப்பு மட்டுமே வெற்றியைத் தேடித்தரும்” என்று சொல்லும் மணிகண்டன், “எந்தப் போட்டித் தேர்வு என்றாலும், படிக்க வேண்டிய பாடங்களைப் பகுதி பகுதியாகப் பிரித்துக் காலஅட்டவணை போட்டுப் படித்தால் வெற்றி நிச்சயம்” என்று அடித்துக் கூறுகிறார். “நேர்முகத்தேர்வில் நமது ஆளுமைத் திறனைப் பார்க்கிறார்களே தவிர நமது தோற்றத்தையோ கேள்விகளுக்குச் சரியாகப் பதில் சொல்கிறோமா என்பதையோ அல்ல” என்று சொல்லும் மணிகண்டன் போட்டித் தேர்வுகளுக்குத் தயாராகி வரும் இளைஞர்களுக்கு நம்பிக்கையூட்டுகிறார்.

Message For the Day…” Do Not Allow Your Mind to Boss over You …”

All of you are pilgrims in the journey towards the city of liberation. Every life is but a stage in the journey, your body is a rest-house for a short stay during the pilgrimage. The mind is the caretaker in the place of our rest. Do not treat the Mind as a Master or Owner, but take care of it so that the house we are privileged to occupy is not damaged or polluted. We must treat the watchman politely and not destroy its interiors. A restless mind is an important source of ill-health. Many are constantly afflicted with some source of worry or other, never free from anxiety. Why? Because they are identifying themselves with the body! One acquires their body, through their past activities and deeds, caused by the twin pulls of love and hate. You can escape from this cycle, if you realize the Oneness of the Divine being present in you and in everyone.

Sathya Sai Baba

” You Might Be President of PepsiCo…” Who Said It ? …

Q. You come home one day as president of the company, just appointed, and your mom is not that impressed. Would you tell that story?
This is about 14 years ago. I was working in the office. I work very late, and we were in the middle of the Quaker Oats acquisition. And I got a call about 9:30 in the night from the existing chairman and CEO at that time. He said, Indra, we’re going to announce you as president and put you on the board of directors … I was overwhelmed, because look at my background and where I came from — to be president of an iconic American company and to be on the board of directors, I thought something special had happened to me.

So rather than stay and work until midnight which I normally would’ve done because I had so much work to do, I decided to go home and share the good news with my family. I got home about 10, got into the garage, and my mother was waiting at the top of the stairs. And I said, “Mom, I’ve got great news for you.” She said, “let the news wait. Can you go out and get some milk?”

I looked in the garage and it looked like my husband was home. I said, “what time did he get home?” She said “8 o’clock.” I said, “Why didn’t you ask him to buy the milk?” “He’s tired.” Okay. We have a couple of help at home, “why didn’t you ask them to get the milk?” She said, “I forgot.” She said just get the milk. We need it for the morning. So like a dutiful daughter, I went out and got the milk and came back.

I banged it on the counter and I said, “I had great news for you. I’ve just been told that I’m going to be president on the Board of Directors. And all that you want me to do is go out and get the milk, what kind of a mom are you?”

And she said to me, “let me explain something to you. You might be president of PepsiCo. You might be on the board of directors. But when you enter this house, you’re the wife, you’re the daughter, you’re the daughter-in-law, you’re the mother. You’re all of that. Nobody else can take that place. So leave that damned crown in the garage. And don’t bring it into the house. You know I’ve never seen that crown.”

Source:::: David Bradley, Atlantic  …Excerpts of Interview with  Indra K. Nooyi, the CEO of PepsiCo,  ….as appeared in Business Insider AU

Read more: http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/07/why-pepsico-ceo-indra-k-nooyi-cant-have-it-all/373750/#ixzz36G3cdOWL

Natarajan

Is a Banana “Chemical Free ” … ?

 

What Your Banana Would Look Like If It Came With An Ingredient

List

Banana

The idea that there is a difference between “natural” chemicals — like those in fruits and vegetables — and the synthetic version of those chemicals produced in a laboratory is a common misconception.

Marketers often feed off consumer’s concerns that “man-made” chemicals are bad. But the fact is that all foods (and everything around us) are made up of chemicals, whether they occur in nature or are made in a lab.

Australian chemistry teacher James Kennedy wanted to dispel the myth that chemicals are bad for us. He created an ingredient list for natural products, like the banana above, to show that there many chemicals in our food’s natural flavours and colours.

And some of them have long, scary sounding names, too. We first sawthe graphics at io9.

“There’s a tendency for advertisers to use the words ‘pure’ and ‘simple’ to describe ‘natural’ products when they couldn’t be more wrong,” Kennedy writes on his blog.

“As a Chemistry teacher, I want to erode the fear that many people have of ‘chemicals’ and demonstrate that nature evolves compounds, mechanisms and structures far more complicated and unpredictable than anything we can produce in the lab.”

 

Source::::Business Insider  AU

Natarajan

Image of the day !!!

 

Happy anniversary, Cassini spacecraft

 

June 30 is the 10-year anniversary of the Cassini spacecraft’s successful insertion into orbit around Saturn. Imaging team leader Carolyn Porco expresses the wonder.

Here's one of the latest views of Saturn by Cassini.  This composite image was snapped by the Cassini spacecraft on May 4, 2014 and processed by Val Klavans. More details: on Flickr

In the past 10 years, no spacecraft has consistently delivered the wonder of our solar system like the flagship-class NASA-ESA robotic spacecraft Cassini. No surprise, because it’s orbiting the amazing planet Saturn, world of rings and moons. June 30, 2014 is the 10-year anniversary of Cassini’s insertion into orbit around Saturn. It’s hard to convey in words how wonderful the Cassini images have been since that great day. They are stark, pleasingly symmetric and startling in their beauty. Carolyn Porco, who leads the imaging science team on the Cassini mission, had this to say today on CICLOPS, the official website of the Cassini imaging team.

On the night of June 30, 2004, we flawlessly guided ourselves into orbit around Saturn, and in doing so, took up residence in the house of the sun’s most glorious planet. Our long voyage to this faraway place was over, and we were about to embark on a scientific exploration that would make history. It was hard to take it all in. I was certain that evening there was nothing we could not do.

The last decade has been the kind that can define a human life. Wandering a distant, alien wilderness of endlessly moving worlds, all of us under the commanding and splendidly garlanded presence at its center, one can surely be forgiven for feelings of rapture and sacred calling. It changes you. It has changed me.

And it has changed all of us, Carolyn, who have been privileged to view these images. Thank you and congratulations, Cassini mission imaging team!

Want to see some of the images? Here are a few, from past EarthSky posts:

Best images of great Saturn storm of 2011

Night and day on Saturn

Crescent Saturn

Best views of Saturn hexagon

Saturn’s moon rains water onto Saturn

A 360-degree view of Saturn’s auroras

Saturn’s largest and second-largest moons

Rainbow rings of Saturn

Video: Ride with the Cassini spacecraft orbiting Saturn

Cassini finds vortex at south pole of Saturn’s moon Titan

Image from Cassini captures five of Saturn’s moons

NASA Cassini spacecraft provides new view of Saturn and Earth

Yin and yang of Saturn’s moon Iapetus

Cassini spies Venus from Saturn’s orbit

Blazing objects in Saturn’s weirdest ring

Bottom line: June 30, 2014 is the 10-year anniversary of the Cassini spacecraft’s insertion into orbit around Saturn. Don’t we live in an amazing time of history?

Source::::Earth sky news

Natarajan

Joke of The Day… Ever Wonder …Why !!!

– EVER WONDER….!

– Why the sun lightens our hair, but darkens our skin?

– Why women can’t put on mascara with their mouth closed?

– Why don’t you ever see the headline “Psychic Wins Lottery”?

– Why is “abbreviated” such a long word?

– Why is it that doctors call what they do “practice”?

– Why is it that to stop Windows 98, you have to click on “Start”?

– Why is lemon juice made with artificial flavor, and dishwashing liquid
– made with real lemons?

– Why is the man who invests all your money called a broker?

– Why is the time of day with the slowest traffic called rush hour?

– Why isn’t there mouse-flavored cat food?

– When dog food is new and improved tasting, who tests it?

– Why didn’t Noah swat those two mosquitoes?

– Why do they sterilize the needle for lethal injections?

– You know that indestructible black box that is used on airplanes? Why
– don’t they make the whole plane out of that stuff?

– Why don’t sheep shrink when it rains?

– Why are they called apartments when they are all stuck together?

– If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?

– If flying is so safe, why do they call the airport the terminal?

Source::::Joke a day.com

Natarajan

” Hits…Likes…and Sambar …” !!!

Chithra Viswanathan is 75 and lives alone in Mylapore but this overtly confident use of technology, which you’d normally associate with youngsters, has helped her showcase her passion, cooking, on a global platform. Photo: Ram Keshav
Chithra Viswanathan is 75 and lives alone in Mylapore but this overtly confident use of technology, which you’d normally associate with youngsters, has helped her showcase her passion, cooking, on a global platform. Photo: Ram Keshav

Seventy-five-year-old Mylapore homemaker, Chitra Viswananthan tells Srinivasa Ramanujam how cooking meets technology through her mobile app

These days, when 75-year-old Chithra Viswanathan goes to Marina Beach for a walk, people stop her. They pause and look at her like they’ve seen her somewhere. And then, they recognise her as the ‘Internet maami’, a sobriquet she’s quite at ease with now.

A few of these co-walkers — regulars at the beach — are friends now. But that’s just a handful. When she logs on to Facebook, she has more than 1,200 friends. “I do not usually accept anyone as a friend unless we have many mutual friends,” she says, adjusting her glasses and skilfully sifting through the numerous windows on her iPad.

She’s 75 and lives alone in Mylapore but this overtly confident use of technology, which you’d normally associate with youngsters, has helped her showcase her passion, cooking, on a global platform.

If Meenakshi Ammal brought out the revolutionary Samaithu Par, a cookbook in Tamil, more than half a century ago, Chithra uses technology to help people all over the world. Her mobile phone application, called AskChitVish Premium, which was launched a few years ago, already has 2,300 recipes and 200 more waiting to be uploaded.

She always had a passion for dishing out new stuff from the kitchen for her grandchildren. But it was about a decade ago when, the Internet boom had just started and she was getting familiar with the computer, that she noticed a query on a website for the recipe of ‘poosanika kootu’. “It was unanswered for three days,” she recalls, “I just took it upon myself to answer it and give her the right recipe.”

There was no looking back after that — she started writing a cookery column for Indusladies.com that had a huge traction among Indians settled abroad. She cooked, she blogged, she wrote and she shared her experience online.

‘Chitvish’ soon became a hit. So much so that she had ‘fans’ across the world. One of them — a 45-year-old woman from Atlanta — actually came down to Chennai just to meet her. “She had been following my recipes,” says Chithra, “When she came to India, she made it a point to come to Chennai especially to see me. I was a little hesitant and clearly told her that I was no fancy chef but just a housewife. It was special to have someone come all the way just for me.”

Her everyday routine begins quite early, just like any other homemaker, but there’s a key difference. When she enters the kitchen, she’s armed with an iPad and her Samsung Galaxy — to take notes and pictures of what she does. “If I see something different on TV, I immediately try it out,” she says, “I never post any recipe online without trying it.”

Baking is very close to her heart as well. “I’m very passionate and experiment more with breads than cakes,” she says. It’s not a new-found passion but one that she started indulging in quite a while ago. “It was in 1967,” she says, “I saw an ad for a baking course in the Polytechnic Institute, Taramani, and immediately went for it with a few friends. It was perhaps the first course for baking in the city. The instructors taught us well and we were fascinated by the concept.”

Another concept that’s caught her attention of late is fusion cooking. She’s tried out Au gratin dosa and Punjabi pesto pizza, besides others“It helps people try out new things,” she says, “The most exciting part is to add your own touch to a tried and tested recipe. For instance, in dishes that need eggs and ingredients that aren’t available here, I look for an alternative.”

Chithra doesn’t eat out, but doesn’t mind heading out once a while to check out what’s new and in. “Why do we like eating out?” she asks, “Not just for the taste but also the way the food is presented. I believe that we eat with our eyes — it’s important to dress up what you’ve made.”

When a friend or neighbour makes a sarcastic comment about cooking, it upsets her. “It (cooking) is very creative,” says Chitra, who credits her late husband, Viswanathan for encouraging her a lot, “That’s not all… there’s a science behind it. Cooking is about how much you add and in what quantities. A little more or a little less makes all the difference.”

A few years down the line, she hopes to come up with more innovative recipes. But not all of them are saved on her computer and iPad. “They keep crashing…can’t trust them too much,” she says nonchalantly, “I prefer storing them all on Cloud.” For this 75-year-old, the sky’s the limit.

Keywords: Chitra Viswananthaninternet maamiAskChitVish Premium,

Source::::Srinivasa Ramanujam in The Hindu

Natarajan

Joke of the Day…

A juggler, driving to his next performance, is stopped by the police. “What are those machetes doing in your car?” asks the cop.

“I juggle them in my act.”

“Oh, yeah? Says the doubtful cop. “Let’s see you do it.” The juggler gets out and starts tossing and catching the knives. Another man driving by slows down to watch.

“Wow” says the passer-by. “I’m glad I quit drinking. Look at the test they’re giving now!

Source::::: joke a day.com

Natarajan

Image of the day…

 

One frame from a time lapse of the Milky Way, with some light pollution and fast-moving cloud cover … and an iridium flare.

Nature & Man: Iridium Flare, Milky Way, Clouds and Light Pollution by Mike Taylor.  Visit Mike Taylor Photography.

Mike Taylor in Maine contributed this interesting photo. He calls it Nature & Man. It’s one frame from a time lapse of the Milky Way, photographed in western Maine. The shot includes quite a bit of light pollution and some fast-moving cloud cover. Most of the light pollution in this image is coming from Farmington, Maine which is about 35 miles from this location. Perhaps most interesting to most skywatchers is the bright iridium flare captured here. As Mike said, they are often mistaken for meteors, but, instead:

An iridium flare is a specific type of satellite flare that is made when the antennas of an Iridium communication satellite reflect sunlight directly onto the surface of the Earth. The satellites are in a near-polar orbit at an altitude of 485 miles. Their orbital period is approximately 100 minutes with a velocity of 16,800 miles per hour.

The uniqueness of Iridium flares is that the spacecraft emits ‘flashes’ of very bright reflected light that sweep in narrow focused paths across the surface of the Earth. An Iridium communication satellite’s Main Mission Antenna is a silver-coated Teflon antenna array that mimics near-perfect mirrors and are angled at 40-degrees away from the axis of the body of the satellites. This can provide a specular reflection of the sun’s disk, periodically causing a dazzling glint of reflected sunlight.

At the Earth’s surface, the specular reflection is probably less than 50 miles wide, so each flare can only be viewed from a fairly small area. The flare duration can last from anywhere between 5 to 20 seconds and can easily be seen by the naked eye

Source:::: earth sky news site

Natarajan

A Look at the FIFA World Cup So Far…Top 10 Goals…

A Video of the Top 10 Goals in the 2014 World Cup.

With an average of 2.8 goals per game, some surprising knock-outs and some sensational “Cinderella stories”, the 2014 World Cup is being crowned as the best of its kind since 1970. To celebrate the end of the group stages, and the beginning of the next round, here is an amazing goal compilation featuring some of the best players in the world:

 

 

Source :::;ba-ba mail site and YOU TUBE

Natarajan