Message For the Day…” Core of Truth Will Never Change…”

When the moon is just a little arc in the sky and one desires to see it, a person indicates it by pointing a finger towards it. Or, when one desires to look at a particular star, a person says, “There, just above that branch of this tree.” The moon is far away, and the star is much farther. At the moment it could be seen just above the branch, but that is only a temporary location. Soon, the location changes. The finger can no longer be correct, for the star or moon moves across the sky. But the genuine characteristic never undergoes change. The form may suffer change; the name may change; times may change; and the space it occupies may change. But the core of Truth will not change. That core is denoted as existence, luminescence, and attractiveness(asthi, bhathi, priyam) in Vedantic texts. The above three together are the nature of God. On these as the basis, forms are constructed by the mind, and names for the forms follow.

Sathya Sai Baba

” Flying into Failure…Airlines that no longer exist…”

Air Australia is one airline that failed.

Air Australia is one airline that failed. Source: News Limited 

THEY are the hugely powerful and glamorous airlines that soared into the hearts of the public only to be plunged into despair and grounded forever.

So what went so horribly wrong

We take a look at five of the most famous cases of carriers that suffered devastating demises and find that financial woes and horrifying plane crashes were among the factors that had a hand in their undoing.

1. Ansett

Founded in 1935, Ansett was Australia’s second-largest airline and ran for more than 65 years. It carried more than 14 million passengers a year and had an annual turnover of more than $3 billion by the time it was placed into administration in 2001.

Unfortunately, Ansett became the nation’s most high-profile aviation failure, and one of the largest corporate collapses ever.

Miss World 1967 Madeleine Hartog-Bel walks out of an Ansett plane. Picture: Bob Nicol

Miss World 1967 Madeleine Hartog-Bel walks out of an Ansett plane. Picture: Bob Nicol Source: News Limited 

In fact, it was bleeding a massive $1.3 million a day, according to its parent company Air New Zealand. The airline’s collapse left about 15,000 people out of work and out of pocket to the tune of $758 million in lost entitlements. Most were eventually paid back, but there were many dark days.

“The Ansett collapse produced enormous pain and hardship to thousands of Australian families,” Mark Korda from administrators KordaMentha told the Herald Sun.

Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, arrives on an Ansett aeroplane circa 1958.

Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, arrives on an Ansett aeroplane circa 1958. Source: News Limited 

KordaMentha stated that: “After a decade of commitment, we effectively completed the administration on 2 September, 2011 … The final dividend paid to former Ansett employees achieved an overall average return of 96 cents in the dollar — a result that surpassed initial stakeholder expectations during the time of the collapse.”

Ansett planes at Sydney Airport.

Ansett planes at Sydney Airport. Source: News Limited  

It was such a desperate time that, in an effort to reimburse the workers, the Federal Government imposed a $10 “Ansett levy” on all plane tickets to raise money.

Tragically, at least 40 Ansett employees committed suicide following its demise, The Australian reported.

2. Air Australia

Unfortunately, Ansett isn’t the only Australian airline to fold in a dramatic fashion. About 4000 passengers were left stranded in 2012 when Air Australia went bustseemingly out of the blue, suddenly grounding flights around its network.

It had pushed itself to the financial brink, literally running out of money to buy fuel.

The Brisbane-based carrier failed with debts of up to $90 million and was liquidated. Up until a few hours before administrators KordaMentha were appointed, tickets were still being sold online. The airline ended up making $36 million from about 100,000 tickets for future travel, which became worthless.

Air Australia is one airline that failed.

Formerly known as Strategic Airlines, the carrier started domestic flights in 2009 before expanding to overseas destinations such as Bali.

3. Pan American World Airways (Pan Am)

One of the world’s most famous airlines, Pan Am was the largest international air carrier in the US for nearly 70 years (1927-91). It was also one of the most innovative, and was a founding member of the global aviation authority, the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

It was a hugely popular airline, bringing glamour to the skies during the good old days of aviation. However, by the 1970s it struggled with major increases in worldwide fuel prices, declining travel, deregulation and an increasing number of competitors.

Then, there was a devastating plane crash that shook the world.

A Pan Am air hostess serves champagne in the first-class cabin.

A Pan Am air hostess serves champagne in the first-class cabin. Source: Getty Images  

According to the The Pan Am Historical Foundation: “The magic era ended with the passing on of Juan Trippe in 1981, and a succession of managements were unable to regain profitability. The rapid rise of world terrorism, culminating in the tragedy of Lockerbie, was the final deathblow.”

A deep gash is seen in the ground next to destroyed houses caused by the crash of Pan Am

A deep gash is seen in the ground next to destroyed houses caused by the crash of Pan Am Flight 103. Source: News Corp Australia  

Pan Am flight 103 from London to New York was destroyed by a bomb in its hold on December 21, 1988, while flying over the Scottish town of Lockerbie. All 243 passengers and 16 crew were killed, as well as 11 people on the ground, making it the deadliest act of terrorism in the UK.

Local residents look at one of the four engines of Pan Am 103.

Local residents look at one of the four engines of Pan Am 103. Source: News Corp Australia   Three years after the tragedy, it was all over for the airline.

A police officer walks past nose of the flight.

A police officer walks past nose of the flight. Source: News Corp Australia 

The Pan Am Historical Foundation states: “All the treasures had been sold, many at bargain-basement prices, yet the deficits remained. The end came on 4 December, 1991. The airline of many firsts, a world leader in technology and innovations, was gone, mourned by many across a world that will not see its like again.”

The story of the airline was turned into a TV show, called Pan Am.

The story of the airline was turned into a TV show, called Pan Am. Source: AP  

4. Swissair

For years, the national airline of Switzerland seemed unbreakable. Founded in 1931, it flew from profit to profit, becoming known as the “Flying Bank” because it was so financially stable and had a reputation for great service.

Throughout the 1980s the airline continued to thrive, and was one of the major carriers in western Europe. But it didn’t last.

A fancy Swissair Convair plane in 1975. Picture: Kecko

A fancy Swissair Convair plane in 1975. Picture: Kecko Source: Flickr 

A disastrous overexpansion program and an unstable economic environment hit the airline hard. By 2001, it was in dire straits. With its entire fleet grounded it was only kept alive by the government. After months of chaos and injections of millions of dollars, it was closed down the following year in a move that shocked the country.

Most of its planes and routes were taken over by a new airline, Swiss International Air Lines (SWISS).

Swissair. Picture: Aero Icarus

5. Trans World Airways (TWA)

One of Pan Am’s main rivals, the US airline TWA also has a long — and mostly glamorous — history spanning 71 years.

In its early days, it flourished under billionaire Howard Hughes and was always on the cutting-edge of aviation technology, USA Today reports. However, poor management in the 1980s hurt the airline, which eventually suffered huge losses.

The situation was worsened by the fact that nobody would lend the airline money with Hughes at the helm.

“We were subject to very stiff interest penalties as a result of Hughes’ involvement,” Jerry Cosley, who held several executive and staff positions with TWA from 1960 to 1985, told the St. Louis Magazine. “He was a genius in many aspects of aviation, but he maintained a very spotty record of financial achievement.”

It faced bankruptcy in 1960, and Hughes gave up control. Things seemed to be OK for a while, until deregulation hit the industry and in the years following, some of its most prized routes were sold off. By 1992 it declared bankruptcy — and again in 1995.

The partially reconstructed shell of the remains of TWA Flight 800 seen in 2013.

The partially reconstructed shell of the remains of TWA Flight 800 seen in 2013. Source: AFP   

Then, disaster struck. In 1996, flight TWA 800 exploded and crashed just minutes after taking off from John F Kennedy Airport, killing all 230 people aboard.

The crash shook the world, and despite it being years ago, there’s still a hunt for answers as to what really happened, with investigators believing it may have been caused by a missile strike.

Five years after the crash, the airline had been sold to American Airlines.

One of the galleys from TWA flight 800.

One of the galleys from TWA flight 800. Source: News Limited 

SOURCE::::: http://www.news.com.au

Natarajan

 

 

Hong Kong’s Third Runway Backed by IATA and Cathay Pacific….

The HK$150 billion project has been backed by both Hong Kong flag carrier  Cathay Pacific, and the International Air Transport Association (IATA), with the interpretation that a third runway is necessary in order to see the aviation industry in Hong Kong flourish.  

Hong Kong’s Third Runway Backed by IATA & Cathay Pacific

Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA) is set to begin the construction of a third runway and associated infrastructure.

The HK$150 billion project has been backed by both Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific, and the International Air Transport Association (IATA), with the interpretation that a third runway is necessary in order to see the aviation industry in Hong Kong flourish.

Construction on the third runway is expected to commence next year, to be completed by 2023, and will help Hong Kong International Airport boost capacity to 100 million passengers and 9 million tons of cargo a year by 2030.

IATA have said that HKIA plays a crucial role as an economic catalyst – Hong Kong is home to some 3,500 regional headquarters and boasts a HK$250 billion tourism industry. The airport serves 63 million passengers and processes 4.4 million tonnes of cargo.

“IATA has long been an advocate of the need for a third runway in Hong Kong. And it is in the interest of everyone in Hong Kong to see the aviation industry flourish. Aviation and aviation-related tourism account for 8.2% of the Hong Kong economy. Increasing HKIA’s capacity to be able to serve 100 million passengers and 9 million tonnes of cargo by 2030 will ensure that the airport continues to be a pillar of Hong Kong’s success—provided the expansion is built, financed  and funded wisely,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO in a speech to the Foreign Correspondents Club of Hong Kong.

IATA has outlined a framework which will allow Hong Kong’s new infrastructure to be built without increasing airline charges, without placing a burden on taxpayers, without making it more expensive for travellers, without adding an extra burden to shippers and while increasing competitiveness of the hub’s air transport network.

HKIA is consistently profitable, and IATA’s Tony Tyler has suggested the airport use its advantageous financial situation to fund its expansion by borrowing through commercial loans or bonds.

Flag carrier, Cathay Pacific has supported IATA’s suggestions to fund the project by saying that the third runway can be self-funded through existing income streams, especially as the number of passengers moving through the airport continues to grow.

“Hong Kong International Airport is extremely successful. It is the world’s busiest airport for international freight and the third busiest in terms of international passenger traffic. The Airport Authority enjoys the highest net profit of any airport in the world and benefits from strong cash flows, a healthy balance sheet, and growing income from retail and aeronautical streams,” said Ivan Chu, Cathay Pacific Chief Executive.

Cathay Pacific also believes that, as a public body, the Airport Authority should reinvest its income in the development of the third runway, so that the airport can maintain its premier hub status and continue to make an important economic contribution to Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s air transport network is under pressure to remain competitive, after its share of the market connecting China to the rest of the world shrank from 20 percent to 17 percent between 2005 and 2013.

Its share on the ASEAN to North America market has remained at 10 percent, whereas the airport’s share on ASEAN to European traffic has contracted to 2.4 percent from 3.3 during the same period.

“There are lots of reasons why these changes are happening. The Middle East airlines are proving to be strong competitors with efficient and affordable hubs being a central piece of their success. And hubs closer to Hong Kong continue to improve their offerings to enhance the competitiveness of their networks,” said Mr Tyler.

SOURCE:::::::: Poppy Marello in http://www.routesonline.com

Natarajan

” How to Flatten Your Belly …” ?

How To Make Sassy Water to Flatten Your Belly

What is Sassy Water? And, will it really help you lose up to seven pounds and five inches in an insanely short time? According to the flat belly diets published in Prevention Magazine and The Daily Mail, the answer is yes. Lemon water has long been touted as a great way to cleanse your body, and help you lose weight. The addition of few new ingredients apparently boosts that weight loss power. Although, you’ll have to look up the diet on your own, the recipe is simple and healthy.

lemon

 

Difficulty: Easy

Instructions

1. First, you’ll need 3 1/2 to 4 quarts of water in a pitcher. Use filtered  water to make sure it is pure.

2. Thoroughly wash one lemon. Slice it very thin, and add it to the water.   You don’t need to squeeze the juice out, just drop the slices in.

3. Peel and thinly slice one cucumber, and add to the water. Add 12 fresh, clean mint leaves.

4. Next, you will need one teaspoon of finely grated ginger. Make sure it is fresh ginger, not the dried powder from your spice rack. Add the ginger to the water. Give it a quick stir, cover and place in the refrigerator over night. Drink it chilled throughout the following day.

5. Make a fresh batch every day for four days. Repeat as needed for great results.

Good luck!  

SOURCE:::::::www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day….” What is Ethical Life …? “

All action (karma) done for the sake of three goals viz. to leverage the Universe for the worship of the Lord, to establish peace and justice in society, and to control and coordinate the functions of the body, is sacrifice. The first is called a holy, sacrificial ritual (yajna); the second, charity(dhana); the third, penance (tapas). All human acts must subserve these three needs, and an ethical life is the foundation for attaining that stage. This ethical life is based upon discrimination between truth and falsehood. Just as the pearl is retained while the shell is  discarded, the essence that is Truth must be accepted and the nonessential rejected. For this, individual exertion and divine grace, both should be present. One should also constantly practice the great lesson that the body and the Atma are separate. This is a highly beneficial exercise. Such discrimination is necessary for secular as well as spiritual life.

Sathya Sai Baba

Most Beautiful Words in English Language …

English is a remarkable language. It has borrowed from many other languages. It is a language both easy to learn and difficult to truly master. A few weeks ago, an online survey asked tens of thousands of people to suggest what they think are the most beautiful words in the English language. I must say, I think I quite agree with the words that kept showing up. . So here are the 32 English words considered the most beautiful.

SOURCE:::: input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

Riddles For the Weekend….

Riddle Time: 12 Challenging Brainteasers

Get ready to put on your thinking cap. It’s time to rack your brain with these 12 riddles. 
1. I am only useful when I’m full, yet I am always full of holes. What am I?

 

 

A sieve (used for straining food like pasta).

2. Fill in the blanks with four, four-letter words that all share the same first three letters.

Samuel the secretive Scotsman was dressed to ____ in his twill woven ____. Little did they know he had a ____ of marijuana stashed away as he innocently warmed his hands by the Scotch ____.

 

Kill, kilt, kilo, kiln

3. What is special about the number 854,917,632?

 

It is the numbers from one to nine in alphabetical order.

4. It stalks the countryside, with ears that cannot hear. What is it?

 

Corn

5. A word with horizontal symmetry is one whose letters are a mirror image of themselves. If you drew a horizontal line across the word and folded it over, it would overlap on itself. Examples: EXCEEDED and ICEBOX. What is the longest word with horizontal symmetry?

 

CHECKBOOK

6. I travel a lot and meet both the rich and the poor, but nobody knows where I am going next. I’m invisible but you can see what I do. Who or what am I?

 

The wind.

7. King Ferdinand has no immediate living relatives and decides to hold a contest to find a worthy successor for when he dies. He gives a seed to every contestant and explains that the person with the healthiest and most beautiful plant will win the throne.

When the final day of the contest arrives, the king finds hundreds of plants of all shapes and sizes. However, he ignores them and awards the throne to a girl holding a pot with only moist dirt. Why did she win?

 

King Ferdinand was a kind and trusting man and wanted to be sure he found an honest heir. He gave small pebbles to all the contestants, claiming they were seeds. Therefore, any contestant with a plant had switched their “seed” in order to win. Everyone but the girl had been dishonest.

8. What can go up a drainpipe down but not down a drainpipe up?

 

An umbrella.

9. What word could be added to all of these words?

  • apple
  • cone
  • lake
  • tree
  • ridge
  • nuts

 

Pine.

10. What goes up and down but doesn’t move?

 

A staircase.

11. Brandon was walking around at the carnival. A man called out from a booth and said, “If I can write your exact weight on this piece of paper, you have to pay me $50. If I can’t do it, I’ll pay you $50.”

Brandon checked the booth for a scale but saw nothing. He agreed. Since your weight can fluctuate by a pound or two, he decided that no matter what number the man wrote, he would just say he weighed a pound more or less. In the end, the man in the booth won the $50. How did he do it?

 

 

The man in the booth wrote the words, “Your exact weight” on the piece of paper.

 
12. You can have it, and be at it, but it never lasts forever. What is it?

 

 

Peace

H/T: riddlesbrainteasers.com

SOURCE:::: http://www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Image of the Day… ” Return of Expedition 42 to Earth ” …

The Soyuz TMA-14M spacecraft is seen as it lands with International Space Station Expedition 42 commander Barry Wilmore of NASA, Alexander Samokutyaev of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) and Elena Serova of Roscosmos near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan. The landing took place on the evening of Wednesday, March 11 in the U.S, and early in the morning on Thursday, March 12, in Kazakhstan.

The three crew members returned to Earth after a 167-day mission on the orbital outpost that included hundreds of scientific experiments and several spacewalks to prepare the orbiting laboratory for future arrivals by U.S. commercial crew spacecraft.

SOURCE:::: http://www.nasa.gov

Natarajan

 

The Origin of the Phrase” jump on the Bandwagon…” !!!

Today I found out the origin of the phrase “jump on the bandwagon.”

bandwagon

For those not familiar, when you jump on the bandwagon, it means you begin supporting a hobby, idea, person, etc. after it has become popular or successful.

The word “bandwagon” is the rather unimaginative name for a wagon that carried a circus band. It first appeared in print in the equally unimaginatively titled book The Life of P.T. Barnum, Written by Himself, which was published in 1855:

At Vicksburg we sold all our land conveyances excepting our horses and the ‘band wagon.’

P.T. Barnum is the famous circus owner and showman Phineas T. Barnum. Back then, circuses were known for their showy parades through town before they set up. These parades attracted villagers’ attention and acted as an easy marketing ploy to get people to go to the circus. Bandwagons were part of those parades. Bright and ornamental, they were impossible to miss.

Toward the end of the 1800s, people had caught on to the fact that bandwagons snared an audience’s attention. Politicians started to use bandwagons in parades through towns on their campaign trails. It’s believed that Dan Rice, a famous circus clown, was the first to rent out his bandwagon to a political campaign.

As a campaign became more and more successful, other people and politicians sought to rent seats on the bandwagon and ride it through town. In doing so, they received face time with the public and believed that the success of the original campaign would rub off on them.

There are records of the phrase used in political speeches throughout the 1890s, usually in the form of warning potential voters not to “jump on the opponent’s bandwagon in haste.” Because of the negative connotations associated with the phrase, many didn’t admit to having a bandwagon of their own despite it becoming common.

Over time, the phrase stopped meaning the literal riding of a bandwagon and started to refer to jumping into anything that was popular. It’s unclear exactly when this transition occurred, but Teddy Roosevelt made a reference to it in Letters, 1899, (later published in 1951):

When I once became sure of one majority they tumbled over each other to get aboard the band wagon.

SOURCE:::: http://www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

This Date in Science…13 March…Discovery Of Uranus…Completely By Accident !!!

March 13, 1781. The 7th planet – Uranus – was discovered on this date, completely by accident. British astronomer William Herschel was performing a survey of all the stars that were of magnitude 8 – in other words, too faint to see with the eye – or brighter. That’s when he noticed an object that moved in front of the star background over time, clearly demonstrating it was closer to us than the distant stars. At first he thought he had found a comet, but later realized this object was a new planet in orbit around our sun – the first discovered since ancient times.

Later, it turned out, astronomers learned they had observed Uranus as far back as 1690. But it was Herschel who first realized the true nature of this distant light in our sky.

William Herschel's famous 40-foot telescope,  constructed between 1785 and 1789 at Observatory House in Slough, England. It was the largest telescope in the world for 50 years.   Image via Wikimedia Commons.

William Herschel’s famous 40-foot telescope, constructed between 1785 and 1789 at Observatory House in Slough, England. It was the largest telescope in the world for 50 years. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

Herschel proposed to name the object Georgium Sidus, after King George III, but those outside of Britain weren’t pleased with the idea. Instead, on the suggestion of astronomer Johann Elert Bode, astronomers decided to follow the convention of naming planets for the ancient gods. Uranus – an ancient sky god, and one of the earliest gods in Greek mythology – was sometimes called Father Sky and was considered to be the son and husband of Gaia, or Mother Earth.

King George III was still pleased, however. As a result of Herschel’s discovery, the king knighted him and appointed him to the position of court astronomer. The pension attached let Herschel quit his day job as a musician and focus his full attention on observing the heavens. He went on to discover several moons around other gas giant planets. He also compiled a catalog of 2,500 celestial objects that’s still in use today.

Voyager 2 gave us our first close-up image of the planet Uranus in 1986.  Its images showed a featureless gas giant world.

Voyager 2 gave us our first close-up image of the planet Uranus in 1986. Its images showed a featureless gas giant world.

In 1977, astronomers using the Kuiper Airborne Observatory made another serendipitous discovery – of rings around the planet Uranus. That discovery made Uranus the second known ringed planet in our solar system.

The closest we humans have come to Uranus was in 1986, when the Voyager 2 spacecraft swung by the planet. At its closest, the spacecraft came within 81,500 kilometers (50,600 miles) of Uranus’s cloudtops on Jan. 24, 1986. Voyager 2 radioed thousands of images and voluminous amounts of other scientific data on the planet, its moons, rings, atmosphere, interior and the magnetic environment surrounding Uranus.

Bottom line: British astronomer William Herschel discovered the planet Uranus – first planet to be discovered since ancient times – on March 13, 1781.

source::::: http://www.earthskynews.org

Natarajan