Image of the Day…Mammatus Clouds…!!!

Mammatus clouds over central Texas

Mammatus clouds don’t keep extending downward to form tornadoes, as some believe. But they do come before, during or after severe weather.

Captured on Memorial Day weekend 2015 Anne-Marie in Georgetown, Texas.  Visit her Facebook page:  Trees

In and around EarthSky’s hometown of Austin, Texas – and, in fact, up into Oklahoma and other parts of the central U.S. – there was some catastrophically bad weather over the Memorial Day weekend. Those who look skyward also noticed lots of mammatus clouds over a period of several days, like these clouds captured by Anne Marie in Georgetown, Texas. These ominous but beautiful clouds can appear around, before or after storms. Anne Marie appears to have caught them as the clouds were breaking up, just as the sun was going down. She wrote:

Mammatus clouds over Georgetown, Texas.

May 25, 2015.

These beautiful pearls formed at the end of a gritty day of weather across Central Texas.

Source…..www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

 

Meet Abhishek Singhania …an IIT Madras Graduate who works with Farmers…

Indrani Roy/Rediff.com meets Abhishek Singhania who left a bright career at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mumbai, to work in a food security project at Khentia village in Bengal, as a research fellow.

Abhishek Singhania with farmers

Image: Abhishek Singhania (standing extreme right clockwise). Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Abhishek Singhania is a strange young man. Graduating in metallurgy from Indian Institute of Technology – Madras in 2012, he got himself a dream job of a consultant at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mumbai. But unlike the youngsters of his age, the cushy job that fetched him Rs 90K per month failed to satisfy him.

Instead, he wanted to dedicate his time to a job more meaningful, an endeavour that would have a direct and positive impact on the growth of India.

“I should be working with farmers instead,” Abhishek told himself.

A few months into his job at PwC, he was sent to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, for six months on an assignment.

“There was no problem with the consultant’s job as such but an inner voice kept pestering me that I was not meant for this. I needed to do something else,” Abhishek told rediff.com.

“I started thinking deeply about my career and my future.

“I was not sure if I would continue with my job at PwC or join the automobile sector (I am passionate about cars) or agriculture,” Abhishek said.

“It was around this time that I started preparing for Graduate Record Examinations but soon lost interest.

“For some time, I have been reading reports of farmers’ suicides and they have perturbed me a lot,” Abhishek said.

“I thought if technical people like us can train these farmers, it can lead to better production and lesser suicides”.

Abhishek returned to India from Jeddah in June 2014.

He took a break from office and visited Temathani village near Kharagpur.

“I met the farmers there and discussed the problems that they face,” Abhishek said.

“I was taken aback by their sheer lack of knowledge,” he said.

“I could understand that they did not know how to treat the soil with right kind of fertilisers for higher production.

“I also realised that the farmers did not know how to save their crops from pests.

Abhishek Singhania (extreme right clockwise) experimenting with biochar

Abhishek Singhania (standing extreme right clockwise) experimenting with biochar. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Abhishek Singhania

“I came to know that they were often using the wrong pesticides that caused more harm to the soil than good.

One fine morning, Abhishek came to IIT Kharagpur from Temathani.

“I knew that this IIT alone has an agriculture department and food technology schools.

“I heard from a cousin of mine, who is a student here, that Dr PBS Bhadoria and Dr Dilip Kumar Swain, were doing a food security project here.

“When I met them they said a project is expected to take off soon in a village nearby.

They, however, could not give me a timeline. ”

In December, Abhishek resigned from PwC and went to Pondicherry to take a look at some organic farms and startups there.

The biochar is made

Image: The biochar is made. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Abhishek Singhania

“I was integrating within me all the necessary information about agriculture,” Abhishek said.

He revisited Kharagpur IIT in February end and after a second round of discussion with Bhadoria and Swain, he decided to join, as a research fellow, the duo’s Food Security Project at Khentia village located 10 km from the institute.

The fact that his stipend would now be a meagre 15K a month did not deter Abhishek even once.

“Rather, I was happy to have finally made up my mind”, he told rediff.com.

Now, Abhishek spends hours with farmers of Khentia village, teaching them essential skills of farming.

Under this project, a barren 14 acres of land has been ‘adopted’ from 14 farmers by the IIT team.

In a collaborative approach, wherein the farmers give free labour and the IIT team the technical knowhow, the land has been treated and made ready for cultivation.

Irrigation system has been revamped and the farmers can now produce rice for their own consumption (earlier they needed to buy rice from the market).

Riding on the success of abundant production of rice, Abhishek’s team has taught the Khentia farmers to produce soyabean, sweet corn, peanut and sesame.

“Target of our project is to make these farmers self-sufficent so that apart from growing their food themselves, they can enhance their income by selling the cash crops to the retail market.

The IIT team plans to give hands on training to the farmers only for a year and once the team feels that the farmers are confident and skilled enough to run the show themselves, the team will move out to other villages of Kharagpur to replicate the same project there.

Abhishek Singhania with a dhenki

Abhishek Singhania poses with a dhenki, machine used by rural folks to produce rice from paddy. Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Abhishek leads the team of trainers from the IIT that keeps visiting the farmers regularly.

At present, he has his hands full making a sustainable farming-cum-marketing model so that once the IIT team leaves Khentia, the farmers there can do everything on their own.

“We want the farmers to form a cooperative that will work towards their interests and well being,” Abhishek told rediff.com.

Abhishek is also making environment-friendly biochar and biogas for the Khentia farmers.

“Generally the farmers burn the plant residue on the field after harvesting. In the process, most of the carbon from the plants get transferred back to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, methane, etc thereby increasing global warming,” Abhishek said.

“Instead, if we do pyrolysis in controlled conditions, we can retain a substantial amount of the carbon in the final product (biochar).

“Biochar increases soil fertility and has many other advantages.

“Our primary aim is to develop an ideal setup for producing biochar which should be simple so that farmers can operate it, it should be inexpensive and should have high efficiency.

“Till now we have done five experiments with 3 different set ups.”

“If my experiments on these products is successful here, I’ll carry them to other villages as well,” he told rediff.com.

As he guided us around the Khentia village in the scorching May heat, sweats covered Abhishek’s forehead.

But his smile spoke for itself how much he enjoyed this new assignment of his.

Isn’t this rigorous farm work tiring?

“Na didi, it’s fun. I had always dreamt about doing something meaningful in life. After a long wait, I have got an opportunity to follow my dream,” said a beaming Abhishek.

Abhishek Singhania poses with a rice storage container

Abhishek Singhania poses with a rice storage container. Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Once his research at IIT-Kharagpur gets over, Abhishek wants to set up a firm that will lend technical assistance towards integrated farming.

After completing his research, Abhishek wants to travel to villages all over Bengal to interact with farmers and share his experience and knowledge with them.

“At present, with the current population, implementation of National Food Security Act requires 61 metric tones of foodgrains annually,” said Abhishek.

“Moreover, India needs to double its agricultural productivity by 2040 to reduce the supply and demand gap.”

These statistics, Abhishek said, outline the need for research in the field of food production.

“I am happy to be a small part of this gigantic research,” he told rediff.com.

Asked if he missed his high profile career at PwC, the young farming enthusiast said, “Not in the least. I am being true to my soul. I have transformed my passion into my profession.

“All that I ever wanted was to have a car of my own. I drive a Hyundai i10 now. What more can I ask for?” Abhishek said.

“For the entire six months of my stay at Jeddah, I stayed at Radisson. But here at Kharagpur IIT, I am staying in a small hostel room with a common washroom.

“The huge difference between my living arrangements here and there never bother me for a minute.

“We get only one life. Why waste it chasing frivolous things?”

Indrani Roy / Rediff.com in Kharagpur

Source………….www.rediff.com
Natarajan
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” ‘Ugly Indian’ is Cleaning up Dirty Cities….”…An Inspiring story…

Bangalore is inspiring people across India to transform the cities they live in, one mile at a time, finds Indulekha Aravind.

It is perhaps the best kind of uprising – without banners, newsroom debates or vehement netas.

Instead, what it does have is a simple but effective slogan: “Kaam Chalu, Mooh Bandh!” (roughly translated as ‘Stop Talking, Start Working’).

The residents of Bangalore might be familiar with the work of The Ugly Indian, an anonymous group born in 2010 with the aim of making the city cleaner.

When you pass a recently painted red wall near a surprisingly clean pavement, for instance, you know it is their handiwork. Four years after the movement kicked off, it seems to be inspiring similar “risings” in other cities and spin-offs in Bangalore itself.

Image: A subway cleaned and decorated with paintings. Photograph, courtesy: The Ugly Indian

On August 15 this year, a group of 200-odd volunteers turned up at MG Road in Bangalore to create a ‘model mile’ by cleaning up the pavement, planting saplings and painting road dividers.

The volunteers were employees of various companies in Bangalore who had come forward to take part in Adopt A Mile, an initiative launched by five friends working in tech companies.

“We were wondering what we could do to change things in the cities. So, we decided to take a stand in their transformation at an individual level by bringing about change one mile at a time. We talked to the companies where we work as well as CEOs of other firms to get their employees involved in adopting a mile,” says A Ramachandran, one of the founders and an executive in an IT company.

They are currently in talk with few companies to include them in the movement . They could either beautify and maintain the mile or even build skywalks and other infrastructure in partnership with civic agencies.

“We are not talking about picking up garbage or filling potholes, which is the job of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike,” says Ramachandran.

By involving companies, the group also hopes to bring in the rigour of the corporate sector into the programme by publishing quarterly results on the website www.adoptamile.in and by conducting audits of the adopted stretches of road independently.

“For instance, if a company is found to have failed in its responsibility in maintaining that “mile” the agreement with it can be cancelled,” explains Ramachandran. The volunteering could also become a team-building exercise for the employees who participate. The entire effort, he says, has been in partnership with The Ugly Indian.

And it’s not just Bangalore. On Friday, photographs appeared on The Ugly Indian Facebook page about ‘Rajahmundry Rising’, where a ‘spot’ in the Andhra town filled with garbage, near a decrepit wall which was being used as a urinal, has been transformed into a clean, bright quarter with a bench and potted plants.

The Facebook page of the Andhra Pradesh group chronicles its efforts through at least a couple of other ‘spot fixes’ and it would warm the cockles of even a cynic’s heart.

In August, it was Mumbai’s turn, when a bunch of enthusiasts got busy on a Sunday morning and spruced up, what seems to have been, an eyesore in Worli. Bhubaneswar too has a group that calls itself “Stopp Us”, reports Times of India.

It has already cleaned up four walls in the city and have plans for many more. “Risings’ have also taken place in Vijayawada, Meerut, Salem, Gurgaon, Kanpur and Visakhapatnam, among others.

The Ugly Indian started off with a simple enough premise. If you want to make a change, begin by doing something instead of just sitting back and blaming the government or “the system”.

The modus operandi is ‘spot fixes’, where a particular area in a city is chosen and a group of volunteers, usually brought together via email, turn up to clean and beautify it. People in the vicinity are asked to monitor it to help ensure it is maintained. As a volunteer at two such spot-fixes a couple of years ago, I can vouch that the emphasis is on working, not socialising.

 

The entire operation was supervises by a small group of people, who also chipped in.Volunteers are given gloves, masks, paint and brushes and roll up their sleeves and plunge in.

After cleaning and painting, small dustbins, or TereBins, are placed so that litterbugs no longer have an excuse. The materials are bought with Rs 100-200 contributed by each volunteer at the spot fix, usually numbering 10 to 15.

Unfortunately, The Ugly Indian’s “moo bandh” principle also extends to media queries and email requests for interviews were met with “we do not respond to the media”. This would also be in keeping with its principle of anonymity and no single person taking centre stage.

 

A wi-fi hotspot & pavement cafe at a former dirty spot on MG Road, Bangalore

But the group does add: “All we can say is that all the growth around the country is totally spontaneous and ‘inspired’ – nobody from Bangalore is going to other cities, or even talking to anyone.”

The exception seems to have been an ‘Ask Me Anything’ on Reddit, where a volunteer clarified: “We are trying to move from an underground guerilla-type movement to one where citizens collaborate with elected officials.”

Requests for “spot fixes” and “risings” have been coming in even from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and a few other countries, adding “Our only agenda is to convert despair to hope.”

To volunteer for a spot fix or learn how to organise one, send an email to theuglyindian@gmail.com. More details on www.facebook.com/theugly.indian

Indulekha Aravind ln  

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

 

Pax Pulling off a Plane Window …!!!

IF you’re a terrified flyer, maybe you shouldn’t watch this video of a man casually pulling off a plane window of an Airbus A320.

http://www.news.com.au/video/id-swNzRhdTpnqENBdqRyvvgexmeOfpoYvp/Airline-passenger-holds-window-pane-in-his-hands-after-it-falls-off

Brazilian Eduardo Caram was waiting in his seat before his flight departed when he discovered a panel had come loose.

 

He immediately alerted an air steward, who said it was not a problem.

The video of the incident has been viewed almost 50,000 times.

“I talked to the flight attendant and he said there was no problem because it is only a protection,” Caram cstated in the video’s caption.

The Mirror reports that the TAM Airlines flight from Rio de Janeiro to Sao Paulo in Brazil took off regardless.

The airline is yet to make an official statement.

Plane scare ... The man holds a plane window pane after 'removing it with ease'. Picture:

Plane scare … The man holds a plane window pane after ‘removing it with ease’. Picture: Youtube/Eduardo CaramSource: YouTube

Source…..www.news.com.au

Natarajan

World’s Biggest Hotel to Open in Mecca…in 2017…

The hotel will feature four helipads and 12 towers. Picture: Dar Al-Handasah (Shair and P

The hotel will feature four helipads and 12 towers. Picture: Dar Al-Handasah (Shair and Partners) Source: Supplied

MOVE over Vegas, the biggest hotel in the world is set to open in a different desert.

Towering over the holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia, the Abraj Kudai hotel will feature 10,000 rooms, 70 restaurants and four helipads.

Set to open in 2017, the project will cost around $4.5 billion and has been designed to look like a desert fortress.

The mammoth hotel will be 45 stories high, made up of 12 towers standing on top of a 10 storey podium. There will be a shopping mall, food courts, a bus station and a huge ballroom to service the millions of people that converge on the city for the annual Hajj pilgrimage.

Five of the floors will be strictly off limits to guests and reserved entirely for the Saudi royal family.

Some critics worry about the destruction of Saudi Arabia’s heritage. Picture: Dar Al-Hand

Some critics worry about the destruction of Saudi Arabia’s heritage. Picture: Dar Al-Handasah (Shair and Partners)Source: Supplied

Irfan Al-Alawi, director of the Islamic Heritage Research Foundation, told The Guardian that the hotel was proof the city was “turning into Mecca-hattan”, and lamented the little heritage left in Saudi Arabia’s holy cities.

The hotel will be built in the Manafia district, a few kilometres south of the Grand Mosque, and is funded by the Saudi Ministry of Finance and designed by the Dar Al-Handasah group.

The Saudi royal family has five levels dedicated entirely to them. Picture: Dar Al-Handas

The Saudi royal family has five levels dedicated entirely to them. Picture: Dar Al-Handasah (Shair and Partners) Source:Supplied

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

A Lion on the Receiving End ….!!!

 

The lion, the prey and the tree.

The lion, the prey and the tree. Source: Getty Images

HERE’S a real-life cowardly lion!

A man on safari holiday captured these amazing images of a big cat turning from hunter to hunted as it fled from stampeding water buffalo and climbed a tree for safety in Kenya.

The lion had been stalking a newborn calf but soon realised it was outnumbered by a protective herd.

“All of a sudden, literally out of nowhere, a male lion sprang out from his hiding place hightailing for a nearby tree with the buffalo now starting to give chase,” said Charles Comyn, 63, who was visiting the Maasai Mara National Reserve with his wife. “It didn’t take long before the lion had scrambled up the tree, fearing for its life.”

Hold on tight!

Hold on tight! Source: Getty Images

The water buffalo weren’t about to give the lion a free pass, and waited out the big scaredy cat as it gradually lost its grip on the branch.

“The marauding buffalo circled below, smelling the lion,” Comyn told Barcroft Media. “They were not going to let it get away”

Talk about clingy.

Talk about clingy. Source: Getty Images

As it lost balance on the tree, the lion summoned one more burst of courage.

The lion let out a mighty snarl, jumped off the tree and bolted to safety. It sprinted toward Comyn and then dashed into nearby brush with its life.

Cowardly Lion Climbs A Tree To Escape Herd Of Buffalo

My, how the tables have turned. Source: Getty Images

“It was a hair-tingling moment,” Comyn said. “The lion could not hang for long — one could really sense that he was almost doomed — so he had to make another attempt to flee.”

It was only after the dust settled, that Comyn realised this showdown was over a newborn calf.

At last, he breaks free.

At last, he breaks free. Source: Getty Images

“Very quickly the buffalo resumed their early morning grazing. It was only then that we spotted the newly born calf in the middle of the herd, which they obviously had been protecting from the lion who possibly had spotted a potential ’light‘ breakfast,” the holiday-maker said.

“What a magical, unforgettable and, as we later learned, unheard of occurrence.”

The “King of the Jungle” was left with his tail between his legs after escaping the herd.

The “King of the Jungle” was left with his tail between his legs after escaping the herd. Source: Getty Images

This story originally appeared on the NY Post.

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

 

How this Aussie Girl Won Sir Richard Branson Over …

Isley Hermansen has dyslexia. Her video about the condition inspired billionaire Richard

Isley Hermansen has dyslexia. Her video about the condition inspired billionaire Richard Branson, who also has dyslexia. Source: Supplied

WHAT does this 12-year-old girl from northern NSW have in common with Sir Richard Branson, the charismatic entrepreneur with a net worth of $US4.9 billion?

They both have dyslexia.

It’s an unlikely pairing, but Isley Hermansen caught the attention of the Virgin Group founder through a heartwarming video she made about the struggle dyslexics face.

Isley started high school this year and was struggling to keep up in class, her mother Julie Hermansen told news.com.au.

“She was suffering a lot from anxiety, which goes hand in hand with dyslexia, and I was trying to think of a way to build her self esteem and empower her,” Julie said.

One Saturday afternoon, Isley Googled ‘famous dyslexics’ and discovered a long rollcall of high profile men and women, including Stephen Hawking, Cher, Roald Dahl and Jamie Oliver.

“She decided to put all these famous faces together in a PowerPoint presentation. She did all the animation and everything on her own, we found a powerful song and we put the video on YouTube,” said Julie.

In the video, Isley explains what it’s like to live with the condition.

“Right now it seems like you have got it all over us … because being in a classroom is not our strong point. Sitting for tests, writing essays and reading are all a struggle for us. You don’t see us put our hand up for answers much, and we might try and hide in the classroom,” she writes.

“One day I’m going to fly like a dyslexic,” the video says, accompanied with images of Branson and other dyslexic celebrities including Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom and Michael Jordan.

Julie shared the video on a dyslexic support Facebook group and was overwhelmed with the response.

“We were contacted by other families who said they cried when they saw it. It got shared in the US and the UK. We got so much feedback from people saying they found it inspirational and from teaching advocates who wanted to use it in schools,” she said.

 

Sir Richard Branson is the UK’s seventh richest man. Photo: Rob Kim.

Sir Richard Branson is the UK’s seventh richest man. Photo: Rob Kim. Source: Getty Images

Julie and Isley then went “went straight to the top” and contacted Branson’s team around five weeks ago.

“We didn’t think we’d get anywhere. We thought, ‘Oh well, we tried’. But then last week I received an email from Richard’s team and it all spiralled from there. It’s incredible to have his support and to have the issue out there in the public eye.”

Branson shared the video on his Facebook page and wrote a blog post about Isley.

‘Every now and then you come across something so inspiring that you can’t help but share it. This was certainly the case with this wonderful idea from 12-year-old Isley, who has severe dyslexia,” Branson wrote.

“Isley’s mum wrote to me saying that one of the main problems with dyslexia is a misunderstanding of the condition, which leads to people feeling ashamed to be dyslexic.

“She said that some kids prefer to fail rather than admit to the shame of being dyslexic. While awareness about dyslexia is growing, it can still hold so many people back.

The note that inspired Richard Branson

sley’s letter to Sir Richard Branson. Source: Supplied

“But with videos like Isley’s, the word is spreading that dyslexics can ‘Shake the Shame’ and see all of the positives of being dyslexic. I see my condition as a gift, not a disability. It has helped me learn the art of delegation, focus my skills, and work with incredible people,” he wrote.

Isley says she’s stoked with the worldwide response to her video.

“It makes me feel very special,” she told news.com.au. “She’s really happy,” her mum added.

Julie says dyslexia is a “hidden disability”.

“There’s no funding for it. Teachers aren’t trained to deal with it and they don’t know how to identify it.

“It’s got nothing to do with intelligence — Richard Branson is a highly intelligent man. It’s just that dyslexics learn differently. They need to be taught differently and we need the school system to change,” she said.

Dyslexia is hereditary and affects an estimated 10 per cent of all Australians, according to the Australian Dyslexia Association.

Source……..www.news.com.au

natarajan

“The Amazing town Home to thousands of Buddhist Monks and Nuns…”

Talk about crammed. Thousands of red houses are jammed together at the Seda Larong Wuming\

Talk about crammed. Thousands of red houses are jammed together at the Seda Larong Wuming Buddhist Institute in China. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

STACKED one on top of the other, thousands of red houses completely cover the hillside they are built on. At around 4000 metres above sea level, these log cabins are the homes of thousands of Buddhist monks and nuns.

Founded in 1980, the Seda Larong Wuming Buddhist Institute in the Larung valley, Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, China, is the largest centre for the study of Tibetan Buddhism in the world and is home to around 40,000 people.

40,000 Buddhist monks and nuns live at the Institute. Photo: William Yu / Solent News

40,000 Buddhist monks and nuns live at the Institute. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Photographer William Yu spent time with them and photographed their daily lives and their homes. He said, “It’s an awesome experience to photograph here, the landscape is shockingly beautiful and unique. The people, most of them monks and nuns, are friendly.

“It’s a remote place and tough to get to, but worth all the efforts to be there. I wish I could have stayed there longer.”

The largest centre for the study of Tibetan Buddhism in the world. Photo: William Yu / So

The largest centre for the study of Tibetan Buddhism in the world. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Mr Yu observed many of the monks’ and nuns’ daily rituals such as the need to remove shoes before entering a building. He said, “It’s unhygienic to wear shoes indoors and if everyone wears shoes in the hall, it quickly becomes dirty and it may damage or mark the floor coverings. Buddhists like to have things last for a long time.

“While Buddhists are pretty easygoing and will let most things slide, you will simply not be allowed in wearing shoes.

“It is also a mark of respect and simply a cultural and religious convention of etiquette. And it is in their monastic code for monks and nuns that they are not allowed to teach Buddhism to anyone wearing shoes. Although this technicality is widely ignored, it has influenced the practices of the devout.”

Photo: William Yu / Solent News

Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

All of the monks and nuns wear traditional Buddhist monastic robes.

Mr Yu, from San Francisco, said: “The robe is so versatile that it can be used not just as clothing, but as things like a blanket and a groundsheet. It is easy to clean and repair and is perhaps the oldest style of dress still in fashion after 2,500 years.”

All of the monks and nuns wear traditional monastic robes. Photo: William Yu / Solent New

All of the monks and nuns wear traditional monastic robes. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

A sight to be seen. Photo: William Yu / Solent News

A sight to be seen. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Buddhist monks and nuns are not allowed to wear shoes indoors. Photo: William Yu / Solent

Buddhist monks and nuns are not allowed to wear shoes indoors. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Photo: William Yu / Solent News

Photo: William Yu / Solent News

Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

 

Photo: William Yu / Solent NewsPhoto: William Yu / Solent News

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

The Story Behind this Greatest Photograph in Sports History…

Photographer Neil Leifer poses next to his iconic image of Muhammad Ali.

Photographer Neil Leifer poses next to his iconic image of Muhammad Ali. Source: Getty Images

FIFTY years ago today Muhammad Ali knocked out Sonny Liston in the first round of their heavyweight title rematch — and Neil Leifer took a photograph.

It was that simple but in so many other ways it wasn’t.

Earlier this year American writer Dave Mondy published fascinating research into arguably the most iconic image in sports history and revealed it would have never been taken if not for a series of extremely fortunate events.

Perhaps the most comical contributing factor to Leifer’s historic snap was he was only in position to take it because a senior photographer had shunted him to that side of the ring. Mondy revealed Sports Illustrated’s Herb Scharfman pulled rank on Leifer — who at the time was just 22 — to claim a spot by the judges’ table that he felt gave him more room to manoeuvre during the fight.

But when Liston fell it left him staring at Ali’s back — you can see him positioned between the champ’s legs in Leifer’s photograph.

“It didn’t matter how good Herbie was that day,” Leifer told Mondy. “He was in the wrong seat.”

14/4/04 D/I - Copypic/Long from Muhammad Ali's book - Cassius Clay (later known as Muhammad Ali) stands over fallen challenge...

How’s the view from there, Herb? Source: News Limited

As for the junior photographer? He was positioned perfectly.

“If I were directing a movie and I could tell Ali where to knock him down and Sonny where to fall, they’re exactly where I would put them,” said Leifer, who went on to become a filmmaker.

Leifer also benefited from what in those days was a risky decision to shoot in colour. There was another photographer, the AP’s John Rooney, sitting to Leifer’s left who also took a pretty good photograph that night.

Rooney’s shot was also widely distributed after the fight.

Rooney’s shot was also widely distributed after the fight. Source: AP

At first glance it looks a lot like Leifer’s (one key difference is Scharfman is positioned to the left of Ali, not between his legs) but when it comes to colour and clarity there’s no comparison.

Interestingly, Leifer’s image wasn’t immediately held in the same esteem that it is today. He actually captured three sensational shots that night and it was another that featured on the first page of a four-page spread of the fight in Sports Illustrated.

“I will never have a night like that ever,” Leifer said. “I mean I’ve never had another one like that. The fight went two minutes and eight seconds and I got three great pictures.”

His snap of Ali standing over Liston was on page four.

Why his ringside angle was the one printed on posters for years to come was because it became the ideal illustration of Ali in his prime.

“This photo shows Ali at the height of his powers,” Leifer told Mondy. “People wanted to remember him at his best.”

But by no means can we put the photograph down to dumb luck. Leifer enjoyed one of the most celebrated careers in sports photography because he had a stroke of genius.

As a boy growing up in New York he would gain free admission to Giants football games by pushing the wheelchairs of handicapped patrons into the stadium and then position himself on the field with the photographers. On his 16th birthday he took several shots of the game winning touchdown in the 1958 NFL championship game and sold them to Sports Illustrated — where he received a job and became a boy wonder.

Leifer would go on to photograph nine summer Olympics, four soccer World Cups, the first 12 Super Bowls and every major heavyweight title fight since 1959. He photographed Ali on 60 different occasions, including all of his biggest fights and 30 one-on-one studio sessions.

But there’s one image that will be remembered forever.

 

Embedded image permalink

Muhammad Ali and photographer Neil Leifer, who took the famous picture from the Ali-Liston fight.

Source…………………..www.news.com.au and /twitter.com/AstonishingPix

Natarajan