Nice one to watch..
Source::: You tube
Natarajan
Nice one to watch..
Source::: You tube
Natarajan



US President Barack Obama might be one of the world’s most powerful man but he is no spelling champion as he failed to spell two words correctly given to him by this year’s Indian—American co—champions of the prestigious Spelling Bee contest.
“He (the President) is very humble. I think he (Obama) is appropriate for the job,” Sriram Hathway from New York told PTI in an interview, moments after he and co—champion of Scripps National Spelling Bee Ansun Sujoe from Texas met the US President at his Oval Office yesterday.
The two co-champions were accompanied by their proud parents in their interaction with Obama, who had invited them to the White House.
Soon after Sriram, 14, and Ansun, 13, were declared co-champions of this year’s Spelling Bee, Obama had tweeted, .
“Congrats to Ansun and Sriram, the incredible co-champs of the #ScrippsNationalSpellingBee. You make us all proud!“.
This was for the first time since 1962 that the annual spelling contest had ended in a tie.
“The President greeted us. He is very nice. He talked to us little bit. He gave us some advice. He also spelled a couple of words for us. Like the two words we misspelled —— corpsbruder and antigropelos. He did not spell them correctly.
But it was quite fun to hear it and to talk with the President and interact,” Ansun told PTI outside the White House after his memorable meeting with Obama.
During the spelling bee competition this year both Sriram and Ansun stumbled one time with the words “Corpsbruder (a close comrade)” and “Antigropelos (waterproof leggings)” respectively. And both passed on these words to Obama for spelling.
For the Spelling bee champions, this was not a surprise.
“He (tried) to spell those two words. We got to shake hands with him. He greeted us very humbly…very welcoming. It was an honour to meet him,” Sriram said.
Obama presented the two young Indian-Americans a book on Constitutional amendments in which he wrote: “Dream, Big Dreams.”
Keywords: Barack Obama, Indian-American Spelling bee champions, Spelling Bee contest
Source:::The Hindu.com
Natarajan

Hampi, India is spectacular. Picture: Hajo Schatz Source: Flickr
WHAT a veteran traveller you are.
You’ve already hiked up to Machu Picchu and climbed up and down the thousands of stairs of the Great Wall of China. We bet you’ve also stood awestruck before the Hagia Sofia and the Taj Majal.
You’re a regular Tony Wheeler, who co-founded the Lonely Planet travel company more than 40 years ago. Like you, he’s visited most of the world’s major wonders of the world and almost everything else worth seeing.
Wheeler and fellow world explorer Vince Michael, head of the Global Heritage FUND
, are always looking for hidden places to discover. By all means, they say, visit Angkor Wat and the Hagia Sophia. Go there and check them off your bucket list.

We all know about the Angkor Wat. There must be something else. Source: ThinkStock
But don’t you want to explore places everyone hasn’t already seen? That’s why CNNasked Michael and Wheeler, a Global Heritage FUND
board member, to pick some hidden gems to explore. These are spots where we hope you won’t always share your trip with thousands of other travellers.
“Who hasn’t seen pictures and read about Angkor Wat in Cambodia?” Wheeler said. “But Banteay Chhmar? It’s an unknown, and discovering an unknown is always a delight.
“Ditto for the Taj Mahal in India. Nobody’s disappointed when they see the Taj for the first time, but they’ve seen pictures of it. It’s popped up in TV programs and movies so often, that actually seeing it is no surprise. Hampi, however, is going to be totally unexpected.”
Let the crowds swarm the world’s best-known marvels. The lesser-known Global Heritage FUND
sites below can be found in the same countries — without the crowds. And two spots are still on Wheeler’s bucket list.
That’s right. Even the co-founder of Lonely Planet hasn’t yet been to these picks in India and Peru. Maybe you can beat him there.
Some of the more undiscovered spots require long and bumpy bus rides through the mountains, while others are located near LUXURY HOTELS
. No matter which you choose, they will knock your (hiking) boots off.

Hampi, India. Picture: Adam Jones Source: Flickr
Hampi, India
One of the most well-known and admired structures and examples of Indo-Islamic architecture in the world, the Taj Mahal is a marble mausoleum built in the 17th century by the Mughal emperor in memory of a beloved wife.
A site of equal interest lies in the south of India at Hampi, the last capital of the last Hindu Kingdom of Vijayanagar. A six-hour drive from Goa or Bangalore, Hampi was conquered by the Deccan Muslim confederacy in 1565 and plundered before it was abandoned.

Old temple between stones in Hampi. Source: ThinkStock
Still standing are several temples, including the Krishna temple complex, the Chandramauleshwar Temple and the temples of Ramachandra and Hazara Rama. There are also hundreds of other remains on the site, including stables, water structures, shrines and royal complexes.
“Hampi is a stunning complex of magnificent temples and other structures set along a dramatic riverine site,” says Michael, calling it “a dramatic testament to one of the earth’s oldest civilisations.”

Virupaksha temple in Hampi. Source: ThinkStock
Source::: news.com.au
Natarajan

Whenever I’m flying home into LaGuardia Airport, I request a window seat and willfully disobey the flight crew by keeping my point-and-shoot turned on. On this particular September afternoon, there was high cloud cover with one rogue cloud hovering ominously above Midtown Manhattan. I timed this exposure so that you can see straight down 42nd Street, all the way to the Hudson River. Greenpoint, Brooklyn and Long Island City, Queens are visible in the foreground, separated by Newtown Creek.
Other than adjusting some levels and adding a bit of a vignette, I didn’t manipulate or ‘shop the original capture.
Source::: Viral Nova Trending site
Natarajan

Photo By.. Rajat Bhargava
“It was a nice breezy shiny Sunday afternoon. We were playing in our community garden. Someone flicked the ball towards the community gardener who was watering plants and the ball got wet. After that it became a monster. The faster the ball was thrown, the more it flew like a rocket leaving trails of water behind; but the magic began when my elder brother started bowling.
His bowling made the ball spin and create a whirlpool of water sprayed in mid air. The moment he delivered the first ball, the closing fielder got a lovely shower because of the spinning wet ball. I looked at the spinning ball and thought to myself that it was a moment worth capturing. I grabbed my camera and asked my brother to spin the ball as fast he could when he bowled. After a few missed shots, I finally snapped that magical moment, where the ball was in sharp focus.”
Source::::
Natarajan

Photograph by :
“I was living in Munich a couple of years ago and had my mother and sister visiting me for a few days. We decided to brave the winter conditions and icy roads to drive to Neuschwanstein castle a couple of hours away. When we got there, the weather had completely cleared and we were REWARDED
with amazing ‘winter wonderland’ scenes everywhere we looked. Not only that, but the town was about as empty as I’d ever seen it – it is typically overrun with tourists.
This particular photo is one of my favorites from that trip as it seemed to capture the ‘fairy tale’ atmosphere of the place that day”.
source:::: viralnova trending
Natarajan
Watch this heart melting video of a golden retriever guarding and playing with this child who was born with down syndrome for a warm feeling that will accompany you today.
Source:::You Tube and Babamail site
Natarajan
An otherworldly take take on an earthly trend, as Rosetta poses with its comet, 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko.

Here is a Rosetta ‘selfie’ with comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko in background. It was taken by the CIVA camera – short for Comet Infrared and Visible Analyser – onboard the Philae Lander. This is the same camera that will be acquiring images from the surface of the comet itself, when the Philae lander sets down on the comet in November.
Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko was 50 kilometers / 31 miles away at the time of this image.
Two frames were taken and merged due to the high contrast.
Rosetta isn’t the first otherworldly object to get in on the earthly trend of selfies. NASA’s Mars Curiosity rover caught one, too, earlier this year.
Source:::Earth sky news
Natarajan
Source::::You Tube
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