அமெரிக்க வாழ் தமிழர் ஸ்ரீகாந்தின் தமிழ் பற்றும் பணியும் !!!!

கல்கி, உ.வே.சுவாமிநாதையர் ஆகியோரின் நூல்களை, முதியோரும், மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகளும் சிரமமின்றி கேட்கும் வண்ணம், அமெரிக்க வாழ் தமிழர், ஸ்ரீகாந்த், ஆடியோ புத்தகங்களை உருவாக்கி வருகிறார்.

சென்னையில் பிறந்து வளர்ந்த, ஸ்ரீகாந்த், 20 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன், அமெரிக்காவில் குடியேறினார். அங்கு, மென்பொருள் துறையில், திட்ட மேலாளராக வேலை பார்த்தபடி, தமிழ் மன்றத்தை நிறுவிய ஸ்ரீகாந்த், அதன் மூலம், தமிழ் தொடர்பான, பணிகளில் ஈடுபட்டு வருகிறார். குறிப்பாக, குழந்தைகளுக்கான இசை, கவிதை, பேச்சு, நாடகங்கள் போன்றவற்றை அரங்கேற்றி வருகிறார்.தற்போது, சான்பிரான்சிஸ்கோ பாரதி தமிழ் மன்றத்தின் தலைவராக பணிபுரிந்து வருகிறார். அங்கு உள்ள, ஸ்டான் போர்டு பல்கலை கழக வானொலியில், மூன்று மணி நேரம், தமிழ் சேவைக்காக ஒதுக்கப்படுகிறது. அதில், பாடல், நேர்காணல், நாடகம் என, பலவற்றை ஒலிபரப்பி வருகிறார். அவருடைய பணிகளில் முக்கியமானது, நாவல்களை, ஆடியோ புத்தகமாக தயாரிப்பது.கல்கியின், “பொன்னியின் செல்வன், சிவகாமியின் சபதம், பார்த்திபன் கனவு’ ஆகிய நாவல்களை, ஆடியோ புத்தகமாக வெளியிட்டுள்ளார். மேலும், உ.வே.சா.,வின், “என் சரித்திரம்’ நூலை, ஆடியோ புத்தகமாக மாற்றும் பணிகளில் ஈடுபட்டு வருகிறார்.”ஆடியோ புத்தகம் எனில், செய்தி வாசிப்பது போல் இருக்கும்’ என்ற, பொதுவான விமர்சனங்களை தாண்டி, தனித்துவத்துடன் உருவாக்கி இருக்கிறார்.நாவலின் நடையில், காட்சி விவரிப்புக்கு ஒரு குரலையும், கதாபாத்திரங்கள் பேசுவதற்கு ஒரு குரலையும் பயன்படுத்தி உள்ளார். கல்கியின், “பொன்னியின் செல்வன்’ நூலில் வரும், 40க்கும் மேற்பட்ட கதாபாத்திரங்களை, தானே பேசி அசத்தியுள்ளார். இது, 75 மணி நேரமாக ஓடும் ஆடியோ புத்தகமாக உள்ளது.

 

 

இதுகுறித்து, ஸ்ரீகாந்த் கூறியதாவது: துவக்கத்தில் துபாயில், மென்பொருள் துறையில் வேலை பார்த்த நான், அடுத்த, மூன்று ஆண்டுகளில், அமெரிக்கா சென்றேன். அங்கு, ஆயிரக்கணக்கான தமிழ் குடும்பங்கள் இருந்தன. அவர்கள், பல்வேறு சிக்கல்களை எதிர்கொள்ள வேண்டி இருந்தது; குறிப்பாக, மொழி பிரச்னை அதிகமாக இருந்தது. அடுத்த தலைமுறையினர், ஆங்கிலத்திலேயே எழுதி, பேசுவதால், தமிழ் மொழி மறந்தே போகும் அபாயம் இருந்தது.எனவே, இங்குள்ளவர்கள் தமிழை மறக்காமல் இருக்க, என்னால் இயன்ற வகையில், பணியாற்றி வருகிறேன்.என் வேலை, மிகவும் பரபரப்பானது; மனதளவில் அழுத்தம் கொடுக்க கூடியது. இதில், போதுமான ஓய்வு கிடைப்பது, சாத்தியமில்லாதது. இருந்தாலும், எனக்கு கிடைக்கும் ஓய்வு நேரத்தில், அடுத்த தலைமுறையினருக்கு சென்று சேரும் வகையில், தமிழ் சேவை செய்வது, சுகமானது.இவ்வாறு, அவர் கூறினார்.

இவருடைய ஆடியோவை கேட்ட, மாற்றுத் திறனாளிகளும், முதியோரும், இவருடைய சேவையை பாராட்டி, நேரிலும், மின்னஞ்சல் மூலமாகவும், பாராட்டி வருகின்றனர். அவருடைய இணைய முகவரி: http://www.tamilaudiobooks.com

 

source:::::Dinamalar .com

natarajan

Detroit …..Then and Now !!!

In its heyday, Detroit was a bustling city. The population spiked from just over 285,000 in 1900 to over 1.5 million by 1930.

In its heyday, Detroit was a bustling city. The population spiked from just over 285,000 in 1900 to over 1.5 million by 1930.

  • The legendary Hotel Pontchartrain had a reputation for luxury. It hosted several presidents, and auto industry executives were known to conduct business in the hotel bar.
Detroit

In the early 1900s, Detroit became the automotive capital of the world. Henry Ford founded Ford Motor Company in 1903, and the Dodge brothers and Chrysler also did business in Detroit.

In the early 1900s, Detroit became the automotive capital of the world. Henry Ford founded Ford Motor Company in 1903, and the Dodge brothers and Chrysler also did business in Detroit.

New residents flooded the city as demand for labor rose. And unions hugely improved working conditions for these workers, giving them 8-hour workdays and a minimum wage.

New residents flooded the city as demand for labor rose. And unions hugely improved working conditions for these workers, giving them 8-hour workdays and a minimum wage.

With the population boom came a thriving arts and culture scene. One of the top destinations in old-time Detroit was the Detroit Opera House.

With the population boom came a thriving arts and culture scene. One of the top destinations in old-time Detroit was the Detroit Opera House.

Detroit wasn't all about the auto industry. The Detroit River was a major hub for cargo shipping and passenger transport throughout the Great Lakes region.

Detroit wasn’t all about the auto industry. The Detroit River was a major hub for cargo shipping and passenger transport throughout the Great Lakes region Other big industries included stoves, ships, cigars, pharmaceuticals, beer, and rail car

Even if Detroit's winters were harsh, the scenery was beautiful.

Even if Detroit’s winters were harsh, the scenery was beautiful.

STATUS OF DETROIT TODAY ….

Detroit’s median home sale price is around $25,200, which is a huge jump from earlier in the year, when rock bottom was at $17,000 (though way down from its 2006 peak of $83,00).

But you can buy a house for cheaper than that. A ton cheaper, in fact.

Wayne County treasury officials are going door-to-door striking controversial deals with whomever is living inside about 1,500 of the more than 6,000 tax-foreclosed properties, according to Christine MacDonald of The Detroit News.

Even though last year’s unpaid property taxes total $17.6 million, the city says it prefers occupied homes to unsold lots and is willing to sell the properties for as little as $500.

The county treasury hasn’t made the list of properties available to the public yet since it’s attempting to first visit a majority of the homes that it believes to be occupied, MacDonald says.

In the meantime, we found at least 13 homes (and one retail space) that you can buy for less than $100. With some deals in the single digits, we posit that these are some of the cheapest houses you can find in America.

A 3-bedroom brick bungalow on Indiana St.

Price: $1

Square feet: 1,434

Zillow estimates this home’s worth at $24,600. The price was reduced $49 last December. The single family home also has a full basement.

A single family 3-bedroom on Garland St.

Price: $1

Square feet: 1,244

Zillow estimates this home’s worth at $28,800. It features a large living room and a one-car garage.

A single family 3-bedroom home on Hartford St.

Price: $1

Square feet: 859

Zillow estimates this home’s worth at $22,200.

A severely fire-damaged 3-bedroom ranch on Parkside St.

Price: $1

Square feet: 704

Zillow estimates this home’s worth at $23,700. This house last sold in July 2003 for $20,000.

A single family two-bedroom on Forestlawn St.

Price: $25

Square feet: 1,200

Zillow estimates this home’s worth at $25,000. It was recently listed.

A fire-damaged brick apartment on Nottingham Rd.

Price: $25

Square feet: 1,755

This house last sold in October 2008 for $12,000. The price has increased $1 since Dec. 16, 2011.

A fire-damaged 2-bedroom home on Virgil St.

Price: $50

Square feet: 900

A fire-damaged ranch-style home on Rockdale St.

Price: $50

Square feet: 695

A fire-damaged brick bungalow on Glenwood St.

Price: $75

Square feet: 862

A 3-bedroom home on West Chicago St.

Price: $50

Square feet: 972

A 3-bedroom home on Evanston St.

Price: $75

Square feet: 1,081

A single family fire-damaged home on Springwells St.

Price: $94

Square feet: 1,104

Zillow estimates this home’s worth at $37,700. This house last sold in July 2006 for $110,00.

BONUS: Retail space on Michigan Ave next to an oil change station

Price: $14

Square feet: 3,000

Zillow estimates this property’s worth at $175,600. It was recently listed.


SOURCE::::: BUSINESSINSIDER.COM

natarajan


Read more: 
http://www.businessinsider.com/detroit-houses-for-1-dollar-2012-2?op=1#ixzz2ZgDA0lJ9

Detroit , Once The Seat of ” Auto Power” , is Bankrupt Today !!!

The BBC’s Samira Hussain explains why Detroit has racked up such big debts

Detroit has become the largest US city ever to file for bankruptcy, with debts of at least $15bn (£10bn).

The city, once a symbol of US industrial power, is seeking protection from creditors who include public-sector workers and their pension funds.

Detroit has faced decades of problems linked to the decline of its industry.

The BBC’s Jonny Dymond in Washington says public services are in a state of near collapse and around 70,000 properties lie abandoned.

However, Mayor Dave Bing has vowed that public services will keep running and wages for public workers will be paid.

On Thursday, Michigan state-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr asked a federal judge to place the city into bankruptcy protection.

If it is approved, he would be allowed to liquidate city assets to satisfy creditors and pensions.

Detroit – known as Motor City for its once-thriving automobile industry – stopped unsecured-debt payments last month to keep the city running as Mr Orr negotiated with creditors.

He proposed a deal last month in which creditors would accept 10 cents for every dollar they were owed.

But two pension funds representing retired city workers resisted the plan. Thursday’s bankruptcy filing comes days ahead of a hearing that would have tried to stop the city from making such a move.


Detroit’s fall is complete. It is a depressing, if inevitable, end to a grotesque saga of decline, corruption and mismanagement. The irony is that the bankruptcy comes just as the private sector is picking up in Motor City. There is a buzz downtown, with commercial and residential occupancy at record levels.But public services are in a state of near collapse. Around 70,000 properties lie abandoned. Great swathes of the city need to be written off. For some, the announcement will come as some kind of relief. When I was last there business leaders told me that some kind of decision had to be taken about the city’s future – that agonising limbo was unsustainable.

The problem now is not just image. Bankruptcy looks bad. But Detroit is already a poster child for urban failure. Nor is it just about being locked out of capital markets – few would lend to the city anyway. But bankruptcy could take years to sort out, when Detroit’s real world problems need urgent remedies

Mr Orr suggested at the time there was a 50-50 chance of the city needing to file for bankruptcy. He also said the city’s long-term debt could be between $17bn and $20bn.

‘Only alternative’

At a press briefing on Thursday, Mr Orr said filing for bankruptcy was the “first step toward restoring the city”.

Alongside him, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing said that residents had to make a new start.

“I really didn’t want to go in this direction – but now that we are here, we have to make the best of it,” Mr Bing said.

The mayor also assured residents that the city would stay open and bills would be paid despite the filing.

“Paychecks for our city employees will continue, services will continue,” he said.

In a letter accompanying Thursday’s filing, Michigan’s Governor Rick Snyder, a Republican, said he had approved the request from Mr Orr to file for Chapter 9 bankruptcy.

“Only one feasible path offers a way out,” Gov Snyder said, adding that residents needed a clear exit from the “cycle of ever decreasing services”.

“The only way to do those things is to radically restructure the city and allow it to reinvent itself without the burden of impossible obligations.

Detroit’s mayor Dave Bing: “I really didn’t want to go in this direction, but now that we are here we have to make the best of it”

“It is clear that the financial emergency in Detroit cannot be successfully addressed outside of such a filing, and it is the only reasonable alternative that is available”.

Meanwhile, the White House said it was closely monitoring developments in Detroit.

“While leaders on the ground in Michigan and the city’s creditors understand that they must find a solution to Detroit’s serious financial challenge, we remain committed to continuing our strong partnership with Detroit as it works to recover and revitalise and maintain its status as one of America’s great cities,” said White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage.

Analysts say there are some concerns that businesses might ditch their operations in Detroit.

But, in the wake of the filing, US car company General Motors said it did not expect any impact on its operations, and hoped it would mark a “clean start” for Detroit.

Detroit in decline

  • Population has shrunk from a peak of 2 million in the 1950s to 713,000 today
  • Highest violent crime rate of any major US city, with 15,245 reported incidents in 2011
  • Some 78,000 abandoned and blighted buildings
  • 40% of street lights do not work
  • Only a third of the city’s ambulances are in service
  • Just 53% of owners paid their 2011 property taxes

Source: City of Detroit Proposal for Creditors

“GM is proud to call Detroit home and today’s bankruptcy declaration is a day that we and others hoped would not come,” the company said.

The city, once renowned as a manufacturing powerhouse, has struggled with its finances for some time, driven by a number of factors, including a steep population loss.

The murder rate is at a 40-year high and only one third of its ambulances were in service in early 2013.

Declining investment in street lights and emergency services have made it difficult to police the city.

And Detroit’s government has been hit by a string of corruption scandals over the years.

Between 2000-10, the number of residents declined by 250,000 as residents moved away.

Detroit is only the latest US city to file for bankruptcy in recent years.

In 2012, three California cities – Stockton, Mammoth Lakes and San Bernardino – took the step.

In 2011, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania tried to file for bankruptcy but the move was ruled illegal.

But Thursday’s move in Detroit is significantly larger than any of the earlier filings.

source:::::bbc.com

natarajan

How This Traveller Flies For Free !!!!!

You would be smiling too if you were flying for free. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.com

You would be smiling too if you were flying for free. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.com

IMAGINE not having to deal with airport security, spend hours waiting for your flight or put up with annoying passengers. Even better, what if you never had to pay for a flight again?

Sound too good to be true? Not for this woman.

Meet US travel writer Amber Nolan. After years of corporate work, Amber went backpacking around South America and vowed never to be chained to her desk again.

Amber came up with a radical plan for her life which involved taking the hitchhiking concept to a whole new level … in the skies. She decided to fly to all 50 US states, for free.

So she set up a website called JetHiking.com and began researching her idea. It wasn’t long before she was contacted by a private pilot in New York, who loved her plan and helped get her started.

Amber hitchhiked on her first plane in July last year, flying from Rochester, New York, to Nashville, Tennesse. Since then she’s made it to 31 states, and she won’t stop until she’s flown to them all.

So how does she manage to get pilots to fly her for free?

Amber gets in touch with the pilots of private jets and light aircraft who are planning an upcoming trip and asks to join them. She has to be completely flexible on the destination, date, and time.

“I find most pilots enjoy sharing their passion for aviation with people,” Amber told news.com.au. “They are adventurers too, and want to help be a part of my project so I can reach my goal. They think it’s a cool idea.”

Travelling on smaller planes has its upsides. She even gets to fly them sometimes.

“I always associate travelling on planes with commercial airlines. I think a lot of people do. Long lines, security scans, being miserable in general,” Amber said.

“Also, hitchhiking this way offers an opportunity to see the country from a different perspective that you will not find if you fly commercial airlines.

“We can do a lot of low flying and really see the landscape. Yesterday, I flew up the Hudson River parallel to the New York City skyline at about 1100 feet (335 metres) – just over the bridges and next to the Statue of Liberty.

“On the way to Georgia, I was able to experience some aerobatic rolls in the plane, and often the pilots will let me fly a little to practice – I want to get my license. On a seaplane, we can land on a small lake in the middle of nowhere.

“And when I land at some of these smaller airports, I feel like I am time-travelling to a ‘romantic era’ of aviation.”

Among the states she’s flown to are California, Texas, Arizona, Washington, Maine and Florida.

What about the challenges?

“It isn’t easy and there is a lot of waiting involved,” Amber warns. “I can’t really plan much since I often have no idea where I’m heading to next, and flights get cancelled all the time for weather (or anything really).

“I’ll land in an area and have to find a place to stay on a shoestring budget. The airports are often far away from any public transportation, so getting to and from the airport is challenging and there’s often a lot of walking.

“I have to be totally flexible to just roll with whatever comes my way, and I often rely on the kindness of strangers.”

Amber has made it to 31 US states already. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.com

 Amber has made it to 31 US states already. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.comWhen she needs a place to sleep she uses the website couchsurfing.com and stays with pilots and their families and friends. Sometimes she’ll stay in a hotel if she’s “really stuck”.

Her next stop is Maryland and New Jersey, followed by Alaska. She still works as a freelance travel writer, earning enough money – along with her savings – to keep her going during her trips.

Amber is also considering taking her “jethiking” international, and is writing a book.

source:::::news.com.au.
natarajan

Birth of Ctrl +Alt + Del !!!

By Virginia Hughes

In the spring of 1981, David Bradley was part of a select team working from a nondescript office building in Boca Raton, Fla. His task: to help build IBM’s new personal computer. Because Apple and RadioShack were already selling small stand-alone computers, the project (code name: Acorn) was a rush job. Instead of the typical three- to five-year turnaround, Acorn had to be completed in a single year.

One of the programmers’ pet peeves was that whenever the computer encountered a coding glitch, they had to manually restart the entire system. Turning the machine back on automatically initiated a series of memory tests, which stole valuable time. “Some days, you’d be rebooting every five minutes as you searched for the problem,” Bradley says. The tedious tests made the coders want to pull their hair out.

So Bradley created a keyboard shortcut that triggered a system reset without the memory tests. He never dreamed that the simple fix would make him a programming hero, someone who’d someday be hounded to autograph keyboards at conferences. And he didn’t foresee the command becoming such an integral part of the user experience.

Bradley joined IBM as a programmer in 1975. By 1978, he was working on the Datamaster, the company’s early, flawed attempt at a PC. It was an exciting time—computers were starting to become more accessible, and Bradley had a chance to help popularize them.

In September 1980, he became the 12th of 12 engineers picked to work on Acorn. The close-knit team was whisked away from IBM’s New York headquarters. “We had very little interference,” Bradley says. “We got to do the design essentially starting with a blank sheet of paper.”

Bradley worked on everything from writing input/output programs to troubleshooting wire-wrap boards. Five months into the project, he created ctrl+alt+del. The task was just another item to tick off his to-do list. “It was five minutes, 10 minutes of activity, and then I moved on to the next of the 100 things that needed to get done,” he says. Bradley chose the keys by location—with the del key across the keyboard from the other two, it seemed unlikely that all three would be accidentally pressed at the same time. Bradley never intended to make the shortcut available to customers, nor did he expect it to enter the pop lexicon. It was meant for him and his fellow coders, for whom every second counted.

The team managed to finish Acorn on schedule. In the fall of 1981, the IBM PC hit shelves—a homely gray box beneath a monitor that spit out green lines of type. Marketing experts predicted that the company would sell a modest 241,683 units in the first five years; company execs thought that estimate was too optimistic. They were all wrong. IBM PC sales would reach into the millions, with people of all ages using the machines to play games, edit documents, and crunch numbers. Computing would never be the same.

 

And yet, few of these consumers were aware of Bradley’s shortcut quietly lingering in their machines. It wasn’t until the early 1990s, when Microsoft’s Windows took off, that the shortcut came to prominence. As PCs all over the country crashed and the infamous “blue screen of death” plagued Windows users, a quick fix spread from friend to friend: ctrl+alt+del. Suddenly, Bradley’s little code was a big deal. Journalists hailed “the three-finger salute” as a saving grace for PC owners—a population that kept growing.

In 2001, hundreds of people packed into the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the IBM PC. In two decades, the company had moved more than 500 million PCs worldwide. After dinner, industry luminaries, including Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, sat down for a panel discussion. But the first question didn’t go to Gates; it went to David Bradley. The programmer, who has always been surprised by how popular those five minutes spent creating ctrl+alt+del made him, was quick to deflect the glory.

“I have to share the credit,” Bradley joked. “I may have invented it, but I think Bill made it famou

source:::::mentalfloss.com

natarajan

Read the full text here: http://mentalfloss.com/article/51674/history-ctrl-alt-delete#ixzz2ZGXMJXdw
–brought to you by mental_floss!

In India …Outside India …Perceptions Vary !!!

Relatives- and their perceptions

Relation

In India

Outside India

Mother-in-law

A woman capable of making your life miserable.

A woman you never fight with, because where else you will find such a dedicated baby sitter for free ?

Husband

A boring human species, who listens more to his mother than you, and orders you around to serve him, his parents and siblings.

Still boring, but now a useful human species that comes in handy when the house needs to be vacuumed.

Friend

A person whose house you can drop into any time of the day or night and you’ll always be welcome.

A person whom you have to call first to check and make sure he is not busy.

Wife

A woman who gives you your underwear and towel when you go to take a shower.

A woman who yells at you not to leave tub dirty when you go to take bath.

Son

A teenager, who without asking will carry your grocery bags from the market.

A teenager, who suddenly remembers he has lot of homework when you start mowing the lawn.

Daughter

A lovely doll, who brings tears to your eyes during her marriage.

A lovely doll, who brings you to tears long before her marriage.

Father

A person you are afraid of, and who is never to be disobeyed .

A person to whom you pretend to obey, after all he is the one paying your college tuition.

Indian Engineer

A person with a respectable job and earning lots.

A person without a secure job, who always dreams one day he will be rich.

Doctor

A respectable person with OK income.

A money making machine, who has a money spending machine at home called ‘doctor’s wife’.

Bhangra

A vigorous Punjabi festival dance.

A dance you do, when you don’t know how to dance.

Software Engineer

A high-tech guy, always speaks in American accent, always anxious to queue in the consulate visa line.

The same hi-tech guy, who does Ganapati Puja everyday, and says ‘This is my last year in the US (or whenever)’every year.

A Green Card holder bachelor

the guy can’t speak Hindi, parents of good looking girls are dying to hook him, wears jacket in summer, says he has a BMW back there.

the guy can’t speak proper English, wears jacket all the time, works in a Candy store at Manhattan, dreams of owning a BMW

 

source:::::unknown….input from a friend of mine

natarajan

Fascinating Fifty Facts about Statue of Liberty !!!!

 

 Statue of Liberty: 50 fascinating facts

1. The statue’s full name is Liberty Enlightening the World.

2. It was a gift from France, given to America in 1886.

3. The head of the statue was displayed at the World’s Fair in Paris in 1878.

4. The robed female figure represents Libertas, the Roman goddess of freedom.

5. She holds a torch and tablet upon which is inscribed the date of American Declaration of Independence (July 4, 1776).

6. From the ground to the top of the torch the statue measures 93 metres, and weighs 204 metric tonnes.

7. Lady Liberty wears a size 879 shoe.

8. She has a 35-foot waistline

9. Visitors have to climb 354 stairs to reach the statue’s crown.

10. There are 25 windows in the crown.

11. Approximately 4m people visit the statue each year. In comparison, over 6m people visit The Eiffel Tower, and 3.5m visit The London Eye.

12. The seven spikes on the crown represent the seven oceans and the seven continents of the world, indicating the universal concept of liberty.

13. The statue has an iron infrastructure and copper exterior which has turned green due to oxidation. Although it’s a sign of damage, the patina (green coating) also acts as a form of protection from further deterioration.

14. Edouard de Laboulaye provided the idea for the statue, while Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi designed it.

15. Laboulaye proposed that a great monument should be given as a gift from France to the United States as a celebration of both the union’s victory in the American Revolution, and the abolition of slavery.

16. Laboulaye also hoped the gift of the statue would inspire French people to fight for their own democracy in the face of a repressive monarchy under Napolean III.

17. Gustave Eiffel, the man who designed the Eiffel Tower was also behind the design for Liberty’s ‘spine’; four iron columns supporting a metal framework that holds the copper skin which is a mere 3/32ths of an inch thick.

18. 300 different types of hammers were used to create the copper structure.

19. The statue’s face was said to be modelled on the sculptor’s mother, Charlotte.

20. The statue’s original torch was replaced in 1984 by a new copper torch covered in 24k gold leaf.

21. Although you cannot see Lady Liberty’s feet clearly she is in fact standing among a broken shackle and chains, with her right foot raised, depicting her moving forward away from oppression and slavery.

22. Despite the positive meaning of the statue – American independence and the abolition of slavery – it African Americans saw the statue as an ironic image of America; professing to be a country of freedom and justice for everyone regardless of race, despite racism and discrimination continuing to exist.

23. The Statue of Liberty became the symbol of immigration during the second half of the 19th century, as over 9m immigrants came to the United States, with the statue often being the first thing they saw when arriving by boat.

24. The statue’s most famous cinematic appearance was in the 1968 film “Planet of the Apes” where it is seen half buried in sand.

25. It is also destroyed in the films “Independence Day” and “The Day After Tomorrow”.

26. The cost of the statue was funded by contributions from both the French and the Americans. In 1885, a New York newspaper entitled “World” announced that $102,000 had been raised from donors, and that 80 per cent of this total had been received in sums of less than one dollar.

27. Groups in Boston and Philadelphia offered to pay the full cost of the construction of the statue, in return for its relocation.

28. When the statue was first erected in 1886 it was the tallest iron structure ever built.

29. In 1984, the statue was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

30. In high winds of 50mph Lady Liberty can sway by up to 3 inches, while her torch can move 5 inches.

31. Lady Liberty is thought to have been hit by around 600 bolts of lightning every year since she was built. A photographer captured this for the first time in 2010.

32. Two people have committed suicide by jumping off the statue, one in 1929 and the other in 1932, while many others have jumped and survived.

33. American poet Emma Lazarus wrote about the Statue of Liberty in a sonnet called “The New Colossus” (1883). In 1903 the poem was engraved on a bronze plaque and placed inside the lower level of the pedestal on the statue.

34. The island in which it stands was previously called Bedloe Island, but its name was changed in 1956 to Liberty Island.

35. There are various replicas of the statue, including a smaller version in Paris, and one on the Las Vegas Strip in Nevada.

36. In 1944 the lights in the crown flashed “dot-dot-dot-dash” which in the Morse code means V, for Victory in Europe.

37. Andy Warhol painted “Statue of Liberty” as part of his Pop Art series in the 1960s. It is estimated to be worth in excess of $35m.

38. The statue functioned as a lighthouse for 16 years (1886-1902), lighting a distance of up to 24 miles away.

39. The statue will be celebrating its 127th birthday in October 2013.

40. Miss America, the comic book character, was granted her powers by the statue.

41. After the terrorist attacks of September 11, the statue was closed for security reasons, with the pedestal reopening in 2004, and the statue in 2009, but only a limited number of visitors are able to go up to the crown.

42. The statue was again closed in 2012 due to the effects of Hurricane Sandy, with the island off limits to the public. The statue is reopening to visitors on Independence Day, July 4, 2013.

43. The statue sustained minor damage in 1916 when German saboteurs set off an explosion during World War One. The torch-bearing arm suffered the most damage, with repair works costing $100,000. The stairs in the torch were then closed to the public for safety reasons, and have remained closed ever since.

44. No-one has been able to visit the torch since.

45. Private boats are not allowed to dock at Liberty and Ellis islands. Therefore the only way on is via the ferry system.

46. The statue’s 300 copper pieces were transported to America in 214 crates on the French ship Isere, which almost sank in stormy seas.

47. Liberty Island is federal property within the territory of the State of New York, even though it is closer to New Jersey.

48. In 1982, it was discovered that the head had been installed two feet off centre.

49. Two images of the statue appear on a $10 bill.

50. The cost of building the statue and pedestal amounted to over $500,000, over $10m in today’s money.

 

source::::The Telegraph UK

natarajan

Evergreen Quotes and Fine Five Facts !!!!

Quotable Quotes ….
1. In my many years I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress.
— John Adams
2. If you don’t read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do
read the newspaper you are misinformed.
— Mark Twain
3. Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of
Congress. But then I repeat myself.
— Mark Twain
4. I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. –Winston Churchill
5. A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on
the support of Paul.
— George Bernard Shaw
6. A liberal is someone who feels a great debt to his fellow man,
which debt he proposes to pay off with your money.
— G. Gordon Liddy
7. Democracy must be something more than two wolves and a sheep
voting on what to have for dinner.
–James Bovard, Civil Libertarian (1994)
8. Foreign aid might be defined as a transfer of money from poor
people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries.
— Douglas Case, Classmate of Bill Clinton at Georgetown University .
9. Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey
and car keys to teenage boys.
— P.J. O’Rourke, Civil Libertarian
10. Government is the great fiction, through which everybody
endeavours to live at the expense of everybody else.
— Frederic Bastiat, French economist(1801-1850)
11. Government’s view of the economy could be summed up
in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps
moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.
–Ronald Reagan (1986)
12. I don’t make jokes. I just watch the government and report the
facts. — Will Rogers
13. If you think health care is expensive now, wait until you
see what it costs when it’s free!
— P. J. O’Rourke
14. In general, the art of government consists of taking as much
money as possible from one party of the citizens to give to
the other.
–Voltaire (1764)
15. Just because you do not take an interest in politics doesn’t mean
politics won’t take an interest in you!
— Pericles (430 B.C.)
16. No man’s life, liberty, or property is safe while the
legislature is in session.
— Mark Twain (1866)
17. Talk is cheap, except when Congress does it.
— Anonymous
18. The government is like a baby’s alimentary canal, with a happy
appetite at one end and no responsibility at the other.
— Ronald Reagan
19. The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of the
blessings. The inherent blessing of socialism is the equal sharing
of misery.
— Winston Churchill
20. The only difference between a tax man and a taxidermist is that
the taxidermist leaves the skin.
— Mark Twain
21. The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is
to fill the world with fools.
— Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
22. There is no distinctly Native American criminal class, save
Congress.
— Mark Twain
23. What this country needs are more unemployed politicians
–Edward Langley, Artist (1928-1995)
24. A government big enough to give you everything you want, is
strong enough to take everything you have.
— Thomas Jefferson
25. We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public
office.
— Aesop
Fine  Five  Facts !!!!
1. You cannot legislate the poor into prosperity, by legislating the
wealthy out of prosperity.
2. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.
3. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the
government does not first take from somebody else.
4. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.
5. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to
work, because the other half is going to take care of them, and
when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work
because somebody else is going to get what they work for,
that is the beginning of the end of any nation!

source:::::input from a friend of mine

natarajan

 

Laughter The Best Medicine ….” Someone Really Important ” !!!

 

Many years ago, the pope decided to visit New York. He is of course provided with a beautiful car and a dedicated driver to take him wherever he wishes to go.

When the pope sees the car, he motions to the driver and says: “Do you mind if I ask you a favor?”

“A favor for the pope??” exclaims the driver, “of course, anything!”

“Would you mind if I drove a little?” Asked the pope, “I never get to and I’d really like to once again drive a little for myself.”

The driver got scared, what if he let the pope get into an accident, but he couldn’t say no to the pope, and so the pope took the wheel… and immediately started to speed up like a maniac!

After going 100 mph in a 45mph zone, a police car zooms in next to them and they are requested to stop. The police officer walks slowly to their car, looks at the window for a moment, and then quickly steps back to his car.

His sergeant got this call:

Cop: “Sir, I have a problem.”

Sergeant: “What kind of problem?”

Cop: “Well, I pulled over this driver for over-speeding, but he’s someone really important.”

Sergeant: “Important like the mayor?”

Cop: “No, no, a lot more important than that.”

Sergeant: “Important like the governor?”

Cop: “Way more important than that.”

Sergeant: “Important like the president??”

Cop: “Much more important.”

Sergeant: “Who’s more important than the president?”

Cop: “I don’t know, but he has the Pope DRIVING for him!”….

 

source::::babamailnet

natarajan