This blog has become a sort of personal-cum-public diary. As for its contents, some are meant for me and my friends and relatives; others are for the public. This blog will have only positive, ennobling, elevating, encouraging and uplifting thoughts/ideas/materials. Whoever visits should feel happy and should be able to pick up some good ideas/thoughts/links. In short, "NOTHING NEGATIVE" is my motto.(Grateful thanks to Jon Sullivan and Public-Domain-Photos.com for the background photo)
Monday, March 31, 2008
Health Watch-5: "Cockroach and Asthma"
A Thought for Today : March 9, 2008
Monday, March 24, 2008
My Album-25: "Sri Ramakrishna Jayanthi Celebrations-2:"
My Album-24: "Sri Ramakrishna Jayanthi Celebrations-1:"
Saturday, March 08, 2008
Letters-10: “Farm Loan Waiver”
Our lands have become degraded and lost all productive capacity. Farmers should be provided subsidized inputs and timely buyback of their produce at reasonable rates. This would amount to teaching a person how to fish for livelihood rather than giving him fish as a one-time generosity. Spending Rs.60,000 crore on debt relief is not enough. The beneficiaries should be made self-reliant. (M.Kamal Naidu, Hyderabad)
2. The waiver is like providing food to the hungry in the morning who become hungry again in the evening. Does the Finance Minister propose to clean up the accumulated dust year after year? Instead, Rs.60,000 crore could have been spent on educating the farmers, providing them with water, seeds and fertilizers, setting up food processing units in every district and buying the produce at a fixed price. (Naresh Jain, Bangalore)
3. A debt relief does not fully mitigate the farmers’ problems in India. In fact, it will only encourage them to evade the repayment of bank loans. In the long run, the waiver will do more harm to farmers because financial institutions will hereafter be wary of advancing big loans to them. The government should evolve better remunerative prices for agricultural produce. (A.Madan Mohan, Chittoor).
4. Will the debt relief actually solve our farmers’ tribulations? The fact that most of the farm borrowings is from moneylenders has been overlooked. The Finance Minister could have ploughed the funds towards welfare measures which would have assured earnings. The farmers would have then earned enough to repay their loans. (C.Jeevitha, Chennai).
5. The waiver announcement has come a little too late. Had it come earlier, some precious lives could have been saved. It has also created an anomalous situation. Honest farmers sacrificed many things while honouring their schedule of repayments. Many who were unable to repay loans resorted to suicide. Both these categories do not benefit from the waiver. Is not it cruel? (A.R.K.Pillai, Mumbai).
6. The agricultural loan waiver has essentially proved that the policy of economic liberalization drawn up by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has not worked and that the Finance Minister could not do anything to take the so-called liberalized markets to the rural masses. Election-eyed loan waivers to one and all will only ruin the economy in the long run. (S.Subramanian Balaji, Chennai).
7. The waiver of farmers’ loans amounting to Rs.60,000 crore is laudable. However, it may set a bad precedent. In future, farmers may take loans and wait for the next elections and a waiver. It will also serve as a disincentive to those farmers who pay off their loans regularly. (Wg.Cdr.V.Sundaresan (retd), Secunderabad)
8. Rather than arguing whether the waiving of the loans has been done with an eye on the elections, we should think of setting up credible structures to ensure that our farmers do not get into the debt trap again. (Vaibhav Minocha, Ghaziabad)
Courtesy: “Letters to the Editor”, The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
Health Watch-4: "Breakfast Keeps Teens Lean"
The study involved 2,216 adolescents whose eating pattern, weight and other lifestyle issues were tracked systematically for five years.
The more regularly the teens ate breakfast, the lower their body mass index was, according to the study. Those who always skipped breakfast on average weighed about 2.3 kg more than their peers who ate the morning meal every day.
Courtesy: Reuters and The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
Science Watch-7: "Remote Control with a Wink"
The system, comprising a single-chip computer and a couple of infrared sensors, monitors movements of the temple and is so tiny that it can be built into the side of a pair of eyeglasses.
Closing both eyes for one second starts an iPod, while blinking again stops the digital machine. A wink with the right eye makes the machine skip to the next tune while with a wink of the left eye, it goes back.
The system can serve as “a third hard” for rock-climbers, motorbike drivers and astronauts, as well as people with disabilities.
The system – dubbed – “Kome Kami Switch,” or “Temple Switch” – can easily differentiate a deliberate one-second wink from natural blinking, said the device’s developer Kazuhiro Taniguchi.
“Normally you blink in an energy-saving manner, very quickly and lightly, but you would close your eyes more firmly to operate a device,” the developer said.
The Kome Kami Switch is also capable of operating television sets, air conditioners, room lighting and other household electronics.
Courtesy: AFP and The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
A Thought for Today : March 8, 2008
Friday, March 07, 2008
Health Watch-3: "Fish to be used to fight mosquitoes" by Shastry V.Mallady
As per a plan chalked out by the Directorate of Public Health(DPH), permanent fish hatcheries would be created in the network of Primary Health Centres and health sub-centres where the two non-edible fish varieties would be reared and supplied to public places/residential buildings on demand.
“The fish varieties – Gambusia and Guppies – will be effective in checking the mosquito larva. The DPH through its nine zonal offices in the State would set up small hatcheries and also protect the existing natural hatcheries,” S.Elango, Addl Director of Public Health, told The Hindu.
To start with, the DPH expects to construct 1500 fish hatcheries in malaria-endemic districts and with a particular focus on 11 municipalities/urban areas.
Explaining the reasons for choosing fish as a medium, Dr Elango said that the two varieties are very active, low cost, eco-friendly and would swiftly eat away the larva of mosquitoes. The fish would be given in a sachet to the people and subsequently it could be grown, he said.
A fortnight campaign involving general public is now being undertaken (till March 15) by taking the support of elected representatives and local panchayats.
Excerpt from “The Hindu, Madurai, March 6, 2008
Grateful thanks to Mr.Shastry V.Mallady and The Hindu
Science Watch-6: "A Physics record is broken"
The $1.4 billion Spallation Neutron Source’s linear accelerator produces a proton beam that strikes a mercury target and creates a stream of subatomic neutrons that are used to study the structure and dynamics of materials.
The beam reached 310 kilowatts, in late January, nearly doubling the 163-kilowatt record held by the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory near Oxford, England. Oak Ridge now holds the Guinness World Record.
“This is basically confirming what we did in January”, a lab spokesman Bill Cabage said. “We confirmed the record.”
Courtesy: AP and The Hindu, March 5, 2008
A Thought for Today : March 7, 2008
Health Watch-2: "Foods for Long Life"
1. Cabbage, Kale, Broccoli, Sprouts:
These contain Indole-3-Carbinol (I3C), which help to fight breast and lung cancer. Aim for three servings a week.
2. Blueberries:
Powerful in retarding ageing, they can even reverse failing memory. They also contain resveratrol, found in grapes and red wine, which can extend your lifespan.
3. Nuts:
Two servings of 8g nuts a week (a saucer) lower risk of heart attack. Nuts are high in fat, but most is beneficial mono-unsaturated fat. Almonds and walnuts help lower cholesterol.
4. Tomatoes:
Eating 10 servings of tomato sauce or tomatoes a week reduces prostate cancer risk. Best cooked and served with little oil.
5. Garlic:
Garlic prolongs cancer-survival time in animals by about 5%, which in humans might add about four years.
6. Oily fish:
Contains high levels of omega-3 fatty acids which protect the heart. Experts recommend 300g a week (3-4 servings), steamed or baked – regularly eaten, it cuts the risk of dying from heart disease.
Courtesy: Sunday Times of India/BMS Interaction, Feb.2008
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Science Watch-5: "Prefrontal Cortex Damage and Moral Conduct"
Dr.R.K.Mishra, emeritus professor at AIIMS, observes that the third eye spoken of by yogis, passes through exactly the same spot. US Researchers discovered that the stimulus from infrasound of BETA rhythms which are between 13 and 22 cycles per second are confined to the frontal area of the brain where complex mental processes take place. Excess stimulation with these frequencies produces recklessness, euphoria and complete loss of mental balance.
The third eye is called ‘vahni’. It is also called ‘gnananetra’. The devotee of Lord Siva applies sacred ash in triple horizontal stripes called ‘tripundraka’ on his forehead to protect it from damage.
If prefrontal cortex of an individual is damaged, then he becomes unable to learn from his past experiences of reward and punishment. “This removes the emotional core of social and moral reasoning, preventing his emotional memories from shaping he Mind’s conscience” ('Strange Frontiers' by George V.Harding).
….
Let us hope that further research in the field may reveal more useful insights.
Excerpt from “Ethics: Personality Limitations on Moral Conduct” by K.A.N.Talpasai, Bhavan’s Journal, June 30, 2004
A Thought for Today : March 6, 2008
Do I contradict myself? Very well, then I contradict myself, I am large, I contain multitudes - Walt Whitman
Eyecatchers-63: "A Culture City to Revive Confucianism"
Jiang Daming, governor of Shandong, announced at a news conference in Beijing that the “Chinese Cultural Symbolic City” will be built in the Ji’ning City, spanning more than 300 sq.km.
The city will incorporate the country-level city of Qufu, ancestral home of Confucius, and Zoucheng, home of Mencius, and the Jiulong Mountain range between the two cities. The whole project covers refurbishing the homes of the two ancient philosophers and building new architectures in the Jiulong mountain range, Jiang said.
The project planning and construction commission, chaired by top Shandong officials, will solicit ideas on project designing from the public.
Details of the solicitation are available at the city’s website, www.ccsc.gov.cn.
Jiang said all design plans will be reviewed by a consultation panel of some 30 top artists, sinologists and architects in China. The ambitious engineering project, initiated by 69 academicians of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering in 2001, aims to showcase the traditional values like peace, harmony and ingenuity advocated by ancient philosophers such as Confucius.
The project has won supports from many, including Pei Ieoh Ming, renowned architect and glass pyramid designer of Louvre, and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Xu Jialu, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress and an initiator of the project, said: “The city will exhibit and commemorate the long-honoured Chinese values, such as refining personal morality, cherishing peace and harmony, and filial piety. Ideally, it shall be the spiritual home for the whole nation.” Xu told reporters that the total budget of the project will be made after design plans are finalized, and forecasts the total cost to surpass about $4.2 billion estimated in 2004.
Construction is expected to start before 2010.
Courtesy: Xinhua and The Hindu, March 3, 2008
Health Watch-1: Snoring and Heart
A Thought for Today : March 5, 2008
A single conversation across the table with a wise man is better than ten years mere study of books - Longfellow
Letters-9: "Forgotten Farmers"
2. It is a shame that the government gave cheques for Rs.3 to drought-hit farmers. Perhaps, even the cheque leaf would cost more! – N.S.Rajaram, On email.
3. It is a shame that political parties are blaming each other when 600 farmers have already died of starvation or committed suicide in Bundelkhand. Strangely enough, the crisis went unheeded, though the region had been reeling under drought for the past five years. Howe can the government be so blind? - Harish Saxena, Noida, UP
4. That officials have tried to suppress cases of starvation death in Bundelkhand is a serious matter. I was shocked to read that officials prevented a man from taking the body of his father, who died of starvation, for autopsy. If the police action in Nandigram was state-sponsored terror, this was worse. Human rights groups should take up the matter and ensure that the guilty officials are punished. – Prem Kumar, Lucknow
Courtesy: The Week, March 9, 2008 (Letters to the Editor)
A Thought for Today : March 4, 2008
Science Watch-4: "Ulysses satellite freezing to death"
The satellite had long outlasted the five-year mission it began in 1990, but continued to transmit useful data on solar winds. More recently, its plutonium power source had weakened and its fuel was freezing as the probe made a wide circle of the sun, traveling as far as Jupiter.
In January, engineers tried a long-shot manoeuvre to heat up the fuel. But their effort backfired and hastened Ulysses’ death by months.
The $ 250 million probe was a joint ESA-NASA project. After being released from orbit by astronauts on the space shuttle Discovery in October 1990, Ulysses made nearly three full wide circles of the sun from above and below its poles, logging nearly 10 billion km overall.
When the satellite recently started to fail, it had just finished examining the sun’s North Pole for a third time.
“This mission has rewritten textbooks,” said Arik Posner, NASA’s Ulysses program scientist. What made Ulysses unique and crucial to scientists was its orbit and perspective. It provided astronomers with a three-dimensional look at the sun and the rest of the solar system. Most of the planets line up along the same geometric plane generally around the middle of the sun and that is where most of the space probes orbit, too. But Ulysses made long wide circles of the sun’s poles, essentially gazing down at the sun and solar system from above and below instead of around the middle.
That three-dimensional data from Ulysses was important for scientists trying to figure out the solar wind. These winds blast away from the sun at 1.6 million km an hour in all directions, said David McComas, a scientist with the Ulysses project.
The wind is crucial because it protects the earth from cosmic radiation, causes geomagnetic storms on the earth, and causes Aurora borealis. “We understand it now, we did not understand it before,” Mr.McComas said.
Courtesy: AP and The Hindu, February 24, 2008
Letters-8: ‘Sons of the Soil’ Slogan
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
A Thought for Today : March 2, 2008
Facts & Figures-25 : Undiscovered Planet at the edge of Solar System
Courtesy: Weekly Review, Harper's Weekly, March 4, 2008
Facts & Figures-24 : Drug-resistant TB found in 45 countries
Courtesy: Weekly Review, Harper's Weekly, March 4, 2008
Monday, March 03, 2008
A Thought for Today : March 1, 2008
A Thought for Today : February 29, 2008
12 Ways of Winning People to Your Way of Thinking
2. Show respect for the other man’s opinions. Never tell a man he is wrong.
3. If you are wrong, admit it quickly and emphatically.
4. Begin in a friendly way.
5. Get the other person saying, “yes, yes” immediately.
6. Get the other do a great deal of talking.
7. Let the other man feel that the idea is his.
8. Try honestly to see things from the other person’s point of view.
9. Be sympathetic with the other person’s point of view.
10. Appeal to the nobler motives.
11. Dramatize your ideas.
12. Throw down a challenge.
Courtesy: “How to Win Friends and Influence People” by Dale Carnegie
Saturday, March 01, 2008
A Thought for Today : February 28, 2008
Greater is he who acts from love than he who acts from fear - Simeon Ben Eleazar
Eyecatchers-62: "Darwin's Legacy"
However, Darwin was not the only one thinking alone such lines. In 1858, he received a letter suggesting ideas remarkably like his own; it was from Alfred Russell Wallace, who was collecting biological specimens in Southeast Asia. Papers putting forth both points of view were duly presented at a meeting of the Linnaean Society of London. The Origin of Species (as Darwin’s 1859 magnum opus came to be titled in 1872, in the sixth edition) marshaled a vast body of evidence and presented his arguments in favour of evolution driven by a process of natural selection that allowed traits best suited to a particular environment to spread in a population. Evolution and a common origin for all life lie at the heart of biology. In an essay strikingly titled ‘nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution,’ the geneticist and evolutionary biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky declared: “Without that light [biology] becomes a pile of sundry facts – some of them interesting or curious but making no meaningful picture as a whole.” The elucidation of the structure of the DNA, the unraveling of the genetic code, and the ability to sequence the entire genome of even complex organisms have served only to lay bare the processes that produce life, which all living organisms share, and show how evolutionary pressures act on those processes. As though this were not enough, Darwin’s ideas have inspired, over the past century-and-a-half, “powerful images and insights in science, humanities and the arts,” as an essay in Nature reminds us.
Courtesy: Editorial, The Hindu, Feb.12, 2008
A Thought for Today : February 27, 2008
Facts & Figures-23 : Sperm Damage affects Four Generations!
Facts & Figures-22 : The Sun will vaporize the Earth!
Facts & Figures-22 : Japan Launches Experimental Satellite
Facts & Figures-21 : Top Producer of Wind Power
A Thought for Today : February 26, 2008
Living without Violence by Usha Jesudasan
Violence. How we fear it. How we hope that it will not touch us or those we love. But it does – so often. The violence we face may not be brutal or physical; it may not on our streets; or with bombs or guns; but nevertheless it is there. We find it lurking in our everyday relationships, attitudes to each other, words, thoughts, looks and feelings.
For centuries men mostly, and those in authority, marginalized the idea of non-violence as it did not help them prosper or succeed in getting what they wanted as much as violence and fear did. Then came people like Gandhiji, Martin Luther, Vaclav Havel and others who made non-violence a political weapon and showed those who were captive to violence and oppression, its power.
Since then, people all over the world have discovered the power of non-violence as a political weapon. But the non-violent life is more than just a political tactic. It is a way of life for every single person and one that is both challenging and meaningful. The idea of non-violence is revolutionary and feared by those who cling to power, because it is an idea that can completely change the nature of society, and thus is a grave threat to the established order.
Non-violence or ahimsa living, is not just for activists; it is for us ordinary people – we all need to transform our minds and hearts to embody non-violence. This is a huge challenge because our society surrounds us with violence – in the media, in our workplaces, relationships and way of life. So, unless we train ourselves to consciously unlearn all the habits of violence we use, our first response to a crisis is violence.
We need to practice the art of “ahimsa living” every day. We need to store within ourselves a repertoire of non-violent actions, thoughts and words, so that when we do face crises, we can draw upon these practical, ethical, and spiritual ahimsa resources.
Could you make a commitment to an ahimsa way of life for a day or a week? Which areas of your life would you have to specially target to live this way?
Courtesy: ‘Young World’, Supplement to The Hindu, Jan.25, 2008
Grateful thanks to Ms Usha Jesudasan and The Hindu for the excellent article, which I intend to read at every opportunity till it is indelibly registered in my mind and some visible change is effected in me; and I fondly hope the visitors to this blog also read it with due to attention and benefit by it.
A Thought for Today : February 25, 2008
A Gentler Way To Lose Weight
Interestingly, few people practice yoga vigorously enough to burn many calories doing it. The study authors speculate that yoga instead makes you more “body aware” and perhaps teaches you discipline that you can apply in other areas of life.
The authors offer these yoga tips:
· Find an edge where you are challenged but not overwhelmed.
· Pay more attention to the internal experience than outer
· Try to become more aware of even your smallest movements.
· Note what you are saying to yourself as you practice – be sure
Courtesy: ‘RD Health’, Reader’s Digest, January 2006