Happy New Year 2021

WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY, HEALTHY, PROSPEROUS AND PURPOSEFUL NEW YEAR 2020

Friday, October 12, 2007

Eyecatchers-35 : Doris Lessing wins Nobel Prize for Literature - AP

British writer Doris Lessing has won the 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature. Lessing, 87, born to British parents who were living in what is now Iran, made her debut with "The Grass is Singing"(1950). Her other works include the semi-autobiographical "Children of Violence" series, largely set in Africa. Her breakthrough was the 1962 "Golden Notebook". "The burgeoning feminist movement saw it as a pioneering work and it belongs to the handful of books that inform the 20th century view of the male-female relationship," the Swedish Academy said in its citation announcing the prize.

Lessing's other important novels include, "The Summer Before Dark" (1973), "The Fifth Child"(1988), "Mara and Dann(1999), "The Story of General Dann and Mara's Daughter, Griot and the Snow Dog(2005).

Lessing is the second British writer to win the Nobel Prize in three years. In 2005, Harold Pinter received the award. (AP)

Excerpt from The New Indian Express, Madurai, October 12, 2007

Further study:
http://wiredforbooks.org/dorislessing/ (Audio Interviews with Doris Lessing)
http://jco.usfca.edu/lessing.html (Joyce Carol Oates on Lessing)

A Thought for Today-95: September 28, 2007

He who submits to wrong is also a wrong-doer, for it is he who is the cause of all evil in the world - Rabindranath Tagore

A Thought for Today-94: September 27, 2007

One puts a premium on evil by suffering it without protest. The proper remedy for evil is to fight against it - Rabindranath Tagore

Self-Improvement-1: For Achieving Excellence

* Be systematic.
* Develop the right attitude.
* Be enthusiastic all the time.
* Maintain a diary to note down things to be done to serve as useful reminders.
* Maintain a happy state of mind so that you are positive in your approach and
outlook all the time.
* What you think you become. If you think you are beaten, you are! If you think
you will lose, you have already lost. It is all in the state of mind.
* Never bother about setbacks/threats/short-comings/difficulties in life.
Difficulties sharpen the intellect and strengthen the mind.

Courtesy: Excerpt from 'Achieving Excellence' by N.Ramachandran, Published in IBA Bulletin, Jan.1999.


Grateful thanks to Mr N Ramachandran and IBA Bulletin.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

A Thought for Today-93: September 26, 2007

The secret of health for both mind and body is not to mourn for the past, worry about the future, or anticipate troubles but to LIVE IN THE PRESENT MOMENT wisely and earnestly – Buddha

Facts and Figures-8: India Today, Oct.1, 2007

The number of radio stations All India Radio had in 1947 was six. Now, the number is 223.

$ 38.4 billion was spent on pet animals in the US during 2006.

More than 4 lac students apply to the IITs every year and only 3000 get through.

There are 262 medical colleges in India which produce 29,172 doctors every year.

2.87 million trucks run across Indian roads.

100 crore rupees is the estimated value of India’s current Ayurvedic production.

6 lac villages where nearly two-thirds of the total Indian population lives, form the future market for the telecom industry. The current 150 million subscriber base translates into only 13% penetration.

Rs.16,200 crore is the value of the online tutoring market in the US.

$ 1 trillion is the combined wealth of the 20-million NRI community, which is more than the size of the $850-billion Indian economy.

20% is the rise in people drinking wine in India from 2006.
Courtesy: India Today, Oct.1, 2007.
Grateful thanks to India Today.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

A Thought for Today-92: September 25, 2007

It is perhaps safe to say that every man, however brilliant he might be, uses during his life no more than one billionth fraction of the potential of his brain - N.Dubinin ('Realize Your Potential' by V.Pekelis)

Eyecatchers-34 : Plastic as strong as Steel - AFP

Scientists have developed a transparent new plastic as strong as steel and as thin as a sheet of paper, according to a study by Science magazine.

Made out of clay and a non-toxic glue similar to that used in school classrooms, the composite plastic is biodegradable and requires very little energy to produce, lead researcher Nicholas Kotov, University of Michigan, US, said.

Excerpt from 'World', The New Indian Express, Madurai, October 6, 2007 (AFP).
Grateful thanks to AFP and The New Indian Express.

Eyecatchers-33 : Perfect Practitioner

Hundreds of patients in Britain feel that the perfect general practitioner, that is family doctor to you and me, is young, female, and Asian.
- Newscape, The Hindu, Madurai, July 11, 2005.
Grateful thanks to The Hindu.

Friday, October 05, 2007

Facts and Figures-7: The Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project (SSCP)-1:

* The 167-km-long shipping channel is meant to link the west coast of India to the eastern ports at a cost of Rs.2,427 crore.

* It would reduce the steaming distance by 780 km and save 30 hours of sailing time as currently ships have to go around Sri Lanka.

Courtesy: 'The Evidence about Ram' by Raj Chengappa, India Today, October 1, 2007.
Grateful thanks to Mr Raj Chengappa and India Today.

Eyecatchers-32 : Earth-like Planet Forming Elsewhere! - AFP

Chicago, Oct.4, 2007: Snuggled into a huge belt of warm dust, an earth-like planet appears to be forming some 424 light years away, scientists said.

At somewhere between 10 and 16 million years old, the planet’s solar system is still in its “very young adolescence,” but is at the perfect age for forming earth-like planets, said lead researcher Carey Lisse of Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Department.

The massive dust ring surrounding one of system’s two stars is smack in the middle of the system’s ‘habitable zone’ where water could one day exist on a rocky planet.

These type of dust belts rare form around sun-like stars and the presence of an outer ice belt makes it all the more likely that water, and subsequently life, could one day reach the planet’s surface.

And this belt is made up of rocky compounds similar to those which form our Earth’s crust and metal sulfides similar to the material found in the Earth’s core.

“It is just right stuff to be making an Earth,” Lisse said in a telephone interview. “It is exciting to think that this is happening.” Not that Lisse will be around to see much of it.

The images captured by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope are about 424 years old, but that is barely a blink in the eye of the young planet.

It will likely be about 100 million years before the planet is fully formed and – if our planet is anything to go by – about a billion years before the first signs of life such as algae appear, Lisse said.

The evolution of complex organisms such as dinosaurs will probably take another couple of billion years if the new planet follows a pattern similar to ours, he added.

But the images captured have helped Lisse and colleagues understand a lot about how an Earth-like planet could form.

While mathematical models can be created to extrapolate what will happen to this particular system, even more can be learned if astronomers continue to probe the universe for other Earth-like planets at various stages of development.

Right now, the planet in the system known as HD113766 is growing as dust grains clump together to form rocks and these rocks collide to form larger bodies, some as big as our own moon. AFP
Courtesy: The New Indian Express, Madurai, Oct.5, 2007.
Grateful thanks to AFP and The New Indian Express.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Facts and Figures-6: "India has Largest Diabetic Population" by Dr.Gita Mathai

According to World Health Organisation and National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse statistics, 31.8% of diabetics are Indians. India leads this list. China occupies the second place with 20.8%; and USA, third place, with 17.7%.
Source: 'Managing Diabetes' by Dr Gita Mathai, Health, Supplement to The New Indian Express, Madurai, Sep.25, 2007.
Grateful thanks to Dr.Gita Mathai and The New Indian Express.

Facts and Figures-5: "Fountain Pens and Ballpens"

Man yearned to express himself even before he learned to talk. Initially he used sharp objects to etch on cave walls or boulders and then infused them with colour extracts from flowers and vegetables.

The first pen was invented more than 2500 years ago by the Greeks. It was made out of a reed. During the middle ages, the quill pen was introduced and for more than a thousand years it prevailed. Feathers of the goose were most commonly used but swan feathers would be used for premium grade pens. Each quill pen lasted only a week.

In the 18th and 19th century, several designs of pens were patented in Europe and America. The idea was to create a pen which would carry more ink than quills in its own reservoir. While this hurdle was easily crossed, it was many more years before problems like ink spills, hardening and thinning of inks could be tackled. The first self ink-filling pen was patented in 1831 by John Parker. Fifty years later, Lewis Waterman patented his creation on which the modern fountain pens are based.

The smallest fountain pen in the world has a tip which is so tiny that the lines drawn by it cannot be seen with the naked eye. The lines are just a few molecules wide - thinner than even the red blood cells in our body! This pen is attached to a microscope and used by scientists while drawing or marking on minuscule objects.

The most expensive pen priced at US $ 265,000 (more than Rupees One Crore) was sold in Harrods. Made of silver with an 18-carat gold nib, this glittering wonder was studded with more than 5000 diamonds and 96 rubies. Not far behind is the pen used by Prince Shamsher of Bangladesh. Costing US $ 260,000 it was made of solid 24-carat gold and embedded with diamonds.

Angelika Unverhau of Germany has the largest collection of ballpoint pens in the world - approximately 220,000 different types. On an average, she adds 30,000 pens to her collection every year.

In 2005, BIC sold its hundred billionth ballpoint pen!

A special pen, which can be used in space, has been invented by Fisher. This pen can write under any condition - zero gravity, under water, at any angle - even upside down. Its ink is not affected under extreme temperatures. This pen is used by American as well as Russian astronauts.

BIC reports sales of 14,000,000 pens daily.

Former US President Thomas Jefferson bred a flock of geese to ensure a steady supply of quill pens!

Courtesy: School Magazine, Supplement to The New Indian Express, Madurai, October 3, 2007.

Grateful thanks to The New Indian Express.

Gandhiana-4: "Gandhiji's View on Women"

"I would boycott that legislature which will not have a proper share of women members." So, declared Mahatma Gandhi unequivocally over 76 years ago at the Second Round Table Conference convened in London by the British Government in September 1931 to consider framing a new constitution for India. Gandhi was a votary of women's education and believed in giving equal representation to women in politics.

Gandhiana-3: "International Day of Non-Violence"

United Nations Organization (UNO) has honoured Gandhiji's ideals by declaring Gandhiji's birthday, October 2, as International Day of Non-Violence.

Let us rededicate ourselves to the path shown by the Mahatma.

Gandhiana-2: "India of My Dreams" by Mahatma Gandhi

I shall work for an India in which the poorest shall feel that it is their country, in whose making they have an effective voice, an India in which there shall be no high class and low class of people; an India in which all communities shall live in perfect harmony. There can be no room in such an India for the curse of untouchability, or the curse of intoxicating drinks and drugs. Women will enjoy the same rights as men. We shall be at peace with all the rest of the world. This is the India of my dreams.

Monday, October 01, 2007

A Thought for Today-91: September 24, 2007

When we are unable to love and appreciate ourselves and our efforts, we run away from our mistakes and failures, rather than learning from them - Meredith L. Young-Sowers

A Thought for Today-90: September 23, 2007

Man's capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man’s inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary - Reinhold Niebuhr

A Thought for Today-89: September 22, 2007

The few who do are the envy of the many who only watch – Jim Rohn

A Thought for Today-88: September 21, 2007

The key that unlocks energy is desire. It's also the key to a long and interesting life. If we expect to create any drive, any real force within ourselves, we have to get excited - Earl Nightingale