Thursday, October 29, 2009

Fungi

Fungi

Fungi


Fungi are large group of parasite and decomposers that include mushrooms, molds and yeasts. Once grouped along with plants, the fungi, are now thought to be more closely related to animals and are treated as a separate kingdom.

"I am very partial to mushrooms and use them generously in my cooking (I am not a bad cook at all!). The prized variety of mushrooms is the short lived variety that blooms with the onset of the monsoons available only on the coast' tells Mr. Mohan Pai.


Pls click the image to read more about Fungi.

-Nethrakere Udaya Shankara

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Chalk out Programme to Rejuvenate Soil

Chalk out Programme to

Rejuvenate Soil


Jeevamruta-flood


Do you think, Jeevamruta, organic fertilizer prepared as per the direction of Subhash Palekar will help to rejuvenate the soil in flood affected areas?

Recently, more than 30,000 people from Sarvajna Nagar and Bytarayanapura Assembly Constituency of Bangalore urged the Karnataka Government to Ban Cow slaughter and to make use of Jeevamruta, organic fertilizer made out of Cow Dung and Cow urine in flood affected areas to rejuvenate the soil which became salty due to heavy rains.

Experts say that there are about 100 crore microbes in one gram of Soil. And stomach of Cow is sea of microbes. One Gram Dung of Local breeds or Deshi Cow (Indian Cows) contains 200 to 500 crore microbes. When mixed, microbes of Cow Dung and Soil support each other and start multiplying.

Some scientists say soil has no life. But really it is not so. Microbes in the soil made it alive one.

Hundreds of farmers used this Palekar method in their fields and succeeded in increasing the the yield.

Hence it is high time to make use of this system to rejuvenate the soil in flood affected areas. And Government should chalk out a plan to feed the Jeevamruta to to soil in flood affected areas at least once in 15 days, till next rainy season, so that it will rejuvenate with full of microbes by next cultivation time.

Vijay Karnataka has published a timely article on this in its issue 22 October 2009. Pls read the article by clicking the image above and read some more information in http://paryaya.blogspot.com (Cow Protection / Gou Samrakshane Section)

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Thousands urge Ban on Cow Slaughter: Use 'Jeevamruta' to Rejuvanate Soil

Use 'Jeevamruta' to Rejuvanate Soil

Thousands urge Ban on Cow Slaughter

appeal-to-achrya-large

More than 30,000 people from Sarvajna Nagar and Bytarayanapura Assembly Constituency of Bangalore urged the Karnataka Government to Ban Cow slaughter and to make use of Jeevamruta, organic fertilizer made out of Cow Dung and Cow urine in flood affected areas to rejuvenate the soil which became salty due to heavy rains.

A Citizens Delegation of the above said areas submitted a memorandum to Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa, through Home Minister Dr. V.S. Acharya on Friday 16th October 2009, which was signed by more than 30,000 people.

Memorandum explained that rejuvenation of soil before next cultivation season is very important as most of the soil beame salty due to floods. There is no wonder if affected farmers try to use chemical fertilizers to improve the soil condition which will harm the soil further.

At this juncture need of the hour is to take some action to improve the soil condition to get good crops next year. Jeevamrut is simple and cheaper organic fertilizer and this could be prepared in the flood affected areas itself after collecting cow dung from various parts of state in the form of donation or through purchase. Such programme will provide employment at least to some flood affected people.

Dr. V.S. Acharya promised the delegation that Government will take action to protect cows shortly. In fact, draft bill has been already prepared and it will be passed soon, he said.

Marappa Alasoor, Thimmegowda, Govinda Rao, Dr. Raja Ram Prasad, Kamala, Muniraju, Vardhaman Jain, Muniraj Karnik and other prominent leaders were there in the the delegation.

To see reports appeared in Press in this regard click the image link above.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Save 1,147,995,904 Indians.

Save 1,147,995,904 Indians.
Tomorrow (14 October 2009) the GEAC meets to decide on the environmental release of GM i.e. BT Brinjal. We all know by now that GM is irreversible, dangerous and unpredictable. That it could change the world as we know it.There is just a day that separates us from this horrible technology.
Call Mr. Jairam Ramesh the environment minister on 011-24361727 or 011-24363958(If you’re calling from outside India, dial +91-11-24361727or+91-11- 24363958) and leave a message if you cannot get through to the minister, that you do not want GM to be allowed into this country. And that you are no labrat.
Pass on this message to all your friends. If a call can save a life, its worth making.
‘IAMNOLABRAT’ Team
===========================================================================
G. KRISHNA PRASAD
Sahaja Samrudha
'Nandana', No-7, 2nd Cross,
7th Main, Sulthanpalya, Bangalore-560 032 Phone: 080-23655302 /
9880862058

Thursday, October 8, 2009

India Won 7th Nobel Prize on 7th October 2009..!

India Won 7th Nobel Prize

on 7th October 2009..!



It sounds interesting. Because India won its 7th Nobel Prize on Wednesday, 7th Of October 2009. Yes! Indian born Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, a senior scientist at the MRC Laborartory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge, England, has won the 2009 Nobel Prize for Chemistry along with two others, the Nobel Committee announced on 7th October 2009.

The two other scientists, who shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with V Ramakrishnan are Thomas E Steitz (US) and Ada E Yonath (Israel). They all are working with MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge.

Born in 1952 in Chidambaram, Tailnadu, Ramakrishnan shared the Nobel Prize with Thomas E Steitz (US) and Ada E Yonath (Israel) for their "studies of the structure and function of the ribosome".

Ramakrishnan earned his B.Sc. in Physics (1971) from Baroda University and his Ph.D. in Physics (1976) from Ohio University.

He moved into biology at the University of California, San Diego, where he took a year of classes, then conducted research with Dr Mauricio Montal, a membrane biochemist.

Let us remember the Great Sons of India who made Indians feel proud by winning the Nobel Prize which is the most respected award the world over.

Here is the list of Those Indians who won this prestigious award and let us salute them...

1) Rabindranath Tagore (1861 - 1941)

Nobel Prize for Literature (1913). Tagore was born and lived in Calcutta for most of his life. He was one of modern India's greatest poets and the composer of independent India's national anthem. In 1901 he founded his school, the Santiniketan, at Bolpur as a protest against the existing bad system of education.

The school was a great success and gave birth to Viswabharati. He was awarded the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature for his work "Gitanjali"; for the English version, published in 1912. The noble citation stated that it was "because of his profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse, by which, with consummate skill, he has made his poetic thought, expressed in his own English words, a part of the literature of the West." In 1915, he was knighted by the British King George V. Tagore renounced his knighthood in 1919 following the Amritsar massacre or nearly 400 Indian demonstrators.

2) Sir C.V. Raman (Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman) (1888 - 1970).
Nobel Prize for Physics (1930). C V Raman was born on 7th Nov. 1888 in Thiruvanaikkaval, in the Trichy district of Tamil Nadu. He finished school by the age of eleven and by then he had already read the popular lectures of Tyndall, Faraday and Helmoltz.

He acquired his BA degree from the Presidency College, Madras, where he carried out original research in the college laboratory, publishing the results in the philosophical magazine. Then went to Calcutta and while he was there, he made enormous contributions to vibration, sound, musical instruments, ultrasonic, diffraction, photo electricity, colloidal particles, X-ray diffraction, magnetron, dielectrics, and the celebrated "RAMAN" effect which fetched him the Noble Prize in 1930.

He was the first Asian scientist to win the Nobel Prize. The Raman Effect occurs when a ray of incident light excites a molecule in the sample, which subsequently scatters the light. While most of this scattered light is of the same wavelength as the incident light, state (i.e. getting the molecule to vibrate). The Raman Effect is useful in the study of molecular energy levels, structure development, and multi component qualitative analysis.

3) Dr. Hargobind Khorana
Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology (1968)

Dr. Hargobind Khorana was born on 9th January 1922 at Raipur, Punjab (now in Pakistan). Dr. Khorana was responsible for producing the first man-made gene in his laboratory in the early seventies. This historic invention won him the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1968 sharing it with Marshall Nuremberg and Robert Holley for interpreting the genetic code and analyzing its function in protein synthesis.

They all independently made contributions to the understanding of the genetic code and how it works in the cell. They established that this mother of all codes, the biological language common to all living organisms, is spelled out in three-letter words: each set of three nucleotides codes for a specific amino acid.

4) Dr. Subramaniam Chandrasekar

Nobel Prize for physics (1983)

Subramaniam Chandrashekhar was born on October 19, 1910 in Lahore, India (later part of Pakistan). He attended Presidency College from 1925 to 1930, following in the footsteps of his famous uncle, Sir C. V. Raman.

His work spanned over the understanding of the rotation of planets, stars, white dwarfs, neutron stars, black holes, galaxies, and clusters of galaxies. He won the Nobel Prize in 1983 for his theoretical work on stars and their evolution.

5) Mother Teresa (1910 - 1997)
Nobel Prize for peace (1979)

Born in 1910, Skoplje, Yugoslavia (then Turkey) and originally named Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, Mother Teresa dedicated her life to helping the poor, the sick, and the dying around the world, particularly those in India, working through the Missionaries Of Charity in Calcutta. The Society of Missionaries has spread all over the world, including the former Soviet Union and Eastern European countries.

Missionaries of Charity provide effective help to the poorest of the poor in a number of countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, and they undertake relief work in the wake of natural catastrophes such as floods, epidemics, and famine, and for refugees. The order also has houses in North America, Europe and Australia, where they take care of the shut-ins, alcoholics, homeless, and AIDS sufferers. Mother Teresa died on September 5, 1997.

6) Dr. Amartya Sen
Nobel Prize for Economics (1998)

Amartya Sen (born 1933) was the first Indian to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics, awarded to him in 1998 for his work on welfare economics. He has made several key contributions to research in this field, such as to the axiomatic theory of social choice; the definitions of welfare and poverty indexes; and the empirical studies of famine.

All are linked by his interest in distributional issues and particularly in those most impoverished. Whereas Kenneth Arrow's "impossibility theorem" suggested that it was not possible to aggregate individual choices into a satisfactory choice for society as a whole, Sen showed that societies could find ways to alleviate such a poor outcome.

And the Seventh Man who won the Nobel Prize is Venkatraman Ramakrishnan.

There are few others connected to India also won the prestigious Nobel Prize.

They are:

1) Ronald Ross.
Born in Almora, India, in 1857 Ronald Ross was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on malaria.

He received many honours in addition to the Nobel Prize, and was given Honorary Membership of learned societies of most countries of Europe, and of many other continents. He got an honorary M.D. degree in Stockholm in 1910 at the centenary celebration of the Caroline Institute. Whilst his vivacity and single-minded search for truth caused friction with some people, he enjoyed a vast circle of friends in Europe, Asia and America who respected him for his personality as well as for his genius.

2) Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936).
Rudyard Kipling, born in Mumbai, 1865 (then Bombay in British India), was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1907.

He remains the youngest-ever recipient and the first English-language writer to receive the Prize. British writer, Kipling wrote novels, poems and short stories -- mostly set in India and Burma (now known as Myanmar).

3) Abdus Salam.

Abdus Salam (1926-1996), born in undivided Punjab and a citizen of Pakistan, and shared a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979, with Steven Weinberg, for his work on electroweak unification, one of the important puzzles of modern theoretical physics. He was a visionary and an advocate of science in the third world. He founded the International Center for Theoretical Physics, in Trieste, Italy, which has nurtured world class physicists through workshops, fellowships and conferences.

4) V.S. Naipaul (1932- )

A British writer, V.S. Naipaul (Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul) was born in 1932 in a family of north Indian descent living in Chaguanas, close to Port of Spain, on Trinidad.

He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2001. In awarding him the Prize, the Swedish Academy praised his work "for having united perceptive narrative and incorruptible scrutiny in works that compel us to see the presence of suppressed histories." The Nobel Committee added: "Naipaul is a modern philosopher, carrying on the tradition that started originally with Lettres persanes and Candide. In a vigilant style, which has been deservedly admired, he transforms rage into precision and allows events to speak with their own inherent irony."

The Committee also noted Naipaul's affinity with the Polish-born British author of Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad: "Naipaul is Conrad's heir as the annalist of the destinies of empires in the moral sense: what they do to human beings. His authority as a narrator is grounded in the memory of what others have forgotten, the history of the vanquished."

5)14th Dalai Lama

Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama ((Born on 6 July 1935 at Taktser, Amdo, northeastern Tibet).

Former Head of state of Tibet and active leader of Tibetan Resistance towards PRC. Escaped to India when the PRC took over Tibet. Although legally a citizen of Tibet and hence indirectly China, he is head of Tibetan Government in Exile which is stationed in India. He got Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 for efforts for Tibetan Freedom through Non-Violence and Spreading Global Peace through Buddhism. Also during Prize Distribution, Head of Prize Committee commented that the prize was a part of tribute to memory of Mahatma Gandhi. Tenzin travels widely, in an effort to promote peaceful ideals.

(Imputs Courtesy: PTI, Wikipedia and other sources)

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Historic Yathra commenced from Kurukshetra...

Historic Yathra commenced

from Kurukshetra...



108 days Historic Yathra for protection of Cows, 'Vishwa Mangala Gou Grama Yathra' was started amidst holy Sanskrit hymns and Vande Gou Mataram slogans from the gathering at Kurukshetra, Haryana on Wednesday, 30th September 2009 (on the occasion of Vijaya Dashami).

Speaking on the occasion Shree Raghaveshwara Bharathi Swamiji of Shree Ramachandrapura Mutt Hosanagar said that 'Dharma Yuddha was took place for Seeta Matha in Threta Yug, while Dharma Yuddha was held for Bhoo Matha in Dwapara Yugh and now in Kaliyug we have to start Maha Sangram (Great Fight) for the protection of Gou Matha.

Killing of Cows will lead to the destruction of entire human population. Several breeds of Indian Cows have already disappeared due to killings of Cows. Some breeds of Indian Cows are in the edge of extinction... If we won't fight for the protection of Cows even now, we would not remain eligible to seek excuse of Gou Matha also, He said.

We won't look towards politicians for protection of Cows and won't beg them to save Indian Breeds of Cows. We came to you. Governments have to hear what people say. So this movement should become peoples movement, Shankanaada of Kurukshetra must echoed in every nook and corner of the country, He said.

Vishwa Hindu Parishad president Ashok Singhal, RSS leader Bhayyaji Joshi, Sadhvi Rithambara, Moulvi of Uttara Pradesh Chote Mia Mouliddin Saheb and others present on the occasion.

Vishwa Mangala Gou Grama Yathra will cover 20,000 K.Ms in the country during its period of 108 days. 4000 Public functions would be held during the Yathra period and 15,000 Upa Yatharas also will be held in support of main Yathra. Total length of Yahtra route would be 10 Lakh KM's including the Upa Yathras.

Apart from Shree Raghaveshwara Bharati Swamiji, Shree Vishwesha Thirtha Swamiji of Pejavara Mutt Udupi, Sadhvi Rithambara, Shree Shree Shree Ravishankara Guruji, Ramdevji Baba, Mata Amrutanandamayi, Acharya Vidya Sagar, Bala Gangadhara Swamiji of Adi Chunchanagiri Mutt and several other saints will participate in the yathra at various points.
Non Chemical Agri expert Padmashree Kutti Menon, former director of CBI Joginder Singh and many others also participate in the yathra.

Kamadhenu Havan, Gayathri Havan and Puja to the Chariot for Yathra 'Gou Ratha' were held earlier on 28th and 29th September under the leadership of Shree Raghaveshwara Bharathi Swamiji.


During this yathra Signature Campaign also will held and Yathra intended to collect more than 50 crore signatures and memorandum with these signatures would be submitted to President of India on January 20th 2010.

View the Video here to know some more info about Gou Grama Yathra.



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