Friday, October 17, 2014

Suggestions By AIADMK Cadres


அடிங்கடா..போஸ்டரை...
Suggestions by AIADMK CADRES

நீதியை வளைத்த சிந்தாமணியே..

குன்ஹாவுக்கு குஸ்கா கொடுத்த கொலுபொம்மையே..

கர்நாடவுக்க்கே தண்ணி கொடுத்த காவிரியே...

குற்றவாளி என்று கோர்ட் சொன்னாலும் குற்றமற்றவரே...

ஒரு ரூபாய் சம்பளம் வாங்கிய உலகத்தின் முதல்வரே..ஆண்டவரே...தேனே..மானே...குளவியே..கொட்டைபாக்கே..தங்கமே,

எளிமையின் சிகரமே..நடந்தே மக்களை சந்திக்கும் மக்கள் முதல்வரே..

ஒபிஸ் க்கு வாழ்வு கொடுத்த யுபிஸ் சே...

ஹெலிகாப்டர் தேவதையே...கொடநாட்டு சிங்கமே...

வரலாற்று தங்கமே...பொங்கலே..படையலே...நீண்ட நாள் தாங்கும் புளியோதரையே...கட்டி சோறு போல் காத்த காத்தவராணியே..! வருக..வருக

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Multi-Faceted T Rajendar Speaks In English

T. Rajendar

Film actor

Vijaya Thesingu Rajendar is a Tamil film actor and director as well as a composer, screenwriter, cinematographer, producer, singer and playback singer. He is also a politician in Tamil Nadu, India.

Born: May 9, 1955 (age 59), Mayiladuthurai
Spouse: Usha Rajendar

Children: Actor Silambarasan, Kuralarasan Rajendar, Ilakiya Rajendar

Interview of Nanjil Sampath with Rangaraj Pandey In Thanthi TV

Interview of Nanjil Sampath with Rangaraj Pandey telecasted in Thanthi TV

Advertisement Modified And Dubbed

Advertisement Modified And Dubbed and its in circulation in Whatsapp.

Watch The Prayer Offerings at Thirupathi Thirumala Temple

Watch The Prayer Offerings at Thirupathi Thirumala Temple


Friday, October 10, 2014

Puffer Fish Turns As A Ball To Protect From Predators

Puffer fish

Puffer fish is an easily recognized type of fish due to ability to transform and enlarge its body in a split of a second. There are more than 120 species of puffer fish which live mostly in the warm waters of the Indian, Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, with only 30 species that are living in the freshwater. Some species move from marine to brackish or fresh water during the breeding season. Although number of puffer fish is stable in the wild, they are vulnerable due to overfishing, pollution of the ocean and loss of natural habitats.

Interesting Details:

Puffer fish vary in size from one inch long pygmy puffer, to a two feet long freshwater giant puffer.
Main feature, common for all puffer fish, is ability to ingest huge amount of water (and air sometimes) which increases their body size and turn them into odd-looking ball-like creatures. Quick transformation scares predators.

Scientists believe that puffer fish developed this tactic as a method of the self-defense because they are poor swimmers that cannot escape from the danger quickly.
Increase of the body size is not the only tactic used against the predators. Almost all species of puffer fish contain toxin (called tetrodotoxin) that can be 1200 times stronger than cyanide.
One puffer fish contains enough toxin to kill 30 adult men.
Toxin is not located in all parts of the puffer fish, and certain cultures prepare puffer fish (meal called fugu in Japan) as a delicacy. Only specially trained chiefs can clean the fish properly and prepare delicious and toxin-free meal. Just one wrong cut of the fish meat can result in the death of the customer.
Sharks are the only species immune to the puffer fish's toxin. They can eat puffer fish without any negative consequences.

Puffer fish can be discretely or brightly colored. There is often relationship between the body coloration and the amount of toxin produced by the fish (brighter colors are often associated with large quantity of toxin in the fish).
Puffer fish do not have scales. Their skin is thick and rough. Some species have spines on the skin, which offer additional protection against the predators.
The most elastic part of their body is skin on the stomach area. When puffer fish ingests water, skin on the stomach expands several times of the normal size of the fish.
Puffer fish have four teeth that are fused in the beak-like structure. They use their teeth for opening of mussels, clams and shellfish. Puffer fish also eat algae and different types of worms and crustaceans.
Puffer fish have excellent eyesight.

Puffer fish reach sexual maturity at the age of five. Male guides the female to the shallow water (close to the shore) where she will release (usually) between three to seven eggs. Young fish are protected by the hard egg shell that will crack as soon as they are ready to hatch. After leaving the egg, young puffer fish swim toward the reef's community.
Although some baby puffer fish cannot be seen without magnifying glass, their body shape resembles those of the adult animals.
Average lifespan of the puffer fish is around 10 years.

Daring Chain Snatching Incident

Daring Chain Snatching Incident

Wings Of Dove In Mumbai

Opposite the Hamidiya mosque in Pydhonie, Mumbai, four flights of stairs above an orderly row of century-old grocery stores, oil vendors and umbrella sellers, the Nachij family’s pigeons take shelter from the blazing sun in bookcases. We appear at their doorstep without warning in late September, and Yusuf Nachij, the pigeon owner, is not home. His brother Shafi invites us to haul ourselves up into their house and on to their balcony, where the family pigeons perch, some in airy cages, others in wooden boxes with sliding glass fronts, left partially open. Here they coexist—we counted six of varying sizes and hues—with potted plants, clotheslines, a Tata Sky dish, as well as their human family, and settle unperturbed into the hands of a visiting uncle to pose for the camera, clearly acclimatized to human eccentricity. “It’s an enthusiasm of my brother’s,” Shafi explains to us. He uses the Urdu word “shauq”. “Our father and grandfather used to keep pigeons too.”

For many Mumbaikars, grateful for the existence of pigeon-proofing at home and fibreglass at work, pigeon-shauq is inexplicable. Having thrived in urban India in recent years, the rock pigeon is one of the few species which can compete with the city’s human population for ubiquity. Long after sparrows and mynahs have given up trying to survive electromagnetic waves, pollution and the disappearance of trees, pigeons have peaceably gone about the business of surviving and multiplying. “In homes they’re considered pests, while commercial properties mostly want to get rid of them for aesthetic reasons,” explains Joshua Rao, general manager, marketing, of Mumbai-headquartered Pest Control (India) Pvt. Ltd. Rao estimates the firm’s bird-proofing business at around Rs.10 crore annually, with demand more or less constant over the last five years. To pigeons, air conditioners are vents from which to bring forth fledglings that will achieve adulthood in 30 days. High-rises are roosts whose height prevents possible predators, like cats, from accessing their nests. Most of all, Mumbai’s humans have made generous neighbours. “The main reason for pigeons thriving here is that food and breeding areas are abundant,” says Asad Rahmani, director, Bombay Natural History Society. “There is no scarcity of nesting sites for them, and they are not afraid of human beings. Pigeons flock to cities all over the world. You find great hordes of them in Delhi, in London, in Leningrad. They are never found in big numbers in nature, but in human habitats, they don’t have many predators.”