29 July 2014

Interesting Facts about Messages in Bottles

I am talking about the time some four five hundred years back when the renaissance had started spreading its’ wings in Europe. Every adventurer was busy planning their travel route mast and adjusting the sails with a vision to discover the world and establish new trade links. Perhaps history was witnessing the greatest change till then, the geographies were changing and new maps were replacing the old ones. 

The fourteenth century to sixteenth century was termed as age of discoveries. The adventures of Marco Polo, Columbus, Captain Cook, Bartholomew Diaz, Vasco Da Gama have been well recorded, studied and are part of folklore. 

Along with them, there are stories of failures, ship-wrecks, and defeats in sea wars, and natural calamities that would have brought down thousands of ships to the bottom of the sea floor. 
The ships were destined to sink and rest in peace on the ocean floor, only to be resided by sea animals and decorated by sea weeds, shells, and planktons.

But few lighter objects were having a different fate. Lighter objects sail on sea. They flow with the current of the ocean and reach different destinations. Before the discovery of wireless in the twentieth century, sailors of wrecked ships used to write S.O.S messages and pack it in a wine bottle. They used to cork those and float numerous such bottles for others to know their whereabouts, current locations, how the ship was damaged, messages to their friends and family members and may be pirates or  traders could divulge even information about their hidden treasures. From rescue pleas, farewell messages to random information, all have found their place. 

A message in a bottle is a form of communication whereby a message is sealed in a container or a bottle and released into the ocean. This was prevalent before the advent of wireless communication. 



Bottles containing such messages do not always start moving in the ocean. They require strong ocean current to leave their location. Such messages seldom used to reach the intended readers. In most of cases, the bottles must be carrying on with their fate of floating forever. Even if one goes on a spree to spot such messages, the transparent bottles are submerged in the sea water and difficult to find. Looking at the vast spread of the oceans, the only possibility of finding such messages is the coincidence of the bottle being struck at any shore or island. Many of them are found by fishermen and sea hunters. 



Ancient Greek Philosopher   Theophrastus is believed to be first to release such messages in around 310 B.C. He tried it to test if Atlantic Ocean was pouring its waters into the Mediterranean Sea.
During the age of discoveries in 16th Century, Queen Elizabeth I had even created a position “Uncorker of the Ocean bottles”. Anyone else opening such bottles could face death penalty. It was widely believed that bottles contained information by British spies. 

There are various researches institutes across the world interested in research of such lost properties. California based Scripps Institute of Oceanography has shown a greater interest in such research. The information shared via bottled messages helps them know about many tragic ship wrecks. This also gives a clue or two about the ocean currents. Drift bottles gave oceanographers at the start of the last century important information that allowed them to create pictures of the patterns of water circulation in the seas around the world. 

It has always been a question of debate about which bottled message is the oldest floated. The records keep breaking as new bottles get discovered. So inspired was Jules Verne by the bottled messages that they formed a key element in the plot of his novel “In search of Castaways.”
Let me share with you some of the tit-bits & interesting incidents about such bottles that I have collected over the years reading on this top. 

1. When you start discussing on bottled messages, this incident is among the most famous ones. The event dates back to some hundred years back, in 1916. A British sailor observed a bottle while sailing in the North Atlantic Ocean, when he saw a floating bottle. He picked the bottle and read the message. It was from a passenger from the British passenger steamer ‘Lusitania’, which was torpedoed by German submarine on May 7, 1915, near Ireland. World War had started in 1914, and half the world was in its clutches. A hapless passenger from the steamer carrying 1198 passengers had written the message during the last minutes of his life. “Still on deck with a few people. The last boats have left. We are sinking fast. Some men near me are praying with a priest. The end is near. Maybe this note will—” the message was incomplete. The piece of information was historic. The steamer had 128 US citizens, which provoked the US to enter the Great War leading to the downfall of the Axis invasion. 

2. A steamer named ‘Kent’, belonging to the East India Company began its journey from England to Kolkata on February 19, 1825. But soon it caught fire. A British army officer Major Duncan McGregor was travelling in the steamer. He quickly wrote a message using a pencil and floated it, “We are all drowning. This is my last message to my wife and my relatives.- Major Duncan McGregor.”. It was his great luck that somehow McGregor survived, and got settled in Barbados, West Indies. Once his servant found a bottled message on the shore which he presented to his master. McGregor could not believe his luck. It was the same message that he had floated nine years back on that fateful day when Kent was gulfed by fire. That is how the ocean currents flow. The site of the tragedy of Kent is 8000 Kms away from Barbados. It is indeed a great coincidence that the message returned safely to the owner.

3. Another of the believe-it-or-not incident is about a Japanese Treasure hunter Chunosuke Matsuyama. In 1784, he set out in search of treasures looted by Chinese pirates when his ship was damaged by sea currents near a barren island. Chunosuke was destined to die starving. But he sculpted a message asking help on a piece of wood & put it in a bottle, which kept floating in the sea before it reached the shores of the village where Chunosuke lived. However the piece of wood was found in 1935, some 150 years later that the date it was posted.

4. This will indeed blow your mind. An American citizen got hold of a bottled message that was floated by Diasy Alexander in 1939 giving half of her property worth 12 Million Dollars. The beneficiary was working as a dish washer in a dingy restaurant.

5. During the First World War, in 1914, A British soldier Private Thomas Hughes floated a message to his wife inside a green coloured ginger beer bottle in the English Channel. He became a martyr a couple of days latter while fighting in France against the German forces. . In 1999, fisherman Steve Gowan found the bottle in the River Thames. The intended recipient, Mrs. Hughes had died in 1979. It was delivered in 1999 to Private Hughes' 86-year old daughter living in New Zealand.

6. There are many incidents of people getting responses via floated messages, even developing relationships, becoming pen friends which usually do not gather much limelight. Harold Hackett's hobby, tossing messages in a bottle into the ocean, proves that even the most outdated and unreliable form of 'social networking' can still work in our booking the face, twittering the tweet world. He sent 4,800 messages via the Atlantic and received over 3,000 messages back from all over the world.  

7. A Swedish sailor, Ake Viking found his lady love via oceanogram, long before social media revolutionized the world. He floated a message in 1956, “To Someone Beautiful and Far Away,” was corked in a bottle and dispatched into the ocean. He received a reply two years later.  “I am not beautiful, but it seems so miraculous that this little bottle should have traveled so far and long to reach me that I must send you an answer,” she replied. The two began a correspondence that ended in Viking’s move to Sicily to marry his match made by the sea.

8. The world record holder is the one which spent 98 years in the wavy waters. A message in a bottle that was lost at sea for nearly a century has claimed a new world record, according to Guinness officials. The 97-year-old letter, discovered just off the Shetland isles, claims the title for the longest time a bottle has been adrift at sea. It was discovered by Scottish skipper Andrew Leaper as he hauled in his fishing nets. He compared the astonishing find to "winning the lottery." Coincidentally, the 43-year-old was skippering the same boat which had set the previous record, the Shetland-based vessel Copious. Previous record holder Mark Anderson was also on board when the bottle was found. Released in June, 1914 by Captain CH Brown of the Glasgow School of Navigation, it contained a postcard promising a reward of six pence to the finder.


So, I guess this off beat topic could review your interests in bottled messaged. Cheers to the spirit of Bottled messages.

27 July 2014

The Last Page of my notebook

I was busy marketing my machinery to a notebook manufacturer the other day at busy town market. This time of the year coincides with the opening of the schools. After the deal was done, I moved into his work area. The smell of newly printed exercise books filled my nose. I imagined how I used to go with my mother to purchase them during my school days.

Back home, i raided my old cupboard that I used as archive to hoard my old books, journals and materials. I landed upon an old notebook, still having the remains of a brown cover, still having a rectangular sticker with Rahul Dravid’s image, bearing my name, my class- XI-Science, Subject- the one I used to hate- Mathematics.

What caught my attention was the last page. I opened it and touched it to feel the time some 14 years back. The page was the most colourful among its counterparts. Scribbled with various colourful inks- Red, Black, Green, Blue. The white page was no longer fit to be called white. I had given my autograph (Signature) at various places, in various sizes, in various fonts, and patterns.

I had used the pages to check whether my pen was working.  The vicious circles, round and round right in the centre of the page.

The page was the testimony of the doodle I made when the lectures were boring. A mouse, a weird shaped elephant, a masked man’s face, a long nosed Pinocchio, all appeared one by one.


The page was also witness to the criss cross game, several of which I had lost to many a partners who like me could never focus on the subject. 

Criss Cross..  

Someone has aptly said that if the last page of your notebook is blank, you lack the creativity. I never gave anybody a chance to tell that I was less creative. The caricature of our mathematics teacher was one of the most stunning features of the page. Her spectacles were something that made the caricature come alive. She would have definitely killed me in case she would have seen that stuff. I always dreaded when my notebook was sent for correction. Somehow I was lucky that I was never caught. Indeed the last page of any notebook is a personal property and any teacher should never enter the personal life of the students.

I used to like her when I was in the class for 2 years. She was my dream girl (At that moment). No exercise book was complete without her name. The love percentage calculator was the feature that could make the ideal last page. I wrote my name followed by hers and used to assure myself of a definite love affair with her. Even today I smile when I imagine those days back. My benchmate was an idiot, who wrote her name in big letters, and I had to strike that a thousand times using my pen so that others don’t read it. The mark of the pen was still there. The page was torn, but importantly, the mark was still there. Probably the sorry that was written for an old, offended friend was more powerful than any other words.

The last page is where one calculates the percentage of marks & decide the ranking of the last exam. Any exciting announcement like a holiday, a picnic, any contest always find a mention in the last few pages of the notebook.

The memories with friends over the last pages are cherished forever. The stand out to tell the discussions during the lectures. The review of the movie, the score of the morning match, the next prank, the cheat code for exam, and the girl/boy you like and much more has been the flavour of a typical school life.

Memories, Memories. The last pages of a notebook are most important ones. The theories on the other pages are long forgotten. Last pages are the graffiti wall of our imagination and remain common for everyone irrespective of the fact that one is academically an achiever or otherwise.

Share this with friends whom you think have shared the last pages of their notebooks with you. 

23 July 2014

The Untold Story behind the debut of Indian Railways

The announcement was made. Train no 19259 up Kochuveli Bhavnagar express from Kochuveli to Bhavnagar will arrive shortly on platform no 1. I was at Ernakulam railway station. I was moving back to Mumbai after a work assignment in Cochin, the cultural capital of Kerala, in Western India. I rechecked my coach no on the ticket. Berth: Confirmed, S-7, 13-Lower Side Berth. I was thrilled about the journey back home after spending 8 days in the city. The platform was quiet, not as noisy as the ones you find in Mumbai or Delhi or Ahmedabad. Quite a few of them waiting like me to board the train; some of them had their relatives to give them a send off; A man in his thirties haggling with the Coolie for a few rupees here and there; few mongers trying to sell their stuff. If you take a cross section of any given normal day at a railway station, this was a perfect sample.

The arrival of the train was marked by the typical whistle of the engine. I got into the coach and arranged my luggage. The ticket collector came and checked my ticket. As he did not have any more passengers to check, I invited him for a chat. A long journey and although I was feeling sleepy, somehow train journey excites me so much that I don’t sleep early.

The ticket collector obliged. We got a cup of hot coffee each and a packet of Cashew Cookies to kill the time. The guy was from Mumbai and soon we got a thing in common to share. Having spent three years in Mumbai, I had fallen in love with the city, an emotion of being a Mumbaikar. We went on discussing politics to gully cricket, from historic places to best shopping streets and covered many aspects over half a dozen coffee cups shared between us. He briefed me about how the Indian Railways was celebrating the 160th year of operations. It was a historic moment on April 16, 1853 when the East India Company green signalled the first railway passenger train in India, a feat celebrated even by Google doodle. Mumbai was the centre of all the celebrations. Being an ardent lover of history, I could discuss more on the development of rail over a period of more than 150 years.

It was past 2 O’ Clock on my cell phone. The collector went back to his seat. I adjusted my air pillow and lay down. The memoirs of the railways still in my mind sang the choirs of romantic development of railways in India which had woven the entire nation together during the pre-independence days and became the symbol of progress and development in the later part.

I recalled a story told to me by one of my friends. It is now a part of their family folklore. One of their ancestors was the witness to the first railway route in India. I am taking you to an age even before the historic trail that happened on April 16, 1853. The story shows the sentiments with which Indian railways made their debut.

The first operational train in India started on December 22, 1852 at Roorkee. It was the first goods train in India.  The purpose of building this rail route was hauling construction materials. Back in 1845, the village of Badmara was thrown into turmoil.

The whole village had gathered at the chowk where the panchayats used to conduct the weekly meeting and discuss the happenings. The monsoons had receded and there was still time to reap the crops. This was to be a part of year that welcomed the king of festivals, Deepavali, the festival of lights. Deepavali or Diwali as it is known is celebrated with much pomp and show in all parts of India alike. It marks the victory of good over the evil, of the light over the ignorance. They say that ignorance is bliss. But though not always.

The village was discussing something more serious there. The air was heavy with the smoke coming out of the chillums. Few children were running around playing, unaware of the havoc that was created by the announcer of the British East India company. The village was under the colonial rule ever since the king of the area had fled the battle ground.

The announcer Bindeshwari was earlier a cowherd. He left his family profession to become an announcer for the company. He rode on a black stallion, with silky coat, well grown in height and of Arabic breed. He carried a British flag, wore the usual uniform of the company and carried a drum to beat in order to gain the attention of the simpleton villagers. As Bindeshwari beat the drums, villagers started gathering around him. Jaypaal the village teacher & Sonlaal, the farmer was the first to reach the spot. Everyone left their chores unfinished, trying to gather what was happening. The ladies in village, covered their heads with chunnis, were speaking in murmurs and giggles.

Bindeshwari announced, “Listen....Listen.....Listen Everyone!!! It is an order from the British East India Company. The company is starting a Railway, between Roorkee and Kolkata. This Railway will pass near the village border. Some part of land from the farms of haria, bhumesh, Brijgopal and Lachhman will be confiscated by the company for this purpose. However the company will compensate for the confiscated land. The work will begin after deepavali”.

Perhaps, Bindeshwari had ignited a fire that drew flak from all the village persons. Bindeshwari was hated among the villagers. His forefathers had been cowherds. He had flouted the norms of caste by working for the company. Belonging to the family of cowherds, he was supposed to carry the legacy forward.
The peepal tree under which the panchayat stood transfixed as panic struck. Neminath Pandey, the Sarpanch of the village rose to announce. “Brothers and sisters. This is an hour of crisis. The Britishers are planning to destroy this land of Bharat. The rail system as I know will destroy our forests and farms. We will not allow this.”

Sonlaal seconded the thought, “I know about the rail. It is a fire spitting demon. It emits fire and smoke and will choke us to death. If the rail runs on this land, it will lead to Earth Quake.”

The word earthquake indeed was a shaker. The whole village erupted in shock. “We will not allow this. We will not allow the rail to pass through our village,” the chorus echoed.

“Our mother earth will shake and kill all of us. The crops will dry and the whole of the country will face famine. The land on which railway passes will lose its fertility. What will we have to feed our children? We cannot sustain this development. All the woods of entire Bharat and all the coal would be burnt away to feed the Demon on rails.  On the day the rail passes, we will be forced to leave our houses and move farther. Because the force of the rail will break down our homes. The smoke will ensure that we do not have any air left to breathe.” Added Sonlaal with a worry in his voice. Now the worry was turning into anger.

“Would that mean, we will have to leave our homes?” asked a nervous Pandey. “Yes”, exclaimed Sonlaal. “We will have to leave our homes, our farms, our cattle. All will get destroyed due to the development of the rail”.
Ignorance is bliss. The Britishers were shocked by the gloomy anticipation of the Indians, especially the uneducated and depressed class. But this was just the first uproar at the onset of the railways. Back then it was not everyone who realized what a great undertaking the Railways would be, or what it would do for the common man and traders alike. The affect that railways was to leave on development of trade, especially Kolkata was yet to see the sunrise.

This was the juncture when Jaipal entered the debate and took the centre stage. Jaipal was the product of the British Education in India. He was a staunch believer of development. He had been trained and educated in England. He returned to India to serve his village through teaching. Although he knew that the railways were meant to benefit the British rule, he also understood how could India gain and prosper.

“Friends,” as he rose to speak. “There is no need to panic. As you all know, I have been in England and have seen the railways there. I have travelled in them and I am alive here to speak in front of you all”
“Railways will never cause the earthquakes or tremors.” Jaipal marshalled his arguments in best possible way to convince the ignorant folks that the Railways was not a fire spitting demon and would not harm them.
“The railways are meant to benefit you by decreasing the time of travel. Imagine, your farm produce being sent to distant Kolkata. This will enhance your reach.”

Haria was still not convinced. He argued, “But Jaipal Bhaiya, would not that mean we have to leave our farms.  The rail line would pass from my farm. I will have to part with my land. The left over land will be of no use since the fertility of the soil would be lost.   Goddess Earth will not forgive me for that.”

“Haria, the land will still remain fertile. Apart from that the British East India Company will compensate you for the land you are parting with them” replied Jaipal.

“Apart from that, the coal reserves or the woods would not be depleted by the rails. You can travel to Kolkata faster than your bullock carts, can send letters to your relatives easily, and can sell goods faster. This will lead to a social revolution in this country. Take my words, Railways will be the biggest boon and one day will be the backbone of the country’s progress.”

We may ridicule & laugh at the situation at the Badmera. But we have a lesson here to learn from the event. The Indian society has had its renaissance from the ignorance, customs & blind beliefs of the Nineteenth century. But it has come a long way due to visionary who worked at the grassroots levels to change the India we have today.


Still in my thoughts were the words of a person who could imagine the development and convince his village folks to welcome the wave of change in the rural, economically degrading, India made up of villages. By the time I recollected this story, the train had reached Manglore station. My morning coffee greeted me. 

21 July 2014

Awesome Lip Smacking Indian Recipes

Coolest Tennis Facts and records

  1. First Wimbledon’s women’s singles was held in 1884.
  2. Marylebone Cricket club first laid down the rules for Lawn Tennis.
  3. International Lawn Tennis Federation was found in 1912.
  4. Nicknamed as Little Mo, Maureen Conolly became the first woman to achieve Tennis Grand Slam.
  5. Norman Brookes was the first Australian to win the Wimbledon Championship.
  6. Monica Seles is the youngest player to win a French Open, in 1990 beating Steffi Graf.
  7. Pete Sampras is the youngest Player to win U.S. Open.
  8. In 1985 Boris Becker was the first unseeded Wimbledon champion. He beat Kevin Curran in the 1985 Wimbledon finals.
  9. Women’s singles French Open has been won by Chris Evert for a record 7 times.
  10. Manual Santana was the first Spainard to win men’s Wimbledon in 1966.
  11. Martina Navratilova won the Women’s grand slam consecutively in 1984 & 85.
  12. Bill Tilden was the Titanic survivor who went on to win the Wimbledon doubles in 1920.
  13. Lottie Dod won her first Wimbledon title at the age of 15. She had won 5 Wimbledon titles against the same opponent.
  14. Bunny Austin was the first to wear shorts at Wimbledon.
  15. From 1927 to 1938 Helen Wills Moody won 8 Wimbledon titles.
  16. Wimbledon starts from 6 Mondays back the first Monday of August.
  17. Wimbledon was first televised in 1937.
  18. Rodney Grover Laver of Australia won the first ever grand slam.
  19. Elizabeth Ryan of U.S has won 19 Wimbledon doubles titles.
  20. Monica Seles was once stabbed during a match.
  21. Boris Becker—Wimbledon, Pete Sampras—U.S. Open, Michael Chang—French Open, are the youngest to win the respective tournaments.
  22. The first man to beat Bjorn Borg at the Wimbledon was Roger Taylor in 1973.
  23. In 1996, Mahesh Bhupathi &Leander Paes of  India reached the finals of all the 4 tennis grand slams & won 2 of them.

Great facts about Olympics and Olympic records



  1. Ancient Olympics were played at Olympia city. The winners in those games were awarded crowns made of olive leaves. King Theodosius I had banned the games in 393 AD.
  2. Even in ancient times, the games were held every four years during August and September and the word "Olympiad", which referred to the four year intervals between competitions, was commonly used to measure time.
  3. The first documented Olympic champion was a man named Coroebus, a cook from Elis who won the sprint race in 776 BC.
  4. It was only in 472 BC that the events were spread out over a period of four to five days, previously they had all taken place on a single day.
  5. The first Modern Olympics were held in 1896 by the efforts of Baron Pierre De Coubertin. Athens was the venue to host first modern Olympics. King of Greece had inaugurated the games in 1896. At first coubertin enlisted 13 nations to send atheletes to participate in the events . Now about 200 nations send athletes 4 about 28 events.
  6. The Olympic flag, with five colored interlocking rings against a white background was conceived by Coubertin indicating the union of 5 continents. After his death, De Coubertin’s heart was buried in a monument near the ruins of the ancient city of Olympia.
  7. The first three Olympics were loosely organized. It was the 1908 London Olympics that had relevant authorities organizing the games in separate discipline. The games were held in a newly built stadium with audience capacity of 66,000.
  8. Politics began to intrude on the Games in a serious way at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, where Palestinian terrorists attacked Israeli athletes in the Olympic Village.
  9. Sixty nations boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, while the Soviets and some of their allies retaliated by declining to take part in the 1984 Games in Los Angeles.
  10. The IOC, headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland, sets and enforces Olympic policy. The site of the games is chosen, usually at least six years in advance.
  11. The winter Olympics were introduced in the year 1924. Chamonix, France was the host city.
  12. Hockey was played for the first time on artificial turf in 1976 Montreal games.
  13. Marjorie Gesting is the youngest player to win gold .at the age of 13 in 1936 olympics he won it in spring board diving event.
  14. In 1932 international Olympic committee initiated custom of lodging all participants in an Olympic village.
  15. A Greek named Spyros Samaras composed the Olympics anthem.
  16. In 1986 Olympics Americans won the 9 out of the 12 track and field events.
  17. September 5 1972 is termed as black day in history of Olympics. On this day 8 Arab terrorists broke into the Israeli camp and opened fire, killing 2 athletes on the spot. Later in the rescue operation all the athletes were killed.
  18. Michael Breal, a French student of Greek mythology suggested the marathon for the modern Olympics.
  19. The new motto for the Olympics – citius ,altius ,fortius meaning faster ,higher ,stronger was coined in 1924 by father Henry Didon.
  20. First Olympics in southern hemisphere was held at Melbourne in 1956.
  21. Swimming, running, cross country riding, fencing ,and revolver shooting make up the pentathlon.
  22. The Olympic flame is lit up by the sun’s rays at the altar of Hera the wife of Zeus in the temple of Zeus in Olympia in Greece.
  23. High board and spring boards are the two diving events at Olympics.
  24. In 1908, the venue of the Olympics from Rome was changed to London because of eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
  25. In 1964 tokyo Olympics Rhodesia started the Olympics with a different flag and ended with that of new one of Zambia.
  26. At the Helsinki Olympics in 1952, K.D.  Jadhav won a bronze for wrestling, which was first medal for India.
  27. In 1996, Leander pace won a bronze in tennis.
  28. Karnam Malleshwari had won a bronze for weight lifting at Sydney games in 2000.
  29. Rajya Vardhan Rathore won a silver medal 4 double trap shooting event at 2004 Athens games.
  30. In the history of Olympics Laryssa latinina has won 18 medals in Olympics.
  31. Emil Zatopek has won 5000mt, 10000mt, &marathon in the same Olympics.
  32. Jessy Owens and Carl Lewis have won the golds’ in same events – 100mt & 200mt.
  33. India has won 11 hockey medals ,8 Gold ,1 silver and 2 bronze .
  34. India won her first Olympics gold at 1928 Amsterdam Olympics (hockey)
  35. Miki Oda was the first Asian to win an Olympic gold.
  36. Ethopia won the marathon consecutively in 1960, 64 &68.
  37. In 1976 Montreal Olympics Nelli Kim of Soviet ,scored a perfect 10 in gymnastics, and won a Gold for himself.
  38. Marion Jones became the first women to win 100mt, 200mt, 400mt relay, 100mt relay and 400mt.
  39. In 1960 Rome Olympics, Milkha Singh of India broke the 400mt world record. He lost the Bronze medal at the 100th part of a second to Michael Spence.
  40. Tokyo was the first Asian city to host Olympics in 1964.
  41. A traditional marathon is 42kms and 385 yards. The reason for this length lies here. The marathon at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London was set to measure about 25 miles (40 km) and to start on ‘The Long Walk’ – a magnificent avenue leading up to Windsor Castle in the grounds of Windsor Great Park. The Princess of Wales wanted her children to watch the start of the race, so the start of the race was moved to the east lawn of Windsor Castle, increasing its length to 26 miles (42 km). The race was to finish at the Great White City Stadium in Shepherd's Bush in London; however, Queen Alexandra insisted on having the best view of the finish; so, in the words of the official Olympic report, "385 yards were run on the cinder track to the finish, below the Royal Box”. The length then became 42.195 km (26 miles 385 yards or 26 7⁄32 miles).
  42. Francisco Lazaro from Portugal in marathon and Knut Jensen, Danish Cyclist are two athletes to die during the games.
  43. Spanish Queen Sofia represented Greece in sailing in 1960 Summer Games.
  44. Joe Frazer, nicknamed as Smokin Joe, won the Gold in 1964 heavy weight category.
  45. Tennis was reintroduced into Olympics in 1988 Seoul edition after 64 years.


20 July 2014

Evolution of Basic thinking process in Humans

Look at your life. You get up in the morning. The awakening is possibly assisted by a musical on your smart phone or other digital gadget. Or a typical alarm clock does the work for you. You have a coffee maker to dispense a mug full to add some stamina to your body. The steam geyser ensures hot water for your bath you and iron makes sure you look a perfect man in the navy blue suit.

The automated security system ensures your home safety as you leave in your car, inhaling the freshness of the morning mist. Probably imagining how difficult would life be without these comforts. This thought provokes to another thought and the chain reaction continues till you reach the age of an undeveloped human race.
Welcome to the pre-stone age. This time travel takes you to about 500,000 years back.

Amidst the dense thick African forests, lies the curious animal in the most care free slumber. As he awakes, finds something that hinders his ability to open his eyes. Wait before you jump to a conclusion. He has not defined the sun and the sunlight. He has not been introduced to even light. This is probably the first signal that his primitive brain has recorded. The sense of vision awakens. He looks at the world around him not understanding who he is; neither knowing what is he going to do next. He tries to observe curiously his body parts; strange organs. He tries to crawl and move. He feels himself using what he would later call his hands. It will probably take a long time, may be years to understand that he can walk erect. Till that time, he was going to crawl on four legs. As he tries to accustom to his new environment, he feels some part of body below the top choked. He tries to understand what is wrong. Yes he is thirsty, but does not know what to do. Probably his thirst is increasing only his helplessness. His observation leads to a place where a fluid in ample quantity with few other creatures in it. Now, fear creeps in. He sheepishly goes to the fluid, afraid to even touch it. He puts his finger hesitantly to check whether this could harm him. The fluid is cold, and would be defined in time to come as water. But right now the animal curiously looks at it for hours as how could he use the fluid to his benefit. Remember that the animal has not defined himself as Homo Sapiens, or called himself a man. He is yet to develop that kind of thinking. For the moment, the fluid is his center of interest. He observes other animals using it via a wide opening on the frontal part of top of their bodies. He feels that this could be used to clear his throat. He drinks it.  Feels it quenching his thirst. Above all, his fear that the fluid could harm him is gone. Now he enters the waters. Suddenly his legs get trapped in rocks. Alas! He is in pains. His throat releases his expression of voice, “Aaaah!” This could be the first words that the animal might have spoken. Again the brain takes a note of it. This is recorded as the expression when the animal is in pain. Whenever such painful experience is repeated, brain automatically sends signal to the voice box.

He comes out of the water to find a strange feeling inside his body. The feeling which would in future lead to all the evolution of human race. The one feeling that will lead to discovery of farming, human settlement and even vices like murder, dacoity, wars, loot and exploitation....... the feeling of hunger!!!

For the time being, let’s go back to our animal. He observes into his new environment, how to find a solution to the undefined strange feeling inside his body. He lies down. He sleeps on his stomach. He uses his hands to fill himself with sand, but realizes that this may not help in long run. The point am driving towards is the realization process. The numerous experiments that the earliest human being conducted over decades, centuries, ages to be even civilised and lead a settled life from a nomad.

Our man looks in his surroundings, finding ways to extinguish the fire in his belly. He finds the colourful parts of the foliage interesting. With efforts, he gets them and bites them using his teeth. The weird taste does give displeasure. He spits it out completely. Tries another part, again to his dismay, that weird taste returns. It takes our man quite a few times to realize that the part he is eating is not good and will remain to taste weird. He throws away the parts and moves forward to find something more interesting. He calls that part of foliage as fruit, defines plant, trees, shrubs and herbs. It will take him quite some years and lots of trial and error to understand which fruit to eat and what not to. He continued his experiments with flowers, only to find it bitter in his dismay. Yes he started understanding what tastes pleasant (read sweet, sour) and what tastes rubbish (Bitter, chilly). This was one of the first senses, the sense of taste that man started developing. This was probably the first of the instructions to the brains, this is sweet, that is sour, and the other one is bitter. This can be eaten, the other can’t be. In case any poisonous fruit or vegetative part was eaten, would have resulted in poisoning, or even death. It took millions of such experiences for man to evolve and understand what is usable and what not.

He accidentally puts the fruits & flowers into his nose. This is when he finds pleasant inhaling experiences. The sense of smell awakens. The primitive brain records the first smell as pleasant. This would continue as man encounters various elements that smell pleasant as well as awful. The brain starts sending signals as the pleasant smelling ones are good and the awful ones are to be avoided.

This helps our new man as he smells the food first. He starts taking judgement about what to eat. The cognitive thinking begins!!! I can define this moment as a giant step for mankind, much before Neil Armstrong stepped on the moon.

Historians reckon that vegetation was food for man for about a million years before he turned a hunter and a nomad. Then he transformed into a warrior, a farmer, and settled later.

Coming back to the man, after he fills his stomach, he needs rest. He knows only one place where he can sleep, the place where he woke up to discover himself. The place is under direct sunlight. Our man is yet to discover caves. He does not even have the thinking ability that the shade under the tree can be a good place to protect himself from the harsh heat of the sun. This thought process will come from the experience when he accidentally runs under the shade of a tree and finds it cooler.
His sense of feeling awakens. He starts distinguishing a cooler climate from a hotter one. Another Eureka!!! However it will take centuries for him to understand and migrate to better climates.
The era for the behavioral modernity has just begun.

The problem that arises when our man encounters another man or woman is about how to express the emotions and how to communicate. Our man makes gestures using hands, legs and facial expressions to communicate. The process is intricate and would have required thousands of attempts to communicate a simple thing for the first time. Today when one shows thumbs up, it indicates all is well. A “V” shown using fingers means victory. It is hard to imagine how human would have communicated without the defined and recorded words and terms.

Let’s look at the sense of hearing. Our new man probably would have started to pay attention to the sounds in nature like that of birds, other animals, insects, the flowing sound of water, thundering sound of clouds and alike. Again the brain starts categorizing them as good or dangerous. Probably he might have seen a lion in the African jungle killing other humans or animals. Hence the roar of the lion indicates danger. The brain is busy listening to the music of nature. Logic of what’s good and what’s bad applies here automatically.

The basic senses have started their functioning. Our man is not alone now. He is in the company of thousands of other human beings. His style of communication has changed. He has started naming everything including himself. He is proud to call himself the most developed animal on earth. The evolutionary process continues as he forms clans, hunts, discovers fire and starts eating cooked meat, discovers wheels, migrates to river banks for protection from other animals, discovers farming and settles. He creates villages, makes new discoveries, creates cities, discovers new lands and establishes newer settlements. The settled man now starts facing challenges. He coins money and this becomes the root cause of many evils. He creates societies but this also gives birth to communalism. The world is divided.  Meanwhile on the other side, the human society faces the fury of nature. Quakes, floods, storms, epidemics strike and man is in fire fighting mode using his brains to survive & sustain. The process of evolution is ongoing and the brain is still taking notes as to what is good and what is bad.

For the man whose journey began on the African soil has come a long way.

Suddenly, your mobile beeps and that is the second message from your boss, “Where are you?” that brings you back to the 21st Century!!!

You open up your laptop to give final touches to the presentation on “Future map for your organization”. And the last slide of the presentation says “Keep Going ... Keep Growing!”

13 July 2014

29 TELESALES TIPS YOU CAN USE

Helps with sales tips that can work wonders for sales people, businessmen and all other professionals.


Coolest Football tit-bits, statistics, and historic facts.


  • Rules of soccer were laid down in 1846 by Cambridge university students.
  • Franz Binder was the first footballer to score 1000 goals.
  • FIFA was founded in Paris by 7 member nations in 1904. Its President, Jules Rimet formulated the idea of a tournament to determine the best international side. In 1929, FIFA passed a vote to hold the first ever World Cup.
  • Along with Jules Rimet a French journalist Robert Guerin was instrumental in starting the world cup.
  • Uruguay was the only country to volunteer to host the tournament. As a country celebrating its centenary of independence and current holders of the Olympic football title, she proved an excellent host.
  • Uruguay had won the football gold in 1928 Olympics. Despite protests from European football associations, the first cup was held in that country. 13 teams, 8 from Europe, 5 from Latin America and U.S had participated in the event. Uruguay was fortunately, the last team to qualify for the World Cup.
  • Lucien Laurent had scored the first goal in the history of the football world cup for France.
  • Ottorino Barassi of Italy was the vice president of Fifa during World war II and had hidden the Jules Rimet trophy in a shoe box under his bed to protect it from the hands of the Nazis.
  • Brazil is the only country to have appeared in all the 21 editions of Football World cup. It has hosted the world cup twice.
  • Hakan Sukur of Turkey had scored the fastest goal in the history of football against South Korea in 11 seconds while fighting for the third place in 2002 edition. He had thus broken the record of Vaclav Masek’s (he belonged to Czechoslovakia) record of 15th second goal against Mexico in the 1962 edition of the world cup.
  • The world cup trophy was earlier called Jules Rimet trophy in the honour of Jules Rimet. During the preparations of the 1966 edition of World Cup in England, the Jules Rimet Trophy was stolen. It was later recovered by a dog named “Pickles”. It was won outright by Brazil in the 1970 Mexico edition of the world cup. It was again stolen in 1983, this time forever.
  • Bobby Moore who led England to victory in the 66 edition was arrested at Colombia in 1970 under false pretexts in order to prevent him from playing in the cup at Mexico.
Edition
Host
Winner
Runners-Up
1930
Uruguay
Uruguay
Argentina
1934
Italy
Italy
Czechoslovakia
1938
France
Italy
Hungary
1950
Brazil
Uruguay
Brazil
1954
Switzerland
West Germany
Hungary
1958
Sweden
Brazil
Sweden
1962
Chile
Brazil
Czechoslovakia
1966
England
England
West Germany
1970
Mexico
Brazil
Italy
1974
West Germany
West Germany
Poland
1978
Argentina
Argentina
Netherlands
1982
Spain
Italy
West Germany
1986
Mexico
Argentina
West Germany
1990
Italy
West Germany
Argentina
1994
USA
Brazil
Italy
1998
France
France
Brazil
2002
Japan-South Korea
Brazil
Germany
2006
Germany
Italy
France
2010
South Africa
Spain
Netherlands
2014
Brazil
Germany
Argentina


  • Brazil, Italy, Mexico, France, Germany (As West Germany in 1974) have hosted the Football World Cup twice.
  • Italy (1934, 1938), Brazil (1958, 1962) have managed to retain the World Cup trophy.
  • Brazil has been the most successful team in world cups having won 5 out of the 20 editions. However, it has never won the world cup on its home soil. In 1950, it lost to Uruguay in the finals. In 2014, Brazil managed 4th Spot.
  • Germany has the record of making it to the finals for three successive world cups (1982, 1986, and 1990).
  • Japan & South Korea were the first Asian nations to host the world cup; in case of Africa, South Africa, Morocco and Egypt hosted the world cup finals in 2010.
  • Oleg Salenko of Russia scored 5 goals against Cameroons in the 1994 world cup, the highest by an individual.
  • Peter Shilton was the English goal keeper, when Diago Maradona scored the magnificent “Hand of God” goal, in the 1986 edition of WC hosted by Mexico.
  • Australia in a world cup qualifier match created a record at Coff’s harbour, Australia smashing Samoa by 31-0. Archie Thompson made 13 goals.
  • Argentina in 1990 and Brazil in 1998 are two instances of a defending champion losing the world cup final match.
  • Germany has the record of losing two consecutive World Cup final matches (1982 against Italy and 1986 against Argentina).
  • The highest margin of win in a world cup match was created when Hungary beat El Salvador 10-1 in a league match in 1982 Spain edition of the cup.
  • Juan Basso Guerin was the first substitute to make a goal in the history of world cup.
  • 1962 WC match at Santiago, when hosts Chile met Italy, is known as “Battle of Santiago” as game erupted into a flurry of kicks and punches. It is still regarded as one of the worst matches in history of the tournament.
  • Brazilian player Vava was the first to score goals in two separate world cup final matches.
  • The 1970 edition of world cup held at Mexico was the first to be televised on colour.
  • Franz Beckenbauer was part of 1966 German squad that lost the finals, came third in 1970. He was the captain of the 1974 cup winning squad. He was to return as coach of 1990 German team that won on Italian grounds. He served as head of organizing committee for 2006 edition held at Germany.
  • 1982, Spain edition of World Cup saw 24 places for grab with the qualifiers and changed structure. It was increased to 32 in 1998 France edition.
  • German goalie Harold Schumacher clattered French substitute Patrick Battinson with a forearm smash. The ball trickled wide of the net but, amazingly, Dutch referee Charles Corver awarded a goal-kick as Battiston lay motionless on the field, having lost two teeth. When asked about the incident, Schumacher is famed to have uttered, “I will pay for his dentist fees”.
  • 1986 edition of world cup, originally to be hosted by Columbia was given to Mexico as Columbia was unable to meet the economic demands of staging the world cup.
  • Roger Milla of Cameroons played in 1994 USA edition at the age of 42, the highest in history of football world cups.
  • Germany is the only European nation to have won the world cup in America in 2014.
  • Spain was the first European nation to win the world cup outside Europe. It won the world cup in 2010, which was hosted in Africa.