Friday, October 16, 2009

Sweets For Diwali -- Happy diwali !!!

Just Recieved these, and expecting a lot more !!!
Wanted to share these with you all :) :)
"May This Diwali
Bring A Lot of Sweetness
In All Our Lives".



































Enjoy life in all its Sweetness...
Live it, and relish it forever!!!

... HaPpY DiWaLi ... :)
Take care of your health ! ! !
... HaPpY DiWaLi ... :)

Thursday, October 15, 2009

An eye-opener and wake-up call for all of us.


It was a sports stadium.

Eight Children were standing on the track to participate in a running event.

* Ready! * Steady! * Bang !!!

With the sound of Toy pistol,

All eight girls started running.

Hardly had they covered ten to fifteen steps,

when one of the smaller girls slipped and fell down,

Due to bruises and pain she started crying.

When the other seven girls heard the little girl cry they

stopped running, stood for a while and turned back.

Seeing the girl on the track they all ran to help.

One among them bent down, picked her up and kissed her gently

And enquired as to how she was.

They then lifted the fallen girl pacifying her.

Two of them held her firmly while all seven joined hands together and walked together towards the winning post..........

There was pin drop silence at the spectator's stand.

Officials were shocked.

Slow claps multiplied to thousands as the spectators stood up in appreciation.

Many eyes were filled with tears

And perhaps even God's!


YES. This happened in Hyderabad [ INDIA ], recently!

The sport was conducted by National Institute of Mental Health.


All these special girls had come to participate in this event

They were spastic children.

Yes, they were Mentally Challenged.



What did they teach the WORLD?

Teamwork?

Humanity?

Equality among all??

Successful people help others who are slow in learning

So that they are not left far behind. Be Kind, kind.


This is really a great message... Spread it!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

I finally got to kiss her, but, it just wasn't enough ;)


Yes. It's true. I finally got to kiss her, after a long wait
of around 6 months.
I knew I was inching closer to her month by month.
Time sure swept through the days.
I finally got to kiss her.
Well, now that's enough.
I was referring to the Business plans trophy as "her".
Well, after a lot of hard work and research we
(me and my team) made it to the finals.
The SAE India's National convention 2009.
The judges were totally satisfied with our presentation.
The moment we finished our presentation,
It was all music to our ears.
Yeah. Judges said "that was an excellent presentation".
And that's just not it.
During the question hour, when ALL the other teams
were totally bashed up by the judges, we had just
three to face. And with the best answers being given,
all that we heard was "good" for the first time of the day.
We still couldn't believe that the question hour was over.
After the competition, I heard the judges telling the
co-ordinators that the results will be given to them only
by the next day, and thus the results and the prize
distribution will be done only on the
second day (16.00 hours).
Everything seems to be good. But, the results weren't
the way we expected.
Well, no plan is the best. Any plan can always be made
better over time. That's one thing I strongly believe in.
Two of our college students stayed back in Coimbatore
while we came back to Chennai as we had our model
exam the day after.
The results were announced.
We were told that we had won the 2nd place in the
national convention.
We were told that the judges wanted to have a few
clarifications done. But we were back in Chennai,
getting our days work done. Thus, the results were
announced and we were 2nd.
Well, a lot of good things happened too.
A good few good looking fans following me, right
after my presentation ;)
Well. Things were going great; it's just that the
results weren't the way I expected.
Nevertheless, I'm Happy about the win. Thanks
to the ones who wished me success
from the bottom of their hearts.
Wishes are on thing that, I'll always need from all
your beautiful hearts.
I finally got to kiss her, but it just wasn't
enough. Nevertheless, the kiss was sweet.
Very Sweet indeed!!!
Sweet smell of success ;)


Friday, October 2, 2009

M.I.T. lets Students Blog - Your space, your thoughts, your wish, just blog it !!!



Now, Mits wants to go to M.I.T :P
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Cristen Chinea, a senior at M.I.T, made a confession in her blog on the college Web site.

“There’ve been several times when I felt like I didn’t really fit in at M.I.T.,” she wrote. “I nearly fell asleep during a Star Wars marathon. It wasn’t a result of sleep deprivation. I was bored out of my mind.”

Still, in other ways, Ms. Chinea feels right at home at the institute — she loves the anime club, and that her hall has its own wiki Web site and an Internet Relay for real-time messaging. As she wrote on her blog, a hallmate once told her that “M.I.T. is the closest you can get to living in the Internet,” and Ms. Chinea reported, “IT IS SO TRUE. Love. It. So. Much.”

Dozens of colleges — including Amherst, Bates, Carleton, Colby, Vassar, Wellesley and Yale — are embracing student blogs on their Web sites, seeing them as a powerful marketing tool for high school students, who these days are less interested in official messages and statistics than in first-hand narratives and direct interaction with current students.

But so far, none of the blogs match the interactivity and creativity of those of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where they are posted prominently on the admissions homepage, along with hundreds of responses from prospective applicants — all unedited.

Not every admissions office has been so ready to welcome uncensored student writing.

“A lot of people in admissions have not been eager for bloggers, mostly based on fears that we can’t control what people are saying,” said Jess Lord, dean of admissions at Haverford College, which posted student bloggers’ accounts of their summer activities this year, and plans to add bloggers this spring to help admitted students hear about campus life. “We’re learning, slowly, that this is how the world works, especially for high school students.”

M.I.T.’s bloggers, who are paid $10 an hour for up to four hours a week, offer thoughts on anything that might interest a prospective student. Some offer advice on the application process and the institute’s intense workload; others write about quirkier topics, like warm apple pie topped with bacon and hot caramel sauce, falling down the stairs or trying to set a world record in the game of Mattress Dominos.

Posting untouched student writing — and comments reacting to that writing — does carry some risks. Boring, sloppily written posts do nothing to burnish an institutional image, college admissions officials say, and there is always the possibility of an inflammatory or wildly negative posting.

Pomona has considered having student bloggers, but so far has felt that the risks outweigh the benefits, said Art Rodriguez, senior associate dean of admissions.

“Blogs can certainly help humanize the process,” Mr. Rodriguez said. “The flip side is that a few anxious high school students may think and worry too much about what someone wrote on their blog, and present themselves in a slightly different way than who they really are. And there’s always the concern about the political ramifications, that bloggers may open up an issue or topic that starts something negative.”

But Mr. Lord of Haverford said prospective students’ interest in the summer bloggers calmed his worries.

“High school students read the blogs, and they come in and say ‘I can’t believe Haverford students get to do such interesting things with their summers,’ ” he said. “There’s no better way for students to learn about a college than from other students.”

Many high school seniors avidly follow student blogs at the colleges they are interested in, and post comments. Luka, one of dozens responding to Ms. Chinea, for example, wrote: “I didn’t know about the anime club. I would have never guessed that people at M.I.T. are interested in anime. Oh well ... +1 on my ‘Why should I go to M.I.T.’ list.”

M.I.T.’s student bloggers said they had read the blogs when they were applying, posted comments and connected with other applicants.

“I was blogging myself, almost every day, when I was in high school, and I read the M.I.T. blogs all the time,” said Jess Kim, a senior blogger. “For me they painted a picture of what life would be like here, and that was part of why I wanted to come.”

Ben Jones, the former director of communications at M.I.T.’s admissions office, began with a single blog by a student five years ago, at the dawn of the Facebook era, and noticed high school students responding right away. “We saw very quickly that prospective students were engaging with each other and building their own community,” said Mr. Jones, who now works at Oberlin College, where he has added blogs to the Web site.

The M.I.T. student bloggers have different majors, ethnicities, residence halls and, particularly, writing styles. Some post weekly or more; others disappear for months. The bloggers are sought out as celebrities during the annual “Meet the Bloggers” session at Campus Preview Weekend.

M.I.T. chooses its bloggers through a contest, in which applicants submit samples of their writing. “The annual blogger selection is like the admissions office’s own running of the bulls,” said Dave McOwen, Mr. Jones’s successor in the admissions office, in his message inviting applications.

This year, 25 freshmen applied for four new spots, and, Mr. McOwen said, it was hard to choose.

“You want people who can communicate and who are going to be involved in different parts of campus life,” he said. “You want them to be positive, but it’s not mandatory.”

And not all posts are positive. Ms. Kim once wrote about how the resident advising system was making it impossible for her to move out of her housing — expressing enough irritation that the housing office requested that the admissions office take her post down. Officials refused, instead having the housing office post a rebuttal of her accusations; eventually, the system was changed.

But most of the blogs are exuberant, lyrical expressions of the joys of M.I.T. life, like last month’s post on returning as a sophomore:

“Something’s changed,” wrote Chris Mills. “Now you know what you’re in for, you know the sleepless nights and frustrations are never far away, but this knowledge can’t seem to remove the exhilarating smile on your face. And it’s in that masochistic moment that you realize who you are. That this is what you’re made for.”

Courtesy : Internet
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/02/education/02blogs.html