Monday, 5 September 2011

gali Janardhana Reddy arrested news

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Thursday, 1 September 2011

Maryada Ramanna

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monkey and crocdile

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Monkey and the Crocodile [Children's story from India by guest artist]
WRITE NOW — Make this fun kids' story even better by adding your own words.

This great story was written by P. R. Ramachander,
a wonderful storyteller from Bangalore, India.
There was a big lake. In that lake a Crocodile used to live with his wife. By the side of the lake was a big mango tree. On that tree one monkey called Chathura used to live. Mango season came.
The mango tree was full of mangos. The monkey used to eat lots of sweet mangos.
One day, the crocodile swam near the tree and asked Chathura, “I see you are eating something. Can you also give me one?”
Chathura happily plucked two mangos and dropped them into the water. The crocodile ate them and liked them. From then on, daily Chathura gave a few mangos to the crocodile.
One day the crocodile took a few mangos to his wife who liked them very much. She asked the crocodile, “You say that the monkey on the tree eats lot of this sweet fruit. I am sure his brain will be very sweet. I would like to eat the monkey’s brain."
GO TO PAGE 2
What happens to the monkey's brain?
Read the rest of this amazing children's story from India
to find out!
Every country has it's own children's stories, fables, and allegories that are unique to it's culture. These global stories help us learn more about each other, because the stories we share tell a lot about who we are and where we are from.
("Monkey and the Crocodile" by P. R. Ramachander, © 2006.)

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Pages: 1 2
Click to WRITE NOW.
Make this children's story even better by adding your own words!

24 new storytellers made this great children's story,
"Monkey and the Crocodile [Children's story from India by guest artist]"
even better by writing...
  1. Storyteller Johnny (8) added to the children's story:
    I like brains too. Especially when they are sweet like mangos.
  2. Storyteller Madison (8) added to the children's story:
    Smart monkey. Don't share with anyone who wants to kill you.
    After the crocodile got hit by the stone, he got a big head ache and he was very sad. He was sad because he couldn't get mangos anymore. He was sad because he lost his monkey friend and he was sad because he had to go home to his wife brainless.
    When he got home, the crocodile wife was very hungry and she got very angry when she saw that the crocodile had no monkey brains with him. So she said "foolish crocodile! you can not even bring me a monkey brain. I do not want to be your wife anymore, and then she left."
  3. Storyteller Brianna (10) added to the children's story:
    The crocodile's wife went to the monkey, "I understand that my husband told you that I wanted to eat your brains. I do not eat brains. My husband is a liar. A big fat crocodile liar. I want to be your friend"
    But the monkey had learned his lesson with crocodiles and did not want to come down and play in the water with mrs. crocodile. He stayed in the mango tree where it was safe.
    Eventually mrs. crocodile got tired of waiting for the monkey to come down from the tree and swam away. And the monkey lived happily, crocodile free.
  4. Storyteller Lars (9) added to the children's story:
    But what about the poor crocodile, she was still hungry.
  5. Storyteller Homer added to the children's story:
    Mmmmm, brains
  6. Storyteller BIDKIDS (PRE-SCHOOL) added to the children's story:
    WE ARE THE PRE-SCHOOL CLASS OF 2008. 22 CHILDREN AGES 3 TO 4 YEARS. THE DIRECTOR OF THE CENTER IS REBECCA WEIS. WE ARE LOCATED AT THE INTERAMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK (IADB) IN WASHINGTON, D.C. THE CHILDREN VOTED FOR DIFFERENT VERSIONS THEY WANTED TO CONTRIBUTE.
  7. Storyteller BIDKIDS (PRE-SCHOOL) added to the children's story:
    CROCODILE WAS SAD AND LONELY. HE TRIED TO MAKE NEW FRIENDS, BUT THE OTHER ANIMALS DID NOT TRUST HIM. AFTER FILLING A SMALL POND WITH HIS TEARS IN A FAR AWAY LAND, HE RETURNED TO THE LAKE AND TRIED TO APOLOGIZE TO THE MONKEY. HIS FORMER WIFE TEASED HIM. THE MONKEY BEGAN TO THROW MANGOES AT HER. SHE SWAM AWAY WHINING. THE MONKEY AND THE CROCODILE –WHO WAS EATING THE MANGOES FLOATING IN THE WATERS — LOOKED AT EACH OTHER AND SMILED.
  8. Storyteller Brittany (12) added to the children's story:
    The monkey then said, "You will not eat my brain?"
    The crocodile said, "No, my wife will, but she is no longer my wife and is also no longer alive. I just want to be your friend."
    The monkey said, "We'll be friends, but only 1 mango a day till I trust you again."
    They were once again friends.
  9. Storyteller bella (7) added to the children's story:
    Thank you guys so much for the story!
    The one I know is a bit different:
    Instead of mangoes,
    it is a magical tree,
    so it groes all the fruit in the world with an unlimited supply!
  10. Storyteller Nishanth 10 added to the children's story:
    I eat brains, monkeys and mangoes.
  11. Storyteller Shaalini added to the children's story:
    I would like to have some brain of the goat
  12. Storyteller pau added to the children's story:
    once there was a very hungry monkey. the tree he lived in had no more food. of course he can go to the mainlaand where there are lots of food, but he would have to cross a river filled with hungry crocodiles. "if the water is deep, then it shall be cold," the monkey said. but still he tried to cross it. when he's halfway to the mainland, a crocodile surprised him. "i will eat your liver!" "oh, im sorry mr. crocodile, but i left my liver in the main land. if you give me a ride i will give it to you," the monkey said. the crocodile agreed, and he carried the monkey on his back. when they were on shore, monkey saaely jumped to safe distance. "you fool have you ever heard of an animal who left his liver behind?" monkey shouted to the crocodile. the crocodile felt foolih, to trust a monkey.
  13. Storyteller Anonymous added to the children's story:
    when the crocodile didnt eat the monkeys brain he suprisingly saw a boy who has no pants.
  14. Storyteller mehwish (10) added to the children's story:
    do not cheat good friends.
  15. Storyteller Point of view « A blog dedicated to my sister-in-law added to the children's story:
    [...] risk of being labeled demanding, I wish Princess would read the story published at the following link and do the following two assignments for [...]
  16. Storyteller Point of view « ??????? ???? added to the children's story:
    [...] risk of being labeled demanding, I wish Princess would read the story published at the following link and do the following two assignments for [...]
  17. Storyteller Point of view « ???????? ??????! added to the children's story:
    [...] risk of being labeled demanding, I wish Princess would read the story published at the following link and do the following two assignments for [...]
  18. Storyteller Point of view | The Ex-philes' Blog added to the children's story:
    [...] risk of being labeled demanding, I wish Princess would read the story published at the following link and do the following two assignments for [...]
  19. Storyteller barbie added to the children's story:
    the monkey and the crocodile became friends
  20. Storyteller Anonymous added to the children's story:
    at last they decided to be friends again and became a good friends again.
  21. Storyteller amanda added to the children's story:
    great fun thanks
  22. Storyteller amanda added to the children's story:
    brains are to gooy for me give me the mangos forever more lets be friends!!!
  23. Storyteller David added to the children's story:
    The crocodile said come here and i will eat your brain the monkey said oh wait i forget my brain in my house wait and i will give you my brain the crocodile said ok but do not be longer when the monkey goes down in the tree the monkey escaped
  24. Storyteller john added to the children's story:
    The crocodile says ok give me the mangoes and i will let you free
    The monkey says ok its a deal!!
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varudu

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ontari

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ganesh wall photos

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O Ganesha, avert this environmental catastrophe!

Isn’t it ironic that a beloved deity symbolic of new beginnings and removal of obstacles has clogged our lakes and tanks and littered our coastlines? Traditionally, Ganesh or Ganpati idols were made of earth, which dissolved easily in the water in which they were immersed during visarjan. Over time, as the magnitude of celebrations grew, mud and clay made way for Plaster of Paris, a cheaper and lighter gypsum-based binding material that degrades very slowly. Also, the vegetable dyes that were traditionally used to color idols were replaced with chemical-based coloring agents and lead-based paints, which leach toxins into the water causing serious health hazards. On the eve of Ganesh Chaturthi, we raise a familiar question again: Should we celebrate at such great cost to the environment? Or will you make a small but significant difference this year?


REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta

An artisan applies finishing touches to an idol of the Hindu elephant god Ganesh, the deity of prosperity, in Jammu. Though earthen clay was traditionally used to prepare the idols, it has now given way to cheaper and lighter Plaster of Paris. The cost to the environment, however, is much higher. Unlike clay, which disintegrates naturally in water easily, Plaster of Paris degrades very slowly and remains for days in the water.
AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade
The ten-day-long Ganesh Chaturthi festival, marking the birth of Lord Ganesh, is celebrated in September. Crowds of devotees take idols in procession to be immersed in water bodies, bringing entire cities to a standstill. Traditionally, soil taken from near the devotee’s home was used to fashion the idol and its immersion in water symbolized the natural cycle of creation and dissolution.

REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

Plaster of Paris has replaced earthen clay as the preferring material for constructing Ganesh idols. Bulk orders are taken over a year in advance and it takes months to complete fashioning the idols. Some variations of plaster contain powdered silica or asbestos, which may cause serious health hazards if inhaled. Asbestos inhalation has been known to cause cancer, as well as asbestosis, a chronic respiratory disease of the lungs. Inhaled silica can cause silicosis, making affected people susceptible to tuberculosis.
AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade

Ganpati Utsav is arguably the most important festival in Maharashtra. While observance of the festival dates back many hundreds of years, it was the nationalist and freedom fighter Bal Gangadhar Tilak who revived it on a grand scale in 1893. Millions celebrate the festival and Ganpatis of all sizes ranging from the diminutive palm-sized to colossi mounted on trucks are taken in jubilant processions for immersion in large water bodies.
AFP PHOTO/ Manjunath Kiran

A Ganesha idol gets a lick of paint. Idols were typically colored with vegetable dyes and natural colors. Of late, they have given way to brighter and more colorful chemical paints, which contain heavy metals like mercury and cadmium. Exposure to these chemicals is fraught with health hazards for the artisans along with the potential risk of polluting water when the idols immersed.
AP Photo/Channi Anand

An exhausted young artisan sleeps in divine company. Thousands of artisans slave away at sweatshops in the months leading up to the celebrations. They work with constant exposure to asbestos and silica dust and toxic chemicals in paints.
AP Photo/Channi Anand

A finished idol awaits a buyer in Jammu, northern India. Paints containing oxides of mercury, zinc and lead are applied on the idols together with "thinner", a petroleum product. Ganesh Chaturthi is celebrated as the birthday of Lord Ganesha, who is widely worshiped as the god of wisdom, prosperity and good fortune.
AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A

A schoolgirl admires a creative interpretation of the Ganesha idol in Hyderabad. The idols will be immersed into oceans and rivers at the end of the festival. In the city of Mumbai alone, an estimated 1.91 lakh idols were immersed in 2010.
AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade

A gigantic Ganesh idol is readied for the dais. The decorated idols are placed in enormous marquees known as pandals over a ten-day festive period marked by worship and cultural celebrations. At the end of the festival the idols, some even larger than this one, are immersed in large water bodies.
AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade

Nearly every Hindu family in Maharashtra keeps an idol of Ganesh during the festival period that lasts ten days. Here, a family takes its newly purchased idol home by local train. This year, municipal authorities and non-governmental organizations have been campaigning for the use of idols made of eco-friendly materials. This family seems to have missed the bus. Maybe next year.
AP Photo/Dhiraj Singh

Devotees prepare to immerse an enormous Ganesh idol in the Arabian Sea on the final day of Ganesh Chaturthi festival in Mumbai. They are joined by millions of others across the state and the rest of the country.  In an important step towards sustainable celebration, some families and organizations have taken steps to symbolically immerse a reusable metal idol in a pot of water at home. The same idol will be reused the following year.
AP Photo/Ajit Solanki

Devotees immerse a Ganesh idol in the Sabarmati River in Ahmedabad. Though the demand for idols made of clay and natural materials have been high this year, supply has not caught up as making idols from clay takes longer. Further, clay idols cost more.
AP Photo/Ajit Solanki

A Ganesh idol joins thousands of others being immersed in the river. A study conducted in the Ganga River in the aftermath of the similar immersion of Durga idols during the Pujo festival estimated that the total amount of paint submerged in the river was approximately 15 tons. They caused the levels of heavy metals such as mercury, chromium and copper and zinc sulphites to increase by as much as 20 times the normal between October and January. Only during the monsoon, when water levels rise in Indian rivers, does the level of pollutants diminish.
AP Photo/Ajit Solanki

A man searches for reusable items amid immersed idols of the elephant-headed Hindu God Ganesh in the Sabarmati River. Action groups in Mumbai insist that there is a silver lining amid all of this: In 2009, 8,383 household idols were immersed in artificial ponds. In 2010, they maintain, the number grew to 13,866.
AFP PHOTO/Noah Seelam
Schoolchildren paint idols of Ganesh made with earthen soil with natural colors in Hyderabad. In Nagpur, eco-friendly Ganesh idols made of natural materials and colored with natural dyes are available at Kheteshwar Mandir, Gandhi Bagh and at Chitnavis Centre. The Goan Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, seen by many as a saffron right-wing group, has gone green by banning the use of Plaster of Paris idols and props in celebrations this year. Their contention finds basis in the Hindu practice of using sattvic (pure) materials for worship. In Ponda, also in Goa, eco-friendly idols have been made using waste paper from used jap pustaka (prayer books). They are painted with edible palm oil which dissolves easily in water. We hope you are inspired. Happy Ganesh Chaturthi! 
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