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Prasad is a guy from Hyderabad, AP, India

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  • Created Dec 19 2008


    Sticky post


    The people who make a difference in your life are not the ones with the most credentials, the most money, or the most awards. They are the ones that care .








    "To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition; to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded. Ralph Waldo Emerson US essayist & poet (1803 - 1882)"
    Please visit my other blog

  • Flood-hit villagers strive to stay afloat- Hindustan Times

    Rated Oct 04 1 review india hindustantimes.com



    The Fury of nature

    Medical teams rushed to flood-devastated Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh where five days of torrential rain have left more than 205 people dead and 750,000 displaced, authorities said on Sunday.

    The floods have submerged entire villages, snapped transport and communication links and raised fears of epidemic in relief camps crowded with people forced out of their homes.

    Large parts of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka have been inundated. Air Force helicopters dropped food and drinking water packages to hundreds of villages that remained cut off after roads were submerged or washed away.
















  • VOA News - Heavy Rains Kill More than 130 in India

    Rated Oct 03 1 review voanews.com

    From the page: "Heavy Rains Kill More than 130 in India
    By VOA News
    03 October 2009




    People wade t02 Oct 2009
    People wadehrough floodwaters to reach safer areas in Kurnool, southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh,
    Officials in southern India say four days of torrential rains and flash floods have killed more than 130 people. "
  • Created Oct 03


    How precious!!
  • The Fall of Delhi in 1857

    Rated Sep 28 1 review history, india, video, 1857, sepoy mutiny youtube.com

    The Fall of Delhi in 1857


  • Indian politician Y.S.R. Reddy, Andhra Pradesh minister,...

    Rated Sep 03 1 review aerospace nydailynews.com






    From the page: "Indian politician Y.S.R. Reddy, Andhra Pradesh minister, killed in jungle helicopter crash: reports

  • Created Jul 20

    What a beauty!


    Some cool pictures taken in July 2009 by my nephew.















  • http://news.in.msn.com/international/article.aspx?cp-docu...

    Rated Mar 24 2009 1 review news msn.com

    What a pity!
    From the page: "Woman cop car crashes, killing 4 Andhra students in US

    Washington: Four Indian students killed in a road accident in the US were hit by a car driven by an off-duty woman police officer going the wrong way, according to media reports citing investigators.

    The four students were killed early Saturday morning in Des Peres St. Louis when a car they were travelling in was broadsided by Christine L. Miller, a Sunset Hills patrol officer. The officer was speeding and possibly drunk, investigators said.

    Nitesh Adusumilli, 27, who was driving the victims' car and Christine were both listed in critical condition Sunday morning at St. John's Mercy Medical Centre in Creve Coeur. Christine, the highway patrol said, was "clinging to life".

    Christine was driving eastbound in the westbound lanes of Dougherty Ferry Road when her Mitsubishi Eclipse struck the passenger side of Adusumilli's Honda, which was turning right onto the road, police said.

    Nitesh's fiancee, Anita Lakshmi, 23, was dead at the scene along with Anusha Anumolu, 23, and Priya Muppvarapu, 22 - Lakshmi's roommates - and Satya Chinta, 25, who was Lakshmi's cousin. He lived near Chicago.

    Sgt. Al Nothum of the Missouri Highway Patrol said Christine's car was "obviously travelling at a high rate of speed", based on the damage to the two vehicles. He said police had reason to suspect alcohol involvement but had not made that determination.

    Nitesh's Internet profile said he worked at AMDOCS, a software and communications firm in Chesterfield. His mother, Nitesh wrote, is a yoga instructor in India; his dad, a real estate agent.

    The three female victims were all working toward master's degrees in information technology at Eastern Illinois University in Charleston. They were meeting Nitesh on the spring break.

    A fourth roommate not on the trip, Anupama Mekineni, learned of the crash from her husband in India; he had been told by a relative.

    Police contacted Anupama on Saturday afternoon by dialling her number from one of the victim's cell phones. The victims' families are all in India, she said.

    Anupama said the university's international school had been informing the victims' families. She was also seeking help from the school in getting to St. Louis to assist with arrangements.

    The three roommates had transferred to the university last autumn from Oklahoma City University, Anupama said.

    A spokeswoman for Eastern Illinois University - about 140 miles northeast of St. Louis - said the school has about 150 international students, roughly a third of whom are from India. Students at the school are set to return from spring break Monday.

    "We extend our deepest sympathies to the families and friends of these young people," said school spokeswoman Vicki Woodard. "This is a tremendous loss to the EIU community."

    "It's really a tragedy for everyone," Sunset Hills Police Chief William E. LaGrand was quoted as saying by St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "Our heart goes out to the victims and to their families."

    LaGrand said Christine, 41, was a patrol officer with a dozen years on the force. The chief said Christine , a Kirkwood resident, was not returning from work at the time of the accident around 1:45a
  • Superstitious Hindus and the Brahmins

    Rated Mar 22 2009 2 reviews religion theviewspaper.net

    Know more about Hinduism
    From the page: "Hinduism cannot be defined in precise terms as it has no common credo, dogma, doctrine, or universally accepted canon. It has no church, cleric or hierarchy of ecclesiastical authority as in Christianity. Hinduism has no uniformity of worship and belief in god is not necessary.

    Indeed, the use of the term â€oeHinduism” in the singular is misleading and it does not justify its greatness which encompasses a multitude of faiths, philosophies, and social observances that have been born, inculcated and have evolved in the Indian subcontinent. Hinduism has undergone drastic changes since its very inception. Also, it never started as â€oeHinduism”. The Hindus or the people living in India over the centuries have seen changing patterns in the religion. The word â€oeHindu”, as all of us know, was derived from Sindhu, the Indo-Aryan word for river Indus (Hindavi for its inhabitants). Earlier this word had no religious connotations - but it soon gained one in the 17th century, when Shivaji used the term Hindu to distinguish his followers from the Mughals, whom they were fighting. With the differentiations made between Hindus and Muslims, and the codification of the â€oeHindu Law”; the â€Hindu†came to denote the followers of a certain norms of conduct and social practices known as Hinduism."
    Hinduism is very well known for its conspicuous characteristics of tolerance, pluralism, and absorptive capacity. The linear development of this exuberant religion is extremely interesting. The Pre-Dravidian faiths included animism and totemism, while the later pre-Vedic faiths included meditative techniques as yoga, lingam or phallic worship, and then saw diversions of non-theistic faiths which got incorporated into Jainism and Buddhism. Hinduism saw a pantheon of deities, with the three most important gods being, Brahma, Vishnu and Mahesh (Shiv). The Vedic religion based on the Vedas was the next stage in the growth of Hinduism.