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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Madhuri Dixit Life in pics-dubut



Madhuri Dixit was born on 15th May 1967 to Shankar and Snehlata Dixit, of a Marathi Chitpavan Brahmin family. She has two elder sisters, Rupa and Bharathi, and an elder brother, Ajit.




She attended Divine Child High School and did her higher studies from Mumbai University. Madhuri was a trained Kathak dancer, but she aimed to become a microbiologist.

Madhuri Dixit made her acting debut in Rajshri Productions movie Abodh in 1984. The film failed but minor and supporting roles continued to follow. Almost after four years of making her debut, Madhuri finally got her big break with Tezaab in 1988.


Her dance number Ek, Do, Teen became a super-duper hit and Madhuri got her first Filmfare nomination for the Best Actress.
Post Tezaab her pair with Anil Kapoor had become such a big hit that the two were seen together in a couple of hit movies like Ram Lakhan, Parinda and Kishen Kanhaiya to name a few.


In 1990, Madhuri did Indra Kumar's Dil, which was Madhuri's first movie with Aamir Khan. She played the role of a rich, arrogant girl in the film.
Dil went on to become a huge success at the box office and Madhuri got her first Filmfare Best Actress Award.


The very next year Madhuri starred in a love triangle Saajan with Sanjay Dutt and Salman Khan. The movie became a huge hit and its songs were also appreciated.
By this time Madhuri had carved her niche in Bollywood. The actress continued her winning streak with Beta, which won her second Filmfare Best Actress Award for the same


Her erotic dance moves in the song Dhak Dhak Karne Laga became very popular and she was named as the Dhak Dhak girl of Bollywood.


In 1993 came Subhash Ghai's Khalnayak, which again had a hit dance number Choli Ke Peeche. The movie also starred Sanjay Dutt and Jackie Shroff.


Sooraj Barjatya's Hum Aapke Hain Kaun! released in 1994 became one of the biggest grossers ever in the history of Hindi cinema. The movie which had Salman Khan playing the lead won Madhuri her third Filmfare Best Actress Award.


In 1997, Madhuri did her first Yash Chopra movie Dil To Paagal Hai. The movie which also starred Shah Rukh Khan and Karisma Kapoor did very good business and Madhuri won her fourth Filmfare Best Actress award.


Post her marriage Madhuri had taken a break from Bollywood. She returned to the big screen as Chandramukhi in Sanjay Leela Bhansali's movie Devdas. She won the Filmfare Best Supporting Actress Award for the movie.

Year 2007, she will back in Bollywood with our gorgeous look and dance style in movie Aaja Nachle directed by Anil Mehta.  It was also nominated in Filmfare Best Actress Award.




In 2011, she appeared as a judge on the dance reality show Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa 4 along with other co-judges Remo D’souza and Malaika Arora khan.



In 17th Oct.1999, Madhuri Dixit married Shriram Madhav Nene, a UCLA-trained cardiovascular surgeon who practices in Denver. Dr. Nene is from a Marathi Konkanastha Brahmin family. She has two sons, Arin and Raayan. After marriage, Dixit had relocated to Denver, US for almost a decade. In October 2011, Dixit again shifted her base back to Mumbai, India, along with her family.



In 2008, Madhuri received Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian award for her contribution to the Indian cinema.




Monday, October 31, 2011

Halloween- Its a Party Time for Kids

 Halloween is based on an ancient harvest festival, but is now celebrated by dressing in costume and eating candy.
The purpose of Halloween was originally to mark the end of summer and the harvest, and the beginning of winter, and to commemorate the passing of the dead.

Halloween is a secular holiday combining vestiges of traditional harvest festival celebrations with customs more specific to the occasion such as costume wearing, trick-or-treating, pranksterism, and decorations based on imagery of death and the supernatural. The observance takes place on October 31.
Though it was regarded up until the last few decades of the 20th century as primarily a children's holiday, in more recent years common Halloween activities such as mask wearing, costume parties, themed decorations, and even trick-or-treating have grown quite popular with adults as well, making Halloween an all-ages celebration.
October 31 was a day used to prepare for winter and greet the spirits of the dead. It was believed that on this day the wall between the living and the dead was broken.
Many different accounts of this celebration are told to explain the transition into the current version of Halloween traditions. Some say that the spirits of the dead searched for offerings of food and water, which is why candy is given out on Halloween. It is also believed that Celts dressed in disguises and made noise to ward off the spirits, explaining the tradition of donning costumes while trick-or-treating.
The practice of trick-or-treating derives from England’s celebration of All Souls’ Day. During the festival, citizens would beg for food and families would give it to them with the promise that the beggars would pray for their dead relatives. This ritual eventually evolved into children visiting houses in their neighborhoods, and the “trick” part has since dissolved.
Different cultures and traditions contribute to the Halloween that we know today. The holiday has evolved a great deal since its beginning, but the basic traditions have remained constant throughout the years.



Friday, September 30, 2011

Sweet Sixteen Birthday Tradition


Traditions and small rituals for the sweet sixteen birthdays include the father-daughter dance, changing of the shoes, the tiara ritual and the candle lighting ceremony.


The sweet sixteen party like a wedding is an American tradition to commemorate the passage from girl to woman, celebrated in the U.S. and Canada with anything from a casual party at home to an elaborate ball. Every family marks the sixteenth birthday with a different style, but the following ideas are a few of the most popular traditions that play a role in the sweet sixteen celebration.

Candle Lighting Ceremony


The candle-lighting ceremony is an old favorite that is seen in many coming of age traditions. It gives the child who is coming of age a chance to thank those who have played a major role in her or his life. At a sweet sixteen, there may be sixteen or seventeen candles (the last one for good luck). The first candle is lit by the girl's parents, and the second by siblings, if she has any. Traditionally, the next four candles are for other family members, and candles seven through sixteen are for friends. The fifteenth candle may be reserved for the girl's best friend and the sixteenth for her boyfriend or best male friend. The seventeenth candle, if she has one, is lit by the girl herself.


Shoe Changing Ceremony
The shoe ceremony is a great idea for a girl who wants to honor the bond with her father or the relationship between her and her grandfather. The sweet sixteen girl sits on a chair in the center of her guests while her father or grandfather brings a pair of high heeled shoes and ritually changes them for the flat shoes or slippers that she was wearing.

The heels are used as a symbol of transition into womanhood during the quince anos or fifteenth birthday coming of age celebrated by girls in the Hispanic community.

Tiara Ceremony
The tiara ceremony is very similar to the shoe ceremony, but uses a sparkling crown or tiara in place of the high heeled shoes. Some families do both rituals simultaneously, with a girl's grandfather bringing either the shoes or the tiara on a pillow while her father carries the other.

Father Daughter Dance
The father-daughter dance is a tradition that is also seen at weddings, where the bride's father hands her off ritualistically to the groom, her new husband. At a sweet sixteen, the father-daughter dance marks the change in a girl's relationship with her parents as she grows up and becomes an adult and less in need of their guidance and care.

Any or all of these traditions can be used to make the sweet sixteen birthday special and to signify the importance of a teen's growth into an adult.

Although the Sweet Sixteen party is usually for girls, some families try to do something similar for their sons too. They may throw huge parties with big birthday cakes, usually displaying the boys' interests.



Saturday, September 10, 2011

A Tribute to Martyr of Twin Tower on 9-11


World Trade Center
Remembering the twin towers, largest towers of the world till September 11, 2001. In an attack on 9/11/2001, the twin tower was destroyed by some terrorist along with thousands of life. This was one of the biggest terrorists attack in the history of USA and the world.

World Trade Center was more than its signature twin towers; it was a complex of seven buildings on 16-acres, constructed and operated by the port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The towers, One and Two World Trade Center, rose at the heart of the complex, each climbing more than 100 feet higher than the silver mast of the Empire State Building.

Built in the 1970s, World Trade Center along with the 110-floor Twin Tower in New York City was designed to withstand normal fires and hurricane-force winds. According to some reports, engineers believed that even the impact of a Boeing 707 would not bring the towers. But no engineer could have prepared for the destruction caused on September 11, 2001.


On September 11, 2001 at 8:46 a.m. Eastern Time, 19 terrorists from the Islamist militant group Al-Qaeda-affiliated flew four hijacked Boeing 767 jet of American Airlines and slammed two of them into the twin towers of World Trade Center in New York and third plane to Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. When passengers attempted to take control of the fourth plane, it crashed into a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, preventing it from reaching its intended target in Washington, D.C.

The plane punctured the tower at floors 94 through 98, but the tower was not yet destroyed. After burning for 56 minutes, the south tower collapsed, followed a half-hour later by the north tower, with the attacks on the World Trade Center resulting in 2,753 deaths.

Tribute in Light
In August 2006, the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation and the Port Authority of New York and New jersey began construction on the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. A great Memorial does not make from stone, glass and steel. Architects and designers in New York City created an annual light show to honor September 11 victim. Twin beams of light from haunting "phantoms" of the buildings destroyed in the terrorist attacks. After that they plan to build a National Memorial & Museum on the be-half of September 11, 2001. The Memorial will be opened on September 11, 2011 and the Museum will be open in 2012. 

Let us remember and honor the thousands of innocent men, women, and children murdered by terrorists in the horrific attack. Recognize the endurance of those who survived the courage of those who risked their lives to save others, and the compassion of all who supported us in our darkest hours. May the lives remembered, the deeds recognized, and the spirit reawakened be eternal beacons, which reaffirm respect for life, strengthen our resolve to preserve freedom, and inspire an end to hatred, ignorance and intolerance.

National 9-11 Museum
Ground Zero






Saturday, September 3, 2011

Some Facts about Statue of Liberty


New Colossus and its famous last lines have become part of American history. Here is the sonnet in its entirety:

“Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
"Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she
With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

The Statue of Liberty was a gift to the people of the United States from the people of France in recognition of the friendship established during the American Revolution. Over the last 127 years, the Statue of Liberty has become an internationally-recognized symbol of freedom and democracy.

French Sculptor Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi Designed the Statue of Liberty. The Statue of Liberty has been a landmark in New York harbor since 1886, but the story of the sculpture begins about 20 years earlier.

In 1865 a French writer and lawyer, Edouard de Laboulaye, first came up with the idea of the statue. Laboulaye had a keen interest in the United States, and had written essays in support of the Union cause during the Civil War. At the war’s conclusion he had the idea of creating a massive statue celebrating the concept of liberty. He wanted the statue to be a gift to the people of the United States from the people of France.
In 1871 Bartholdi sailed to America, and when entering New York harbor he realized he had found the perfect location for the statue he envisioned.


The Torch Was On Display in Philadelphia in 1876

At Philadelphia's Centennial Exhibition in 1876 the torch of the Statue of Liberty was a popular sight. Bartholdi had the hand and torch of the Statue of Liberty brought to Philadelphia in 1876 and it was prominently displayed at the Centennial Exhibition, a large fair celebrating the 100th birthday of the United States. After the Centennial Exhibition closed, the torch was taken to New York City, and was on display in Madison Square Park for several years. 

The statue, of course, was still being constructed in Bartholdi's workshop in Paris.

The Head of the Statue of Liberty was displayed in 1878

The face was featured at the paris International Exhibition in 1878. It was prominently displayed in a park in Paris.

People at the fair could pay an admission fee to climb inside the statue’s head and look out the windows in the crown. This is so popular that people need to book the tickets for crown at least 3 to 4 months in advance. I am planning to get a ticket for me in next summer. Hope I will get one for me. 




The Statue was built in Bartholdi’s Workshop

Bartholdi’s workshop in Paris workers formed the parts that would become the statue of Liberty. The parts of the statue of liberty are formed by bent copper sheets. But the arm is actually made of plaster the process of construction was that enormous plaster forms were made first, and copper plates were then shaped to match the contours of the plaster version.

After some years when the statue is displayed it turns blue-green with age due to chemical reaction between metal and water. The process is called as patination and occurs with most copper when it’s placed outside.

The true color of the statue before patination was a shiny reddish brown color. There is no painting color in statue of Liberty. 

The Statue’s Steel Structure Was Designed by Eiffel

In 1881 the French engineer Gustave Eiffel designed a steel interior skeleton supported the statue. Gustave Eiffel would later design and build the Eiffel tower in Paris.  Eiffel, relying on his experience building steel bridges, came up with a brilliant design that could hold the weight of the statue while also withstanding the high winds it would encounter in New York Harbor.

By early 1884 only the Statue of Liberty was completely assembled in Paris. It’s not placed upon a pedestal, as it would be when assembled in New York harbor. To gain entrance to the statue when it was assembled in Paris, workers created an entrance in the statue’s right foot, which is at the rear of the statue. 

The Statue of Liberty Was Finally Assembled in 1886

The statue of Liberty is disassembled in Paris, packed into crates, and loaded aboard a French freighter, which departed in late May 1885. The many parts of the statue arrived in New York in June 19th. The ship was greeted with cannons booming in celebration. After being shipped France, the statue was placed on Bedloe’s Island in New York.

In May 1886 the steel skeleton designed by Eiffel started to rise atop the pedestal, and by summer the copper plates of the statue itself were being riveted into place.

The Statue of Liberty was officially unveiled in October 28, 1886. President Grover Cleveland presided, and after a number of speeches, the sculptor Bartholdi pulled a rope and the French tricolor covering the statue’s face was pulled away.

Cannons boomed, fireworks lit the sky, and observers said it was like a thousand Fourth of July celebrations.

Since its construction, the Statue of Liberty, or as Bartholdi called it, Liberty Enlightening the World, has become a great symbol of the United Sates, and of freedom in general.  

The Statue of Liberty is really a amazing piece of architecture from 19th century which is situated at the border of New Jersey and New York. The famous Brooklyn bridge of New York and Ellis Island (old entry port of USA) are the neighbor of the Liberty island which makes it more beautiful and attractive place for the visitors.


You will enjoy the boat ride to Liberty Island and Ellis island from New jersey and New York. Also, while waiting in the queue for boarding the boat from New York, you can enjoy the standalone musician who will play a tune from any song or National Anthem of your country of origin. For us, he played the tune of Indian National Anthem.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Hartalika Teej "Signature of Devotion & Dedication"



"Women all over India celebrate Teej with great enthusiasm, dressing in their best saris and honouring the other women of the family and their husband's."

Teej is an occasion of utmost devotion and love for the newly wed brides. Celebration of First Teej festival is of great importance for the newlywed couple. It is a moment for wives to express deep love and affection for their husband. Craze and excitement of the First Teej is quite apparent on their face as preparations for Teej begin well in advance.

A small story lies behind the celebration of Hartalika Teej vrat. Legends explain that Lord Shiva started ignoring the entire world, including Goddess Parvati without noticing her devoted love. In order to get her husband’s attention, Parvati underwent severe penance for several years surviving only on grass and fruits. Eventually, Lord Shiva got pleased by the love and affection of Parvati and finally accepted her. Hence, this festival is commemorated by all women, whether married or single.
Hartalika Teej is the biggest of the various variation of Teej. Hartalika Teej falls on the third day of the first fortnight of the month of 'Bhadra'. It is a three-day festival which is celebrated by women in honor of Parvati Maa. On this day, womenfolk keep fast for long and conjugal life of their husband. Hartalika Teej fast proceeds without even drinking a drop of water. By rigorous fasting and praying to Goddess Parvati on Hartalika Teej, married women are blessed with healthy life of their husband while the unmarried girls are said to be blessed by a husband like Lord Shiva.

This is my first Teej and I have lots of planning to celebrate it but I am missing my family very much. I have one question for all women. Can your husband fast like this for you with such a devotion and dedication? I think you have answer for this question because in my point of view we know our husband very well. I wish all women to enjoy this great Teej and always being happy for the life with your devoted husband. 


Friday, August 26, 2011

Millions brace as Irene churns toward U.S.

SUSTAINED WINDS: 100mph 
LATITUDE: 31.2N
PRESSURE: 951.00mb
WIND GUSTS: 125mph
LONGITUDE: 77.5W
MOVING: N at 14mph

Hurricane Irene began lashing the East Coast with rain Friday ahead of a weekend of violent weather that was almost certain to heap punishment on a vast stretch of shoreline from the Carolinas to Massachusetts.
For hundreds of miles, people in the storm's path headed inland, made last-minute preparations and monitored the hurricane's every subtle movement. Irene had the potential to cause billions of dollars in damage all along a densely populated arc that included Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, Boston and beyond. At least 65 million people could be affected.

President Obama said all indications point to the storm being a historic hurricane.

"I cannot stress this highly enough," Mr. Obama said from Blue Heron Farm on Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts, where he is on vacation with his family. "If you are in the projected path of this hurricane, you have to take precautions now. Don't wait. Don't delay. We all hope for the best, but we have to be prepared for the worst."
As Irene trudged northwest from the Bahamas, rain from its outer bands began falling along the North and South Carolina coast. Swells and 6- to 9-foot waves were reported along the Outer Banks. Winds were expected to pick up later. Thousands had already lost power as the fringes of the storm began raking the shore.
Hurricane warnings remained in effect from North Carolina to New Jersey. Hurricane watches were in effect even farther north and included Long Island, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, Mass.

Here  some usefull tips to save our life for in critical critical.....
  • Make sure you have plenty of batteries and candles.
  • If you have regular phone service (non-cable), you will want a corded phone, since cordless will not work, and cell service could be difficult.
  • Have small bills ($1’s and $5’s) for purchases, because credit/debit card transactions and ATM’s may not be working.
  •  If you have a generator, have at least 10 gallons of gas, and get it ahead of time, since gas pumps may not be working.
  •  Fill your car gas tank.
  •  If you have an asphalt shingle roof greater than 10/15 years old, you may want to get a tarp, since these become almost impossible to find after a storm. If your roof is damaged, and you don’t cover it, any subsequent water damage will not be covered by insurance.
  • If you have an ice chest, make ice and fill it
  • If you have well water (no power, no water), bottle up some water and fill you bath tub. You can use this water for cleaning and flushing.