Friday, August 29, 2008

Tamil Bhavana Photos Bhavana mms Bhavana biography






BhavanaScreen Name: Bhavana


Real Name: Karthika


Birthday: June 6, 1986


Place of Birth: Kerala,India


Occupation: South Indian actress


Acted in: Malayalam,Telugu & Tamil films




Debut movie: NammalAwards & Rewards: FilmFare Best Actress Award(2006);State Award for Best Character Actress and Ujala-Asianet award for the same year 2006Bhavana is a very popular cute South Indian film actress.She acted in malayalam,telugu and tamil films sofar.Bhavana entered into film industry with the movie Nammal which was a big success and got her so much fame and honours.Bhavana acted with almost all popular heroes of Malayalam industy including popular Mohanlal,Mammootty,Suresh Gopi,Prithviraj,Jayaram,etc.Bhavana made her tollywood debut recently with Ontari opposite Tollywood actor Gopi Chand.Thus actress Bhavana cemented her place in South Indian films.Though she got so many offers form tamil and telugu, she refused simply because of her very tight shedule including the offer from popular Tollywood director Krishnavamsi.Sources say that she also refused to act with Tamil controversial young actor Simbu as his image now a days is tarnishing.Her latest hot news is that she accepted to do a tollywood movie opposite Allu Arjun.Bhavana also recieved so many awards for her good performance including the prestigious Filmfare award in the year 2006.Bhavana


Miracle of Nature keep Watching!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!












Have u realised the miracle!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!




Thursday, August 28, 2008

The Statue of Zeus at Olympia




This is the statue of the god in whose honor the Ancient Olympic games were held. It was located on the land that gave its very name to the Olympics. At the time of the games, wars stopped, and athletes came from Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, and Sicily to celebrate the Olympics and to worship their king of gods: Zeus.
LocationAt the ancient town of Olympia, on the west coast of modern Greece, about 150 km west of Athens.
HistoryThe ancient Greek calendar starts in 776 BC, for the Olympic games are believed to have started that year. The magnificent temple of Zeus was designed by the architect Libon and was built around 450 BC. Under the growing power of ancient Greece, the simple Doric-style temple seemed too mundane, and modifications were needed. The solution: A majestic statue. The Athenian sculptor Pheidias was assigned for the "sacred" task, reminiscent of Michelangelo's paintings at the Sistine Chapel.
For the years that followed, the temple attracted visitors and worshippers from all over the world. In the second century BC repairs were skillfully made to the aging statue. In the first century AD, the Roman emperor Caligula attempted to transport the statue to Rome. However, his attempt failed when the scaffolding built by Caligula's workmen collapsed. After the Olympic games were banned in AD 391 by the emperor Theodosius I as Pagan practices, the temple of Zeus was ordered closed.
Olympia was further struck by earthquakes, landslides and floods, and the temple was damaged by fire in the fifth century AD. Earlier, the statue had been transported by wealthy Greeks to a palace in Constantinople. There, it survived until it was destroyed by a severe fire in AD 462. Today nothing remains at the site of the old temple except rocks and debris, the foundation of the buildings, and fallen columns.
DescriptionPheidias began working on the statue around 440 BC. Years earlier, he had developed a technique to build enormous gold and ivory statues. This was done by erecting a wooden frame on which sheets of metal and ivory were placed to provide the outer covering. Pheidias' workshop in Olympia still exists, and is coincidentally -- or may be not -- identical in size and orientation to the temple of Zeus. There, he sculpted and carved the different pieces of the statue before they were assembled in the temple.
When the statue was completed, it barely fitted in the temple. Strabo wrote:
".. although the temple itself is very large, the sculptor is criticized for not having appreciated the correct proportions. He has shown Zeus seated, but with the head almost touching the ceiling, so that we have the impression that if Zeus moved to stand up he would unroof the temple."
Strabo was right, except that the sculptor is to be commended, not criticized. It is this size impression that made the statue so wonderful. It is the idea that the king of gods is capable of unroofing the temple if he stood up that fascinated poets and historians alike. The base of the statue was about 6.5 m (20 ft) wide and 1.0 meter (3 ft) high. The height of the statue itself was 13 m (40 ft), equivalent to a modern 4-story building.
The statue was so high that visitors described the throne more than Zeus body and features. The legs of the throne were decorated with sphinxes and winged figures of Victory. Greek gods and mythical figures also adorned the scene: Apollo, Artemis, and Niobe's children. The Greek Pausanias wrote:
On his head is a sculpted wreath of olive sprays. In his right hand he holds a figure of Victory made from ivory and gold... In his left hand, he holds a sceptre inlaid with every kind of metal, with an eagle perched on the sceptre. His sandals are made of gold, as is his robe. His garments are carved with animals and with lilies. The throne is decorated with gold, precious stones, ebony, and ivory.
The statue was occasionally decorated with gifts from kings and rulers. the most notable of these gifts was a woollen curtain "adorned with Assyrian woven patterns and Pheonician dye" which was dedicated by the Syrian king Antiochus IV.
Copies of the statue were made, including a large prototype at Cyrene (Libya). None of them, however, survived to the present day. Early reconstructions such as the one by von Erlach are now believed to be rather inaccurate. For us, we can only wonder about the true appearance of the statue -- the greatest work in Greek sculpture.

Indian Junior team returning from Karachi

Barely days after returning from Karachi, where he led the Indian junior contingent of table tennis players to the top, with 10 gold medals and four silvers, 18-year -old Shubham Sharma has his eyes trained on the Asian Junior Table Tennis Championships to be held in Singapore. ‘‘India is the number one table tennis team in South Asia, and there’s an assured passage to at least the quarterfinal stage of any south Asian tournament. But the Asian Championships are different,’’ says the winner of the Under-15 south Asian Junior Championships. With competition from countries like China, Korea and Japan, Shubham refuses to cower before the challenges posed by these table tennis giants. ‘‘Whenever we (the Indian team) take part, we go with the aim of winning a medal. The Chinese or Korean players all come under the top 10 in the world, so it will be tough. But you never know,’’ he says.It was Shubham’s tenacity, backed by his coaches Ibrahim Khan, and Nagender Reddy at the St. Paul’s Table Tennis Academy, that pushed him to Number 5 in Asia in the Under-15 category in 2005. However, this will be the last year for Shubham to participate in the junior category. Next year he will be playing only in the senior circuit. And it’s a circuit filled with strong players. ‘‘In the national level tournaments, right from the first round, the games are tough. Whereas in the state-level ranking tournaments, it’s a little less intense.’’ Shubham, in fact, was the first table tennis player from the state to represent the country in 35 years! ‘‘In the national-level, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu are the best, doing consistently well. Over here, I feel, that sometimes players become satisfied with just their state-level performances, and the hunger to do well even at the national level vanishes,’’ he says. ‘‘Most of the rising young players opt for higher education, quitting their sport.’’ The hunger to succeed is yet to be satiated for Shubham though. Plans to shift to Delhi, to join the S