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Dabbu-Manushulu ! Awesome


krisomania2043

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[b] [size=5]Dabbu kadu manushulu sasvatham annaru...kani ikkada manishi chastunade tappa dabbu kadu...
Immaculate poori with his pen power again ..awesome ..[/size][/b]

[size=5]sooper ga cheppadu idi matram [/size]
[size=5][img]http://a.imageshack.us/img803/8713/alismile.gif[/img][/size]

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[quote name='Luv Guru' timestamp='1326769038' post='1301314395']
Struggle for existence... anthe... Dabbu kaadu Power Important.. ..
[/quote]

business man lo surya bhai cheppe dialouge baa nenu seepindi
manchi ga anipichindi
nijangane manishula kosam evadoo importace ivvadu unless vallu family mebers aithe kani
Money..of course power speaks
Money unde indirect ga power unatle
[img]http://www.gifsoup.com/view2/1804205/brahmi-intro-o.gif[/img]

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[quote name='rambabu304' timestamp='1326770502' post='1301314470']
to an extent I do agree but.. der are many people who are still remembered even after death.........
[/quote]


like who?

valla bday ki saavu day ki tappa vere time la evadu pattinchukodu pattinchukunna swa-labham kosam swardham kosamo tappa inkokati undadu. point is not to deviate from "who is remembered and who is not" thing is who/what/which is more powerful a dead man or money you do the math.

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Adi Surya bhai Vi kaadu.. RGV tweets.. Adi blog lo mottam ave untai... Mana Poori avi dialogues kinda vadesukunnadu.. RGV life lessons avi..


To an extent its true.. But World is a mirror mama.. U get wat u r.. Nuvvu Vakranga face pedithe.. U will see wat u r..

So lIfe should be a mixture of all. Identifying the right proportion is a challenge . One who knows this will see heights.. ani anukuntaa..


[quote name='Murthygaru' timestamp='1326769718' post='1301314426']
business man lo surya bhai cheppe dialouge baa nenu seepindi
manchi ga anipichindi
nijangane manishula kosam evadoo importace ivvadu unless vallu family mebers aithe kani
Money..of course power speaks
Money unde indirect ga power unatle
[img]http://www.gifsoup.com/view2/1804205/brahmi-intro-o.gif[/img]
[/quote]

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[quote name='Luv Guru' timestamp='1326771490' post='1301314521']
Adi Surya bhai Vi kaadu.. RGV tweets.. Adi blog lo mottam ave untai... Mana Poori avi dialogues kinda vadesukunnadu.. RGV life lessons avi..


To an extent its true.. [size=6]But World is a mirror mama.. U get wat u r.. Nuvvu Vakranga face pedithe.. U will see wat u r..[/size]

So lIfe should be a mixture of all. Identifying the right proportion is a challenge . One who knows this will see heights.. ani anukuntaa..
[/quote]

[img]http://i3.tinypic.com/87lqps8.gif[/img]

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[quote name='charygaru' timestamp='1326771124' post='1301314503']
like who?

[b]valla bday ki saavu day ki tappa vere time la evadu pattinchukodu pattinchukunna swa-labham kosam swardham kosamo tappa inkokati undadu[/b]. ...
[/quote]


[img]http://i44.tinypic.com/oohv4.gif[/img]I have to respectfully disagree with you here mate....

Once study this....





[url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Pennycuick_(British_engineer"]http://en.wikipedia....ritish_engineer[/url])
\\






Col. John Pennycuick was an English engineer.
He was posted in south Tamil Nadu, during the
British India time. Tamil Nadu has been having
water crisis from that time onwards. For
centuries together, Tamil Nadu depends on Rain
God, for all its water needs. Even today,
Chennai city is helplessly watching clouds over
its skyline moving from Chennai to down south.

When he was posted in India, he wanted to take
some effective corrective action to this water
problem. He studied the situation of south Tamil
Nadu and decided if he can reverse the course
of a river flowing west, the area south of
Madurai will be able to get water. Thankfully we
didn't have regional Governments then and also
no regional political parties! So it was easy for
John Pennycuick to propose this solution. He
worked out a detailed blue print for the project
and submitted to the Government, with
detailed budget. As the water had to flow
through a hill, the budget was quite high.
Initially the Government was hesitant to spend
this money. John Pennycuick came up with a
suggestion that he will get the local workforce to
contribute labour and by that he can reduce the
overall cost. The Government agreed after lot of
follow-up and finally the project work started.
But the local workforce lacked commitment and
often stopped work as they had to attend to
many local festivals! I wonder how we can have
so many festivals, when we had a water
problem! So the cost went beyond the budget
and the British Government cancelled the
project, when it was half-way through. John
Pennycuick was very upset as the project was
his baby. He then went back to his home town
and spoke to his wife. He explained to her how
the project will help south Tamil Nadu and how
he is duty bound to complete this work. Finally
his wife donated all her jewellery for the
expense of the project! John Pennycuick
returned to India with his own money now and
with that, completed the project successfully!
The west flowing river was made to flow
eastwards and south Tamil Nadu, got the muchrequired
water at last!
We often hear cases where officials take money
from public projects for their own use. Very
rarely we come across instances where a person
sells the jewels of his wife to fund a public
project. Very rightly and deservingly a statue for
Col. John Pennycuick has been erected in front
of Madurai Public works department. Recently
Col. John Pennycuick's great grandson visited
Madurai and he was welcomed very warmly by
the public.
History should also talk about such people, not
just General Dyers!




[b] Remembrance in Tamilnadu[/b]

[list]
[*]Tamilnadu government established his statue.
[*]A booklet in honour of him written by Madhavan was released by Sagayam, the Collector of Madurai District on 17th December 2011 in [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thaniyamangalam"]Thaniyamangalam[/url].
[*]Still, many of the farmer families of the [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theni"]Theni[/url], [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madurai_District"]Madurai District[/url] have been keeping the portraits of John Pennycuick.
[*]In [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theni"]Theni[/url] district,at Balarpatti, kutchanoor and Kuzhiyanur, people celebrate the Pongal, a traditional festival of farmers, in the streets.
[*]In remembrance of him, many children in this area are named after him.
[*]There are temples in rural areas of Tamilnadu State where Pennycuick was worshipped as God
[/list]



[url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaigai_River"]http://en.wikipedia....ki/Vaigai_River[/url]



The Periyar Dam was built in 1895 by John Pennycuick, who implemented a plan proposed over a century earlier by [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pradani_Muthirulappa_Pillai"]Pradani Muthirulappa Pillai[/url] of Ramnad. The dam was built by the British Army Engineering corps for the [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travancore_kingdom"]Travancore kingdom[/url]. The first dam was washed away by floods, and a second masonry dam was constructed in 1895.
"Greater than the mother bearing child/Greater than the child that is born/Every breath is Periyar/Every word is Periyar/In every place, in all the world/As far as Periyar water flows/Your name will stand-Pennycuick-your name/Though written on water, will always stand".
That is how Anthony Muthu Pillai (1863-1929) had paid tributes in Tamil to John Pennycuick, the engineer who had taken up the "audacious and unprecedented feat of...engineering" for transferring some water from the Periyar river in Travancore State to the Vaigai basin in Madras Presidency. This basin was described by [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poet"]Poet[/url] and [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyricist"]lyricist[/url] [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vairamuthu"]Vairamuthu[/url], who hails from this area: "It is a different world. Another planet on the surface of the earth. Ignored by the clouds, cursed by nature and dry land, passed by the Gods with their eyes tightly shut..."






valla kulam kaadhu, valla maatham kaadhu, chivaraki valla desam vaadu kooda kaadhu ayina Col. John Pennycuick eppatiki tamilnadu lo konni areas lo devudila kolusthaaru, roju guruthuku chesukuntaaru, ala cheyadam valla vallaki ruppee raadhu , kaani abhimaanam anthe....


..I hope now u will agree that there r ppl who admire apart from selfish reasons...


prapancham anthaaa KCR lanti valle vundaru @3$% @3$%

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[quote name='Maddy_Rulez' timestamp='1326778019' post='1301314961']
[img]http://i44.tinypic.com/oohv4.gif[/img]I have to respectfully disagree with you here mate....

Once study this....





[url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Pennycuick_(British_engineer"]http://en.wikipedia....ritish_engineer[/url])
\\






Col. John Pennycuick was an English engineer.
He was posted in south Tamil Nadu, during the
British India time. Tamil Nadu has been having
water crisis from that time onwards. For
centuries together, Tamil Nadu depends on Rain
God, for all its water needs. Even today,
Chennai city is helplessly watching clouds over
its skyline moving from Chennai to down south.

When he was posted in India, he wanted to take
some effective corrective action to this water
problem. He studied the situation of south Tamil
Nadu and decided if he can reverse the course
of a river flowing west, the area south of
Madurai will be able to get water. Thankfully we
didn't have regional Governments then and also
no regional political parties! So it was easy for
John Pennycuick to propose this solution. He
worked out a detailed blue print for the project
and submitted to the Government, with
detailed budget. As the water had to flow
through a hill, the budget was quite high.
Initially the Government was hesitant to spend
this money. John Pennycuick came up with a
suggestion that he will get the local workforce to
contribute labour and by that he can reduce the
overall cost. The Government agreed after lot of
follow-up and finally the project work started.
But the local workforce lacked commitment and
often stopped work as they had to attend to
many local festivals! I wonder how we can have
so many festivals, when we had a water
problem! So the cost went beyond the budget
and the British Government cancelled the
project, when it was half-way through. John
Pennycuick was very upset as the project was
his baby. He then went back to his home town
and spoke to his wife. He explained to her how
the project will help south Tamil Nadu and how
he is duty bound to complete this work. Finally
his wife donated all her jewellery for the
expense of the project! John Pennycuick
returned to India with his own money now and
with that, completed the project successfully!
The west flowing river was made to flow
eastwards and south Tamil Nadu, got the muchrequired
water at last!
We often hear cases where officials take money
from public projects for their own use. Very
rarely we come across instances where a person
sells the jewels of his wife to fund a public
project. Very rightly and deservingly a statue for
Col. John Pennycuick has been erected in front
of Madurai Public works department. Recently
Col. John Pennycuick's great grandson visited
Madurai and he was welcomed very warmly by
the public.
History should also talk about such people, not
just General Dyers!




[b] Remembrance in Tamilnadu[/b]
[list]
[*]Tamilnadu government established his statue.
[*]A booklet in honour of him written by Madhavan was released by Sagayam, the Collector of Madurai District on 17th December 2011 in [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thaniyamangalam"]Thaniyamangalam[/url].
[*]Still, many of the farmer families of the [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theni"]Theni[/url], [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madurai_District"]Madurai District[/url] have been keeping the portraits of John Pennycuick.
[*]In [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theni"]Theni[/url] district,at Balarpatti, kutchanoor and Kuzhiyanur, people celebrate the Pongal, a traditional festival of farmers, in the streets.
[*]In remembrance of him, many children in this area are named after him.
[*]There are temples in rural areas of Tamilnadu State where Pennycuick was worshipped as God
[/list]


[url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaigai_River"]http://en.wikipedia....ki/Vaigai_River[/url]



The Periyar Dam was built in 1895 by John Pennycuick, who implemented a plan proposed over a century earlier by [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pradani_Muthirulappa_Pillai"]Pradani Muthirulappa Pillai[/url] of Ramnad. The dam was built by the British Army Engineering corps for the [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travancore_kingdom"]Travancore kingdom[/url]. The first dam was washed away by floods, and a second masonry dam was constructed in 1895.
"Greater than the mother bearing child/Greater than the child that is born/Every breath is Periyar/Every word is Periyar/In every place, in all the world/As far as Periyar water flows/Your name will stand-Pennycuick-your name/Though written on water, will always stand".
That is how Anthony Muthu Pillai (1863-1929) had paid tributes in Tamil to John Pennycuick, the engineer who had taken up the "audacious and unprecedented feat of...engineering" for transferring some water from the Periyar river in Travancore State to the Vaigai basin in Madras Presidency. This basin was described by [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poet"]Poet[/url] and [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyricist"]lyricist[/url] [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vairamuthu"]Vairamuthu[/url], who hails from this area: "It is a different world. Another planet on the surface of the earth. Ignored by the clouds, cursed by nature and dry land, passed by the Gods with their eyes tightly shut..."






valla kulam kaadhu, valla maatham kaadhu, chivaraki valla desam vaadu kooda kaadhu ayina Col. John Pennycuick eppatiki tamilnadu lo konni areas lo devudila kolusthaaru, roju guruthuku chesukuntaaru, ala cheyadam valla vallaki ruppee raadhu , kaani abhimaanam anthe....


..I hope now u will agree that there r ppl who admire apart from selfish reasons...


prapancham anthaaa KCR lanti valle vundaru @3$% @3$%
[/quote]



nuvvu cheppedaaka naaku aadu evado telvadu atlane i am sure chaaala mandiki telavdu nenu cheppali anukuntuna point vere nuvvu cheppe point vere nenu nee point ki agree chesthalenu ani kuda antalenu mine is in reference witht the dialogue from BM movie

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[quote name='charygaru' timestamp='1326778256' post='1301314981']
nuvvu cheppedaaka naaku aadu evado telvadu atlane i am sure chaaala mandiki telavdu nenu cheppali anukuntuna point vere nuvvu cheppe point vere nenu nee point ki agree chesthalenu ani kuda antalenu mine is in reference witht the dialogue from BM movie
[/quote]


ohh that aa I think wat ooo watu... ponile peddha manasu tho ee chinnavaadi point ardham chesukunnav [img]http://i42.tinypic.com/2q37v2u.gif[/img]

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[quote name='Maddy_Rulez' timestamp='1326778629' post='1301315003']


ohh that aa I think wat ooo watu... ponile peddha manasu tho ee chinnavaadi point ardham chesukunnav [img]http://i42.tinypic.com/2q37v2u.gif[/img]
[/quote]

nuvvu chinnavaadivi naadi pedda manasa [img]http://i44.tinypic.com/1jp2mx.gif[/img]

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[quote name='charygaru' timestamp='1326778717' post='1301315006']
nuvvu chinnavaadivi naadi pedda manasa [img]http://i44.tinypic.com/1jp2mx.gif[/img]
[/quote]


hey naa age just 19. monna ne voter card echaaru :P promise. KCR meedha ottu

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