Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Pune Rickshaw Driver Travels 32Km To Return Laptop To Man. Proves That Good Still Exists

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How many of you will vouch for the fact that whenever you have left your phone, wallet or basically anything in auto-rickshaws it’s as good as gone? Now I’m not calling rickshaw drivers dishonest, but it is practically impossible for them to locate you back and return your belongings.

But one rickshaw driver from Pune, Dilip Raising decided to go against this odd and travelled for 32 km, only to return a laptop to its rightful owner – software engineer M Narendra Chaudhari.

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Dilip Raising drove all the way from Baner area in Pune to the Railway station to search for his passenger, Chaudhari. Unable to find him there, Raising went to the Magarpatta police chowkey and handed them the bag.

Chaudhari had boarded Dilip Raising’s auto-rickshaw from Magarpatta area to go to Baner on Sunday, 8:30 AM and in a hurry forgot to collect the laptop.

It is only after getting off from the rickshaw that he realised he had left his laptop. Raising himself discovered the bag when he went to the Railway station and let another passenger board the rickshaw.

Assistant inspector of the Hadapsar police station Salim Nadaf, felicitated Raising, as this was a one-of-its-kind story.

 

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Narendra Chaudhari had lodged a complaint in the same police station and was more than happy to find his laptop safe. We hope that Dilip Raising’s honest story is heard by millions and it acts as a reminder to all that humanity still exists.


Source : Storypick

Friday, January 1, 2016

so #Year2016 is here....


Today is the first page of a new book worth 365 Pages (2016) to be written. and I will blast this ceremony in a much better way.
I began this with joining of an animal rescue organization. that is the thing i want to do from very first day when i enter here (Chandigarh, India).
and yes as well I am too happy that i have made it.

9500 year old tree found in sweden is the oldest tree


The world’s oldest tree, a 9,500-year-old Norwegian Spruce named “Old Tjikko,” after Professor Leif Kullman’s Siberian husky, continues to grow in Sweden. Discovered in 2004 by Kullman, professor of Physical Geography at Umeå University, the age of the tree was determined using carbon-14 dating.
 Because of its size it stays for such long time. The short tree can withstand storm more than long tree.


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Image credits: Karl Brodowsky

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Image credits: Leif Kullman

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Image credits: IBL/Rex Features

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Image credits: Petter Rybäck