Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Can Sachin Tendulkar score his 100th international ton against Australia today?


Bradman scored his 100th first-class ton against India in 1947. Will Sachin Tendulkar return the 'favour' by emulating cricket's greatest batsman in Ahmedabad today?


If Sachin Tendulkar scores his 100th international ton against Australia today, it will add another layer to cricket's great connection. Aussies adore their Sir Don; admire a 'little fella' call Tendulkar.

Images of Don Bradman (Top) and Sachin Tendulkar walking out to bat. PICS/GETTY IMAGES 
In November 1947, Bradman scored his 100th first-class century during the Australian XI vs Indians XI at the Sydney Cricket Ground. And though it was achieved in a tour game (held as a tune-up for the five-match Test series), Bradman deeply cherished the achievement when he hit India's G Kishenchand to mid-on for  a single.

Landmark tonJust like Kishenchand is remembered in India as the man who gave Bradman the single to reach a century of first-class hundreds, Ricky Ponting's team will forever be known for the side which presented Tendulkar with his landmark hundred especially if it turns out to be a match-winning effort.

For nearly two decades now, Australia has been in love with the Indian batting master. Neil Harvey (82), a member of Bradman's 1948 team, says Tendulkar ranks closest to the Australian genius.

In a DVD produced by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation called Bradman Centenary Collection which was released a few years after the 2001 passing away of Bradman, Harvey says: "Tendulkar gets down the wicket like Bradman used to so to slow bowling. "Tendulkar's feet movements are so good... he has this ability like Bradman to pick the line and length of the ball probably quicker than anybody else in the game. That is what makes great players so great. He'll be probably closest to Bradman that I've seen."

It is well documented that Bradman told his wife, Lady Jessie in the mid-1990s that he thought Tendulkar batted like him. The great Indian was over the moon. "This is the greatest compliment one can ever get. I only got to see the cassettes (footage of Bradman) when I was 16 or 17. Until then, I was engrossed in my own game. After a few years, you get to know that my style resembles Sir Don's. I mean ¦ that is something amazing and I was absolutely thrilled about it," Tendulkar tells celebrated Australian cricket writer, Mike Coward in the DVD.

Bradman considered his 100 first-class tons as a heavyweight of an achievement. In his autobiography, Farewell to Cricket, he wrote: "Of all my experiences in cricket, that was my most exhilarating moment on the field. The huge crowd gave me a reception which was moving in its spontaneous warmth."

There won't be any benevolence from Ricky Ponting to Tendulkar in Ahmedabad today, but in 1947, there was a bit of it dished out by India captain Lala Amarnath when Bradman was on the threshold of his feat. Historians reckon Amarnath called on batsman Kishenchand to bowl to Bradman because he wanted his milestone century to be scored against India. But Bradman saw it differently.  "Finally with my total on 99, Amarnath called up Kishenchand who was fielding on the boundary.

Surprise choice"He had not bowled before and I had no idea what type of bowler he was. It was a shrewd move, as one could have so easily been deceived, but I treated him with the greatest respect until eventually came a single to mid-on and the great moment had arrived," Bradman wrote.

India endured a 0-4 loss to Australia, but won the tour game (by 47 runs) in which Bradman reached his milestone. Will India achieve the same result as Lala Amarnath's men did in 1947? Over to Motera!

Why Internet Explorer will survive and Firefox won't


Something extraordinary happened this month. Google released version 10 of its Chrome browser. Microsoft released Internet Explorer 9. And now, after an epic development cycle that included 12 betas, Mozilla has finally said “Ship it” for Firefox 4.
Three major releases from the three leading browser developers in the same month? That’s unheard of. It took more than 15 years for Internet Explorer to work its way through nine versions. Firefox, which used to be the agile upstart, has taken nearly two years to progress from version 3.5 and nearly three years from version 3.0. It took Google only a bit more than two years to ship Chrome 9 last month, and it was replaced by version 10 just a little over four weeks later.
That difference in tempo is fundamental to understanding how the computing world has changed. The idea of branded browsers as standalone pieces of software seems increasingly quaint. Google is setting a blistering pace and defining a world where a browser is simply a piece of plumbing that you refresh every few weeks (unless you think that’s just too slow and you want to download a new build every night).
It’s tempting to look at Microsoft’s history with Internet Explorer and assume that they are just incapable of working at the speed of the Internet. It’s also easy to be skeptical about Mozilla’s ambitious roadmap that has them shipping versions 5, 6, and 7 before the end of this year. But take a closer look at the development process for IE 9 and there’s a different story to tell. Microsoft is playing the same game as Google. Mozilla is stuck in 2005. And that’s why the core of Internet Explorer will still be around in five years when Firefox will have, at best, a loyal cult following.
The first platform preview of Internet Explorer 9 was released on March 16, 2010. The final release arrives just two days shy of the one-year anniversary of IE9’s public debut. I don’t think that’s a coincidence. IE9 is part of Windows, and its development reflects the same engineering discipline that we saw in Windows 7: Plan, develop, stabilize, ship. Repeat.
During that year-long cycle, Microsoft cranked out one beta and a release candidate. More importantly, they released seven updates to the platform preview—at a pace of one every 6-8 weeks or so. It’s worth noting that Microsoft could have slapped a user interface and a version number on each of those releases. If they had, the cadence would have matched up neatly with that breakneck pace set by Google. But they chose to leave those distractions off and focus on the rendering engine. Those platform previews were aimed at developers building applications.
Although Microsoft is mum on its future plans, you can bet that development will continue at that same measured pace, although perhaps not so publicly. This release isn’t so much a finish line as it is another milestone in a much larger process. The IE 9 engine will be in phones before the end of the year, and it will play a huge role in the next version of Windows, which should be available to the public in 18 months or so.
And there’s the real story.
What is Microsoft’s biggest challenge today? We’re not in a post-PC world yet, but the transition is well under way. Successfully making that transition involves building a platform that can scale from handheld devices to workstations, from tiny smartphone screens to tablets to wall-sized displays. Microsoft isn’t going to accomplish that goal by tweaking the classic Windows interface. Anyone who’s used a Windows 7 tablet PC knows that a bigger Start button and taskbar aren’t enough.
At last year’s MIX conference, Microsoft talked about its new app platform, which is based on a simple design philosophy: write code once, target for multiple platforms. That’s the same space that Google is playing in. Google has an entire family of apps that are designed to work exclusively in a browser. There’s Google Mail and Google Docs, and more importantly there’s Google Apps Marketplace, where third parties are building project management, CRM, and accounting apps designed to work in Chrome. Microsoft has Outlook Web Access 2010, which is an astonishing replication of the Outlook interface. (If you’ve only used OWA 2007, you’ll be blown away by the improvement.)
Microsoft’s Office Web Apps are an interesting first step, but their limitations are glaring and the gap between Word and Excel in a browser and their standalone counterparts is huge. By this time next year, I expect we’ll see a beta version of Microsoft Office for the Web that is designed to run in a browser window. More importantly, I am certain that Windows 8 will be in beta by that time, and I’m convinced that we’ll see an alternative shell for Windows 8, written in HTML5 and intended for use on tablets. It will use Internet Explorer’s rendering engine, which has already proven to be wicked fast, without needing any of its old-school user interface.
So where does that leave Firefox? It doesn’t have an app ecosystem or a loyal core of developers. Extensions? Those were worth bragging about in 2005, but in 2012 the story is apps. Businesses and consumers will want to use the same browser that powers their installed apps. In the PC space, that means Google or Microsoft. It doesn’t leave room for a third player.
So long, Firefox. It was nice to know you.

Facebook @ Mentions now work in comments


Facebook has expanded its @ Mentions feature to include comments. This means that users can now mention/tag Facebook friends, Facebook Pages, Facebook Groups, and Facebook Events in comments to News Feed stories and wall posts, according to Inside Facebook.
Previously, users could only use @ Mentions on content they were creating from scratch, such as wall posts and status updates, and not when they were adding to already existing content. Now users can type the @ symbol when writing a comment to get the drop-down menu for @ Mentions. When a user is tagged, they receive a notification stating that a friend “mentioned you in a comment.”
Facebook first added @ Mentions in September 2009, allowing users to mention Facebook friends, Facebook Pages, Facebook Groups, and Facebook Events by typing an @ symbol followed by the first few letters of whatever they wanted to tag, and then selecting it from the drop-down menu that appeared. The @ does not remain part of your post; it’s merely the syntax that invokes the tagging feature itself. Instead, your post simply gets a link to the relevant page on Facebook.
The ability to use @ Mentions in comments was requested by many users immediately after Facebook added the original feature. Back then, the company said that “it may happen” but did not elaborate as to why it may not want to roll it out. Now it’s finally here.
The update will likely lead to users navigating to more pages and posting more content on the social network. Users are always more likely to be more active if they get a notification about being mentioned. Facebook is once again increasing visits and engagement on its website.

Facebook received 250,000 resumes in 2010





Last year, Facebook received almost 250,000 résumé applications. To help those applying to the company, IB Times put together a list of five questions you should ask yourself to see if you’re ready to work at one of the hottest technology companies:
  1. Are you enthusiastic and passionate about Facebook?
  2. Do you know anyone who can assess or vouch for your cultural fit?
  3. Are you suited to work in a bold and open environment?
  4. Can you make a difference?
  5. Can you let go of work-life balance (for most of the time, at least)?
How does Facebook’s résumé count compare to other online giants? Well, Facebook is still a relatively small company but it’s very clear that the number is quite large, though definitely not the highest. For example, Google, arguably the largest Web company, receives somewhere around 1 million résumés each year, with the record for one week being 75,000.
Google had some 24,400 employees last year, while Facebook had over 2,000. It’s therefore fairly impressive that a company that is 12 times smaller, and has significantly fewer positions available, received just four times fewer applications last year.
In December 2010, the social network was named the best company to work for in the US. I’d therefore be very surprised if Facebook did not set a new résumé record for itself this year.

Facebook bans 20,000 accounts daily

Facebook chief privacy advisor Mozelle Thompson appeared before the Australian Parliament’s cyber-safety committee this week to discuss Internet-related security issues. Thanks to the event, we learned that about 20,000 users are kicked off Facebook every day for various infractions, including for lying about their age.
“There are people who lie. There are people who are under 13 [accessing Facebook],” Thompson told Federal Parliament’s cyber-safety committee, according to The Telegraph. “Facebook removes 20,000 people a day, people who are underage.”
Although the company requires its users to be at least 13-years-old, the limit is easily circumvented, like on pretty much any website on the Internet. “While the social network has mechanisms to detect liars,” Thompson admitted that “It’s not perfect”.
The original report suggested that the 20,000 accounts banned daily are all for individuals found not to be at least 13-years-old. This is not true; the number actually includes accounts deleted for any serious rule-breaking. Furthermore, it does “not include the proactive efforts that actually prevent fake or under age accounts from being created.”
“At Facebook, we take safety very seriously and we were pleased to participate in a hearing in Australia to talk about our safety policies, practices and systems,” a company spokesperson said in a statement. “As we explained in the hearing, these efforts include removing numerous accounts everyday for activities including spamming, posting inappropriate content, and violating age restrictions.”

Firefox 4 Snags About 5 Million Downloads In 24 Hrs


Surpassing the 2.35 million obtained by Internet Explorer 9, Firefox 4 seems to have had a successful debut, going past the five million milestone since debuting Tuesday.  

Wednesday, March 23, 2011:  Mozilla Firefox 4, which was launched yesterday, has already taken 1.95 per cent of the worldwide Internet browser market, according to StatCounter, the free website analytics company. The firm's research arm StatCounter Global Stats reports that on the first day of its release Firefox 4 scored higher globally than Microsoft's new Internet Explorer 9 which was launched more than a week ago.
Firefox 4 has really hit the ground running and has eclipsed the launch of IE 9," commented Aodhan Cullen, CEO, StatCounter. "Although IE 9 has undoubtedly been hampered by its lack of compatibility with Windows XP." By yesterday IE 9 had taken just 0.87 per cent of the worldwide market.

When all versions of each browser are taken into account, Internet Explorer still leads the global market with 45 per cent followed by Firefox with 30 per cent and Chrome with 17 per cent. In the US, IE (all versions combined) leads the market with 48 per cent followed by Firefox on 26 per cent and Chrome on 14 per cent.

On a monthly basis, StatCounter figures show a steady decline in the IE global market share from 55 per cent in February last year to 45 per cent this year. In the same time frame Google's Chrome has risen steadily from 7 per cent worldwide to 17 per cent.

StatCounter recently reported that Firefox overtook Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE) to become the number one browser in Europe for the first time in December 2010.

StatCounter Global Stats are based on aggregate data collected on a sample exceeding 15 billion page views per month (4 billion from the US) from the StatCounter network of more than three million websites. 

BCCI releases provisional schedule of IPL 2011




With the assembly elections coming in between the hugely awaited IPL 4, the Board of Control for Cricket in India released a provisional schedule for IPL 2011, which will see 10 teams battling it out for the top spot.

OWING TO the upcoming assembly elections in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala and Puducherry, the governing body of theIndian Premier League (IPL), the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has released a revised provisional schedule of IPL 2011.
 
The fourth installment of the hugely awaited IPL 4 is set to commence from April 8 until May 22. The Mahendra Singh Dhoni ledChennai Super Kings, which was the winner of the IPL 3, will take on Kolkata Knight Riders in the opening match of the IPL 4 on April 8, 2011 at MA Chidambram Stadium in Chennai.
 
IPL 4 will see 10 teams battling it out for the top spot.

The IPL 2011 Revised Schedule is placed below:
 
Date
Time
Teams
Venue
April 8
8 PM IST
Chennai
April 9
4 PM IST
Deccan Chargers vs Rajasthan Royals
Hyderabad
April 9
8 PM IST
Kochi v Royal Challengers Bangalore
Kochi
April 10
4 PM IST
Delhi Daredevils vs Mumbai Indians
Delhi
April 10
8 PM IST
Pune Warriors vs Kings XI Punjab
Navi Mumbai
April 11
8 PM IST
Kolkata Knight Riders vs Deccan Chargers
Kolkata
April 12
4 PM IST
Rajasthan Royals vs Delhi Daredevils
Jaipur
April 12
8 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore vs Mumbai Indians
Bangalore
April 13
4 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab vs Chennai Super Kings
Mohali
April 13
8 PM IST
Pune Warriors vs Kochi
Navi Mumbai
April 14
8 PM IST
Deccan Chargers vs Royal Challengers Bangalore
Hyderabad
April 15
4 PM IST
Jaipur
April 15
8 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Kochi
Mumbai
April 16
4 PM IST
Chennai Super Kings v Royal Challengers Bangalore
Chennai
April 16
8 PM IST
Deccan Chargers v Kings XI Punjab
Hyderabad
April 17
4 PM IST
Pune Warriors v Delhi Daredevils
Navi Mumbai
April 17
8 PM IST
Kolkata
April 18
8 PM IST
Kochi
April 19
4 PM IST
Delhi Daredevils vs Deccan Chargers
Delhi
April 19
8 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore v Rajasthan Royals
Bangalore
April 20
4 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Pune Warriors
Mumbai
April 20
8 PM IST
Kolkata
April 21
8 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab v Rajasthan Royals
Mohali
April 22
4 PM IST
Kolkata Knight Riders v Royal Challengers Bangalore
Kolkata
April 22
4 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Chennai Super Kings
Mumbai
April 23
8 PM IST
Delhi Daredevils v Kings XI Punjab
Delhi
April 24
4 PM IST
Deccan Chargers v Mumbai Indians
Hyderabad
April 24
8 PM IST
Rajasthan Royals v Kochi
Jaipur
April 25
8 PM IST
Chennai Super Kings v Pune Warriors
Chennai
April 26
8 PM IST
Delhi Daredevils v Royal Challengers Bangalore
Delhi
April 27
4 PM IST
Pune Warriors v Chennai Super Kings
Navi Mumbai
April 27
8 PM IST
Kochi v Deccan Chargers
Kochi
April 28
8 PM IST
Kolkata Knight Riders v Delhi Daredevils
Delhi
April 29
4 PM IST
Rajasthan Royals v Mumbai Indians
Jaipur
April 29
8 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore v Pune
Bangalore
April 30
4 PM IST
Kochi v Delhi Daredevils
Kochi
April 30
8 PM IST
Kolkata Knight Riders v Kings XI Punjab
Kolkata
May 1
4 PM IST
Rajasthan Royals v Pune Warriors
Jaipur
May 1
8 PM IST
Chennai Super Kings v Deccan Chargers
Chennai
May 2
4 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Kings XI Punjab
Mumbai
May 2
8 PM IST
Delhi Daredevils v Kochi
Delhi
May 3
8 PM IST
Deccan Chargers v Kolkata Knight Riders
Hyderabad
May 4
4 PM IST
Chennai Super Kings v Rajasthan Royals
Chennai
May 4
8 PM IST
Pune Warriors v Mumbai Indians
Navi Mumbai
May 5
4 PM IST
Kochi
May 5
8 PM IST
Deccan Chargers v Delhi Daredevils
Hyderabad
May 6
8 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore v Kings XI Punjab
Bangalore
May 7
4 PM IST
Kolkata
May 7
8 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Delhi Daredevils
Mumbai
May 8
4 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore v Kochi
Bangalore
May 8
8 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab v Pune Warriors
Mohali
May 9
8 PM IST
Rajasthan Royals v Chennai Super Kings
Jaipur
May 10
4 PM IST
Deccan Chargers v Pune Warriors
Hyderabad
May 10
8 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab v Mumbai Indians
Mohali
May 11
8 PM IST
Rajasthan Royals v Royal Challengers Bangalore
Jaipur
May 12
8 PM IST
Chennai Super Kings v Delhi Daredevils
Chennai
May 13
8 PM IST
Kochi v Kings XI Punjab
Indore
May 14
4 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore v Kolkata Knight Riders
Bangalore
May 14
8 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Deccan Chargers
Mumbai
May 15
4 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab v Delhi Daredevils
Dharamsala
May 15
8 PM IST
Kochi v Rajasthan Royals
Indore
May 16
8 PM IST
Pune Warriors v Deccan Chargers
Navi Mumbai
May 17
8 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab v Royal Challengers Bangalore
Dharamsala
May 18
8 PM IST
Chennai
May 19
8 PM IST
Pune Warriors v Kolkata Knight Riders
Navi Mumbai
May 20
8 PM IST
Mumbai Indians v Rajasthan Royals
Mumbai
May 21
4 PM IST
Kings XI Punjab v Deccan Chargers
Dharamsala
May 21
8 PM IST
Delhi Daredevils v Pune Warriors
Delhi
May 22
4 PM IST
Royal Challengers Bangalore v Chennai Super Kings
Bangalore
May 22
8 PM IST
Kolkata Knight Riders v Mumbai Indians
Kolkata
May 24
8 PM IST
Qualifier 1 First v Second
Mumbai
May 25
8 PM IST
Eliminator Third v Fourth
Mumbai
May 27
8 PM IST
Qualifier 2
Chennai
May 28
8 PM IST
Final
Chennai
 


India vs Australia Cricket World Cup 2011: Good luck India

Sachin Tendulkar, who won the man-of-the-series award in the 2003 Cricket World Cup, is still 'hungry for runs'. He has already scored 326 runs in six innings of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 at an average of 54.33. Will India make history again?

SARDAR PATEL Stadium, Motera in Ahmedabad will host the second quarter final match of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 between the world's top two ODI teams, Australia and India on Thursday, March 23.
 
This match has been pegged as a "Battle of revenge".
 
Since March 23, 2003, the two cricket champs will meet for first time in a Cricket World Cup match on March 24, 2011. In the final of the 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup, played at New Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg, Ricky Ponting and his men defeated India by 125 runs.
 
However, in the last eight years, Australia team have been changed. In the ongoing Cricket World Cup Australians are without Glenn McGrath, Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden. From the 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup final, only Ponting and Brett Lee are playing for the Australian side.
 
The other side from the 2003 finals, Indians still have the same opening pair of Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sahwag. In the middle Yuvraj Singh is there and leading bowlers Zaheer Khan and Harbhajan Singh are serving the country in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011.
 
Even as the second quarter final match of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 between India and Australia that will be played tomorrow from 2:30 PM IST, millions of Indian cricket crazy fans have started praying for an Indian victory against the Australians. Good luck India!


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Inspiration for todays youths: Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev & Rajguru

Inspiration for todays youths: Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev & Rajguru

When power is misused, it translates into violence; but when it is used for achieving one’s Righteous goals, it amounts to justice. This revolutionary ideology was stated by the great revolutionary Bhagat Singh. Any sacrifice will be inadequate to accomplish the greatest aim of freeing the motherland, was the inspiring outlook of Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev and Rajguru, his associates in the freedom fight. Today is the day when these three great revolutionaries laid down their lives in their effort to achieve their goal.

O People! Do not be so ungrateful to Revolutionaries so as to forget them!

23rd March is the day that Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev attained Martyrdom. One example of the resoluteness of Sardar Bhagat Singh and his associates remains inspirational even today. In order to disgrace Sardar Bhagat Singh and his associates, the then British Government informed them,’ If you feel that you should be spared from being hanged, then you must apply for mercy.’ The spirited answer to that advice, as given by Sardar Bhagat Singh, was as follows-
“The Government says that we should apply for mercy. But why should we do so? Are we thieves or dacoits or goondas? We are political prisoners in this war for freedom. The blood of complete freedom is circulating in every blood vessel of ours. Whatever bold action we did was for the sake of freedom alone ! We may not be worshippers of non-violence; our path may not be devoid of atrocities but is it not true that we are freedom-fighters? If the government has even a fraction of justice left within it, it has to treat us as political prisoners. We will never beg for mercy.
We do not intend to face this death sentence by saying ‘Do whatever you like but spare us from being hanged’. We dislike even climbing on the foot board meant for hanging. We are brave soldiers and true men ! Hence treat us like that by either shooting us with bullets or blast us with cannons. Who wants to face such a feeble sentence as hanging? We request you to respect this last wish of ours!”
Our politicians have seemingly dismissed memories of revolutionaries’ sacrifice completely. Their martyrdom appears to have no value for those with a political agenda.

Martyr Bhagat Singh

Born : 27th Sept. 1907, Punjab.
Died: Hanged in the early hours of 23rd March 1931.

As a freedom fighter, he was considered to be one of the most famous revolutionaries of the Bharatiya Independence movement. For this reason, he is often referred to as Martyr Bhagat Singh. At such a young age, if anyone was smiling just before being hanged to death, it was Martyr Bhagat Singh. His uncle, Sardar Ajit Singhas well as his father, were both great freedom fighters, so Bhagat Singh grew up in a patriotic atmosphere.
At an early age, Bhagat Singh started dreaming of uprooting the British Empire. Never afraid of fighting during his childhood, he thought of ‘growing guns in the fields’, so that he could fight the British. The Ghadar Movement left a deep imprint on his mind.Kartar Singh Sarabha, hanged at the age of 19, became his hero. The massacre at Jallianwala Bagh on 13th April, 1919 drove him to Amritsar, where he kissed the earth sanctified by the martyrs’ blood and brought back home a little of the soaked soil. At the age of 16, he used to wonder why so many Bharatiyas could not drive away a fistful of invaders.
In search of revolutionary groups and ideas, he met Sukhdev and Rajguru. Bhagat Singh, along with the help of Chandrashekhar Azad, formed the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA). The aim of this Bharatiya revolutionary movement was now defined as not only to make Bharat independent, but also to create a socialist Bharat.
A brutal attack by the police on veteran freedom fighter Lala Lajpat Rai at an anti-British procession caused his death on 17th November 1928, in Lahore. Bhagat Singh was determined to avenge Lajpat Rai’s death by shooting the British official responsible for the killing, Deputy Inspector General Scott. However he shot down Assistant Superintendent Saunders instead, mistaking him for Scott. Then he made a dramatic escape from Lahore to Calcutta and from there to Agra, where he established a bomb factory.
The British Government responded to the act by imposing severe measures like the Trades Disputes Bill. It was to protest against the passing of the Bill that he threw bombs in the Central Assembly Hall (now our Loksabha) while the Assembly was in session. The bombs did not hurt anyone, but the noise they made was loud enough to wake up an enslaved Nation from a long sleep.
After throwing the bombs, Bhagat Singh and his friend deliberately courted arrest by refusing to run away from the scene. During his trial, Bhagat Singh refused to employ any Defence counsel.
Despite great popular pressure and numerous appeals by political leaders of Bharat, Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev and Rajguru were accorded the death sentence and hanged in the early hours of 23rd March 1931. Their bodies were cremated on the bank of the Sutlej in Ferozepur. Bhagat Singh was just 23 years old at that time. Old timers say that in many places, not a single hearth fire burned that day.
The last paragraph of the leaflet that he distributed (and wrote) in the Assembly Hall said: “We are sorry that we who attach such great sanctity to human life, we who dream of a very glorious future when man will be enjoying perfect peace and full liberty, have been forced to shed human blood. But sacrifice of individuals at the altar of the Revolution will bring freedom to all, rendering exploitation of man by man impossible. Inquilab Zindabad (Long live the Revolution).”
There was a time when the very mention of the name of the young revolutionary stirred the passions of most Bharatiyas.

Shivram Rajguru

Shivram Hari Rajguru (1908 – 23rd March 1931) was born in an average middle-class Hindu Brahmin family at Khed in Pune District in 1908. He came to Varanasi at a very early age where he learnt Sanskrit and read the Hindu religious scriptures. He had a great admiration for Shivaji and his guerrilla tactics.


At Varanasi, he came in contact with revolutionaries. He joined the movement and became an active member of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA). Rajguru had a fearless spirit and indomitable courage. The only object of his adoration and worship was his motherland, for whose liberation, he considered no sacrifice too great. He was a close associate of Chandrashekhar Azad and Bhagat Singh and his field of activity was UP and Punjab, with Kanpur, Agra and Lahore as his headquarters.
Rajguru was a good shot and was regarded as the gunman of the party. He took part in various activities of the revolutionary movement, the most important being Saunder’s murder. Chandrashekhar Azad, Shivram Rajguru, Bhagat Singh and Jai Gopal were deputed for the job. On 17th December 1928, while Saunders came out of his office and started his motor-cycle, he was shot dead in front of the police headquarters at Lahore by Rajguru.
At the time of his martyrdom, Rajguru was hardly 23 years of age.

Sukhdev Thapar

Sukhdev Thapar (15th May 1907 – 23rd March 1931) was a Bharatiya revolutionary from Punjab.
He was an active member of the HSRA, being one of its senior most leaders. He is known to have started study circles at the National College (Lahore), in order to delve into Bharat’s past as well as to scrutinise the finer aspects of the world’s revolutionary literature. Along with Bhagat Singh and others he started the ‘Naujawan Bharat Sabha’ at Lahore. The main aims of this organisation were to activate the youth for the freedom struggle, inculcate a rational scientific attitude, fight communalism and end the practice of untouchability.
His letter to Mahatma Gandhi written just prior to his hanging, protesting against the latter’s disapproval of revolutionary tactics, throws light on the disparities between the two major schools of thought among Bharatiya freedom fighters at that time.

We pay obeisance to this invaluable son of Bharat, who is still an inspiration to millions of Bharatiyas.