UTILIZE THE BY IDENTIFYING THE HUMAN AS RARE IDENTITY GRANTED BY NATURE IN THE WITNESS

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Mother Late P.Rangaveni
Father: Late PGKsaibaba My younger brother (Late)
P.S.Bhanu Prasad


His Majestic Highness Jagadguruvulu Maharani Sametha Maharajah Shri Shri Shri Anjani Ravishankar Pilla vaaru
in the address of Hon. Chief Justice,
Supreme court of India,
New Delhi

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జేబులో పెట్టుకొన్న ఫోన్ నుండి మాటలు వింటున్నారు కంప్యూటర్ ను హేక్ చేసి, ఈమైల్స్ అన్నీ చూస్తునారు, కంప్యూటర్ ముందు కుర్చుని ఎవరి ఏమి మాట్లాడుకొంటున్నా విని స్వార్ధానికి ఉపయోగించుకొంటున్నారు అ విధంగా బౌతికంగా మేము బలం గా ఉన్నాము మేమే తెలివైన వారము మమ్ములను ఎవరూ ఏమి చెయ్య లేరు అన్నట్లు అలోచిస్త్రున్నారు, ఇందులో వ్యక్తులు కొందరు పోలీసులు మీడియా లో ఉన్న వారు కలసి గ్రూప్ గా ఫారం అయ్యి రహస్యం కులం కోసం డబ్బు కోసం సుఖాలు కోసం, రాజకీయంగా సామాజికంగా దెబ్బ కొడుతున్నారు ఎవరి మాటలు అయిన విని స్వార్ధానికి ఉపయోగించుకొంటున్నారు, రహస్య సేటిలైట్ కెమెరాలు ఉపయోగించుకొని మోసం చేస్తున్నారు.

Sunday, 7 September 2014

CHILD PRODIGIES ----- ALL THE EXCELLENCY AND EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCES ARE REQUESTED TO SUPPORT WITH THEIR QUALITIES TO RESONATE ON DHARMASWAROOPAM OR THE RULE OF KING AND QUEEN TO REGENERATE AND RE ORGANISE THE HUMAN SOCIETY

Child Prodigies





      #11 Srinivasa Ramanujan



Srinivasa Ramanujan - OPC - 1.jpg


Srinivasa Ramanujan (Tamil: ஸ்ரீனிவாச ராமானுஜன்) FRS (About this sound pronunciation ) (22 December 1887 – 26 April 1920) was an Indian mathematician and autodidact who, with almost no formal training in pure mathematics, made extraordinary contributions tomathematical analysisnumber theoryinfinite series, and continued fractions. Living in India with no access to the larger mathematical community, which was centred in Europe at the time, Ramanujan developed his own mathematical research in isolation. As a result, he rediscovered known theorems in addition to producing new work. Ramanujan was said to be a natural genius by the English mathematician G. H. Hardy, in the same league as mathematicians such as Euler and Gauss.[1]
Ramanujan was born at ErodeMadras Presidency (now Tamil Nadu) in a Tamil family.[2][3][unreliable source?] His introduction to formal mathematics began at age 10. He demonstrated a natural ability, and was given books on advanced trigonometry written by S. L. Loney that he mastered by the age of 12; he even discovered theorems of his own, and re-discovered Euler's identityindependently.[4] He demonstrated unusual mathematical skills at school, winning accolades and awards. By 17, Ramanujan had conducted his own mathematical research on Bernoulli numbers and the Euler–Mascheroni constant.
Ramanujan received a scholarship to study at Government College in Kumbakonam, which was later rescinded when he failed his non-mathematical coursework. He joined another college to pursue independent mathematical research. During the same time, Diwan Bahadul R. Ramachandra Rao, ICS; who was a keen mathematician and served as President of the Indian Mathematical Society himself; assisted Ramanujan in getting a clerical job in the Accountant-General's office at the Madras Port Trust Office to support himself.[5] In 1912–1913, he sent samples of his theorems to three academics at the University of CambridgeG. H. Hardy, recognising the brilliance of his work, invited Ramanujan to visit and work with him at Cambridge. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society and a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Ramanujan died of tuberculosis caused by illness and malnutrition in 1920 at the age of 32.
During his short life, Ramanujan independently compiled nearly 3900 results (mostly identities and equations).[6] Nearly all his claims have now been proven correct, although a small number of these results were actually false and some were already known.[7] He stated results that were both original and highly unconventional, such as the Ramanujan prime and the Ramanujan theta function, and these have inspired a vast amount of further research.[8] The Ramanujan Journal, an international publication, was launched to publish work in all areas of mathematics influenced by his work.[9]
In December 2011, in recognition of his contribution to mathematics, the Government of India declared that Ramanujan's birth date (22 December) would be celebrated every year as National Mathematics Day and declared 2012 the National Mathematics Year.

#10 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart






With a harpsichord in hand from the age of 3, Mozart was an exceptional musician. He left us his first composition at the tender age of just 6. Just two years later he composed his own symphony, and at the age of 12 a whole opera. Unfortunately he died at 35, we were left with 600 of his magical compositions.
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#9 William Rowan Hamilton


Irish born polyglot William mastered three languages at the age of 5. They were Hebrew, Greek and Latin. As well as conquering 13 languages, he was also a promising mathematician. Using his language skills he went on to find numerous errors in French mathematicians, Laplace's work. Knighted 30 years before his death, William Hamilton was an extraordinary talent.



#8 Pablo Picasso






This artist graced us with his creations from the age of 15 with the help of his father who was also an artist. His first large oil painting, titled 'The Communion' was displayed in Barcelona. However his growing interest in the area of modern arts caused disputes between his parents and him. Picasso went on to confound a new style of art; Cubism.




#7 William James Sidis





Arguably the smartest man to ever have walked upon this planet. He was the youngest to enroll at a prestigious university, he set the world record at the age of 11. 4 years prior however, after learning to read and write by himself, he gained fluency in 8 languages! His IQ is estimated to be around 250-300.


#6 Kim Ung-Yong





As a guest to Hangyang University in South Korea, Kim Ung-Yong started attending physics lectures at the age of 3. He was invited to work at NASA at the age of 8! Before all that, Kim was able to speak just 4 months into his life. Fast forward two years and Kim could read four languages, including German and English.


#5 Kathleen Holtz



Need a lawyer? Kathleen is the world's youngest lawyer, qualifying at the age of 18. Before that, she enrolled at university at the age of 10 and gained a degree in Philosophy. The average age of those taking the bar exam was 30. Kathleen was over ten years younger! She worked for the firm TroyGould.


#4 Gregory Smith



Nominated 4 times for the Nobel Peace Prize, Gregory was given a scholarship amounting to around 70,000 US Dollars. As time went on, Gregory obtained a BSc majoring in Mathematics. He spoke in front of the UN and met figures like Clinton and Gorbachev. He continued humanity work in many countries including Rwanda and Kenya, for which he was nominated the Peace Prize.



#3 Akrit Jaswal





At seven years old, he became a surgeon. Born in 1993, Akrit became the youngest qualified surgeon in the Indian subcontinent. He is however, quite arrogant, which may put some people off befriending him! He said that those who try to help him excel are just not as smart as he is.


#2 Cleopatra Strata




The world's youngest and highest paid superstar, paid 1000€ per song at the age of 3. Setting the record as the youngest to become a successful commercial singer. Cleopatra has even won an MTV award, and has sang for 2 hours in front of a mass of spectators.


#1 Pelé




Not all child prodigies were academic Gods or musical magicians. Pelé was a sporting sensation. He tried out for his first professional club at the age of 15, and was on the Brazilian national team at 16, winning a World Cup the succeeding year. After retiring, he managed to score 1281 goals, making him the highest scorer of all time.










HIS HIGHNESS MAJESTIC MAHARAJA SHRI SHRI ANJANI RAVISHANKAR PILLA VAARU 
DIRECTORATE OF KING AND QUEEN 







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