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To the left, I have my faith, to the right I have those that inspire me\nAnd behind me, I have all the people I\u2019ve left behind because of who I\u2019ve become\nAnd in front of me, I have all the people I\u2019m going to meet as a result of my positivity<\/p>\n
My mentors have given me everything they have and now it\u2019s time for me to do the same\nNever let them down, never let myself down\nKeep my head up and my chest out\nI will stand up straight and act as if I\u2019ve already conquered my life dreams<\/p>\n
Who am I? I AM EXTRAORDINARY!<\/b>\nWho says so? I DO<\/b><\/p>\n
That\u2019s it, and you must never forget it ever during your life\nI will triumph when I feel like giving up\nI will believe when there is no reason to believe at all<\/p>\n
When anyone tells you that you can\u2019t do it, smile at their ignorance of your glory\nI will rise up and bring others with me along the journey\nI will serve others for the greater good of this world\nI will train my mind for that is where all of my success is hidden.\n.<\/b>\nWho am I? I AM EXTRAORDINARY!<\/b>\nWho says so? I DO<\/b><\/p>\n
I will push through every obstacle that get\u2019s thrown at me\nAnd I will find a way through when there seem\u2019s to be none\nWhen rock bottom strikes, I will use it to take myself to the next level\nLife is beautiful\nLife is a journey\nLife is what I make it..<\/p>\n
Because who the heck am I? I AM EXTRAORDINARY!<\/b>\nAnd who says so? I DO<\/b><\/p>\n"}]
The Entrepreneurship Cell, IIT Bombay presents the Entrepreneurship Summit 2018 - a confluence of industry veterans, business leaders, entrepreneurs, visionary students and anyone who has the vision of building the next big thing! The Entrepreneurship Cell, IIT Bombay is the recipient of patronage from UNESCO, Make In India, StartUp India & Digital India <\/b>for it\u2019s annual [ E-Summit ] which witness a crowd of around 20,000 corporate & professionals, 600+ startups 110+ speakers including 15+ foreign speakers<\/b> for the conclave spanning two days in the beautiful campus.<\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514024520971","data":"
The wide range of activities like Keynote speaker session, Live pitching, Hackathons, Startup Expo, Internship and Job fair, Innovation and Business conclave, competitions and workshops <\/b>culminate in the 2-day Annual Entrepreneurship Summit [E- Summit] which is in its 13th edition now. The E-Summit has grown in status and impact with corporate leaders, entrepreneurs, academics and venture capitalists from around the world sharing their experiences and providing inspiration to students and professionals from IITB and all over the world. <\/p>"}]
Mechanical Engineering Association, IIT Madras presents Tech2Farm, this year\u2019s Flagship event. With an aim to do something\nimpactful for our society, we have collected real-life engineering problems in the agricultural sector. This\nevent provides you with an excellent platform to solve those problems. <\/p>
Prize money worth over 1,00,000 and internships at stake<\/b>, this is a unique opportunity to unlock your\ntrue potential! <\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514023563022","data":"
Tech2Farm is a 4-month long event which involves designing and prototyping. You get 10 problem\nstatements, from which you can select one or more. The registration has to be done by the team leader\nand each team can have maximum of 6 candidates. <\/p>
The final event will be conducted in the month of\nMarch.\nNote that we have associated with manufacturers who can help you take the product to market and if the\nsolution looks promising enough, then it can even be turned into a startup idea! <\/p>
Remember, your efforts can change the life of thousands of the farmers of India. <\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514023778462","data":"
If all this sounds exciting, go ahead, make teams with your friends and register before 31st of December,\n2017 (Sunday), 23:59 hrs. <\/b><\/p>
<\/a>Link to registration<\/a>: https:\/\/goo.gl\/wVEF5q<\/b><\/p>Link to the problem statements:<\/a> https:\/\/goo.gl\/Hwz7BR<\/b><\/p>For more details regarding the event, follow this link: <\/a> https:\/\/goo.gl\/Hwz7BR<\/b><\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514023943332","data":"Does problem-solving pique your curiosity?? <\/p>Wanna be a change-maker ?? <\/p>Dreaming to make an impact on the society ?? <\/p>This message is a tailor-made for you!! <\/p>Prize money worth over 1,00,000 and internships at stake,<\/b> this is a unique opportunity to unlock your\ntrue potential! <\/p>Register NOW!<\/b><\/p>Any queries? Feel free to reach us: <\/b><\/p>Karthik Bonda,\n+91-8500827606,\nmea@smail.iitm.ac.in <\/b><\/p>"}]
Link to the problem statements:<\/a> https:\/\/goo.gl\/Hwz7BR<\/b><\/p>For more details regarding the event, follow this link: <\/a> https:\/\/goo.gl\/Hwz7BR<\/b><\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514023943332","data":"Does problem-solving pique your curiosity?? <\/p>Wanna be a change-maker ?? <\/p>Dreaming to make an impact on the society ?? <\/p>This message is a tailor-made for you!! <\/p>Prize money worth over 1,00,000 and internships at stake,<\/b> this is a unique opportunity to unlock your\ntrue potential! <\/p>Register NOW!<\/b><\/p>Any queries? Feel free to reach us: <\/b><\/p>Karthik Bonda,\n+91-8500827606,\nmea@smail.iitm.ac.in <\/b><\/p>"}]
For more details regarding the event, follow this link: <\/a> https:\/\/goo.gl\/Hwz7BR<\/b><\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514023943332","data":"Does problem-solving pique your curiosity?? <\/p>Wanna be a change-maker ?? <\/p>Dreaming to make an impact on the society ?? <\/p>This message is a tailor-made for you!! <\/p>Prize money worth over 1,00,000 and internships at stake,<\/b> this is a unique opportunity to unlock your\ntrue potential! <\/p>Register NOW!<\/b><\/p>Any queries? Feel free to reach us: <\/b><\/p>Karthik Bonda,\n+91-8500827606,\nmea@smail.iitm.ac.in <\/b><\/p>"}]
Does problem-solving pique your curiosity?? <\/p>
Wanna be a change-maker ?? <\/p>
Dreaming to make an impact on the society ?? <\/p>
This message is a tailor-made for you!! <\/p>
Prize money worth over 1,00,000 and internships at stake,<\/b> this is a unique opportunity to unlock your\ntrue potential! <\/p>
Register NOW!<\/b><\/p>
Any queries? Feel free to reach us: <\/b><\/p>
Karthik Bonda,\n+91-8500827606,\nmea@smail.iitm.ac.in <\/b><\/p>"}]
Rudyard Kipling was a man of questionable beliefs, enough to confidently say that I would have never liked the man had he been alive today, but since white privilege was and still is a thing, we must pretend he was an angelic figure that gave the world, and specifically India, a character that would become loved across generations. <\/p>
Despite popular misconceptions, Kipling was not a professional author but a journalist and The Jungle Book is not the only book he wrote. After being born on December 30, 1865 in Mumbai and grown up around the jungles of Madhya Pradesh, Kipling would subsequently go on to return to England where he died in 1936. While The Jungle Book was the product of a racist outlook towards Indians - Mowgli was the white man and the animals were Indians -, Kipling would go on to change his views as he got older. Still doesn't excuse his words though. That being said, here are 5 books by Kipling that you must read!<\/p>
1. Just So Stories: <\/b><\/p>
I love this book because it's a neat and clean book for children without any of his imperialism thrown into the mix like extra salt in an already salty soup. Just So Stories covers tales of how certain animals got their characteristic features which Kipling borrowed from the tales he heard as he grew up in India and Africa. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514017516811","data":"5a3e17e934fa3"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514017518352","data":"
2. Kim: <\/b> <\/p>
A friend once asked me to describe Kipling's book Kim in one line and I said, 'Imperialist garbage, but a decent read.' <\/p>
It is difficult to find books by Kipling that weren't influenced by his racist views, even more so to when to set yourself on the task to find good books that are racist but still readable. Kim, however, is strangely endearing. <\/p>
Kim O'Hara, a 12 year old Orphan running around the streets of Lahore, was the son of a British man and an Indian woman. Kim is his story. A coming of age tale of a young boy lost in Lahore to following a Lama around then going on to become something unique, Kim is a definite must read to understand how a white man viewed India back then and also to enjoy a decent piece of children's literature.<\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514018049423","data":"5a3e17ffa023e"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514018051162","data":"
3. Captain Courageous: <\/b><\/p>
This one is another one of my favourites when it comes to Kipling's work. Like I said, it is difficult to find the good ones. When a spoiled brat and son of a railroad tycoon is a pain to handle, the millionaire father sends him off on a steamboat to Europe with a crew that clearly does not want the brat onboard. What follows is a tale that changes the young boy's life and turns him from a brat to someone ready to take on life. It's a heart warming story and a must read for teenagers getting angsty. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514018424708","data":"5a3e181d56b01"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514018426440","data":"
4. Under The Deodars: <\/b> <\/p>
A story about experiencing life in India as a white man. What could possibly go wrong?<\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514018494547","data":"5a3e1833cb0d6"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514018496528","data":"
5. Rikki-Tikki-Tavi: <\/b> <\/p>
Now this one is a timeless classic that I believe should have been just as popular as The Jungle Book. Rikki Tikki Tavi is a tale of a Mongoose named Rikki that is trying to protect an Indian family from two giant cobras. It's a great read for kids and I recommend it. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514018561084","data":"5a3e185201bf4"}]
In the dying days of the Mughal Empire, there lived a man named Mirza Asadullah Baig Khan. He was a quiet, unassuming man, born in Agra in the year 1797, on December 27th in fact, who would go on to adopt the pen name Ghalib, a calling card of sorts to hide his own identity and to put himself in someone else's shoes and write, and as fate would have it, become one of the most renowned Urdu and Persian poets of all time. Even to this day, his poems about life, love, loss, deceit and pain resonate across millions of lives, especially those kids who share his Shayaris on social media pretending to understand what it means (including yours truly).<\/p>
The reason I decided to put his 10 best Shayaris in this article is because I want students to read his work and realise just how much they can relate life's simple struggles to his words even hundreds of years later. It truly is a bizarre thing to experience the feeling that despite the social inequalities and shifting of privileges that happened over a period of time, the problems that humans face are the same, the causes change of course, but the pain remains the same. <\/p>
Ghalib's work is now a national treasure, his works preserved, his memory honoured. He truly was one of the brightest literary gems from the subcontinent, so without further ado, here are 10 of his Shayaris, in their original form. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514012295870","data":"5a3e0231f0da0"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514012291491","data":"
1. Hazaaron khwaheeshen aisi ki har khwahesh pay dum nikale,Bahhut nikale meray armaan lekin phir bhi kam nikale ...<\/i><\/p>
2. Aah ko chahiye ik umr asar hote takkaun jeeta hai tiri zulf ke sar hote tak <\/i><\/p>
3. Is qadarr tora hai mujhaay uss ke be-wafaai nay \"ghalib\"Abb koi agarr pyar se bhi daikhaay to bikharr jata hoon mai..<\/i><\/p>
4. Sabnay pahna tha baday shauk se kaagaz ka libaas,<\/i><\/p>
Jis kadar log thay baarish me nahaanay walay,<\/i><\/p>
Adal ke tum na humey aas dilaaoo,<\/i><\/p>
Qatl ho jatay hain, zanzeer hilanay walay..<\/i><\/p>
5. Sarayy raah jo unsaay nazar mili,<\/i><\/p>
To naksh dil kay ubhar gayay,<\/i><\/p>
Hum nazar mila kar jhijhag gayay,<\/i><\/p>
Woh nazar jhukaa kar chalay gayay...<\/i><\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1514012410303","data":"5a3e024c88117"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514012411959","data":"
6. Hamen Unse hai Wafa ki Umeed<\/i><\/p>
Jo Nahi Jaante Wafa kya hai.. <\/i><\/p>
7. Toda kuch is Ada se Taellukh us ne Ghlaib,<\/i><\/p>
Ke Sari umr apna kusoor dhoondte rahe..<\/i><\/p>
8. Ishq ne \u2018Ghalib\u2019 nikamma kar diya<\/i><\/p>
varna ham bhi aadmi the kaam ke..<\/i><\/p>
9. Dard ho Dil Men To Dawa Kijye<\/i><\/p>
Dil hi Jab Dard Ho To Kya Kijye..<\/i><\/p>
and my personal favourite of all time...<\/p>
10. Hum To Fanaa Ho Gaye Uski Ankhein Dekh Kar Ghalib<\/i><\/p>
Na Jane Woh Aaina Kaise Dekhte Honge<\/i><\/p>"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1514013111226","data":"
Thus lived and died Mirza Ghalib, the last Mughal Poet of India, one that left permanent presence in our culture. <\/p>"}]
Whether doing standup, acting on TV and in movies, or performing his off-kilter hip-hop and funk under the name Childish Gambino, it's impossible not to be impressed by Donald Glover's talents.<\/p>
He got his start performing with the sketch group Derrick Comedy, which led to him being hired by Tina Fey in 2006 to write for 30 Rock. Three years later he left that job to move to Los Angeles and was soon cast on the sitcom Community. He had released his first mixtape, Sick Boi, the previous year, using a name, Childish Gambino, he'd been given by an on-line Wu-Tang Clan name generator. His next mixtape, Poindexter, was released on September 19, 2009, the same day Community premiered on NBC. While his brainy, sometimes goofy rapping style was established by these two mixtapes, his next efforts sought to expand his reach and touch on more serious subjects. I AM JUST A RAPPER and I AM JUST A RAPPER 2 were released in quick succession at the beginning of 2010; then a couple months later he released Culdesac, a mixtape that showed off his soulful singing style. All the while he was still starring on Community, launching a successful standup comedy career, and making electronic music under the name mcDJ. To this point all his music had been self-released, but that changed when he was signed to Glassnote Records in 2011. His first official album, Camp, was issued that same year. Busy as ever, Glover launched a tour that lasted into 2012, then released another mixtape, Royalty, denoting his new status as a more serious rapper and featuring a range of musicians including Beck, ScHoolboy Q, and Das Racist's Heems.<\/p>
Along with guesting on tracks by Kilo Kish, Chance the Rapper, Young Dro, and Kenna, his next move was to reduce his commitment to Community in order to focus more on his music and other projects, most notably a production deal with the TBS network. He left the show for good in 2013, and that same year released his second album, Because the Internet. The record featured appearances by Chance the Rapper, Jhen\u00e9 Aiko, and Azealia Banks, and scored Childish Gambino a Top Ten debut chart placement, a gold record, and a nomination for Best Rap Album at the 2015 Grammy Awards. Glover kept up the same determined pace he always had, and in 2015 released a new mixtape, STN MTN, and EP, Kauai, both of which showed him expanding his sound, with the latter featuring more singing than before. His next big project was creating and starring in Atlanta, a well-received comedic drama set in the titular city. It debuted in September of 2016 and was an instant commercial success. Around this same time, Glover began dropping hints about a new album, played a festival in California where he played many new songs, and in November debuted the first single, \"Me and Your Mama.\" It was a new sound cooked up by Glover and longtime producer Ludwig G\u00f6ransson, based on deeply weird late-'60s and early-'70s psychedelic funk and soul like Sly & the Family Stone and Funkadelic. \"Awaken, My Love!\", which came out in December of 2016, featured Glover forgoing his trademark rap style completely and instead stretching his vocal range in a variety of styles.<\/p>"}]
I still remember the day\nWhen you passed by me\nGiving a kind smile\nWhich I never knew would become something<\/p>\n
As days passed by\nThe clouds started to envelope the sky\nand wrapping the Sun\nMarking the end of July<\/p>\n
It was August\nThe month of rains\nI remember you in blue\nWith band aids all over you<\/p>\n
The rain changing to thunder\nStormed my life, making everything a blunder\nI moved away from you\nNot even having a clue, that I would ever love you<\/p>\n
It was the month of November\nOh! I'm certain\nCoz that's when I first texted you\nSaying \"Hi man! Can you suggest me a brand name?\"<\/p>\n
Little that I knew\nThat months later you would be my best friend\nWho would tolerate the craziness\nEvery time I show my mid-town-madness<\/p>\n
Things started to change\nFrom texting to late night calls\nWe began to talk everyday\nTeasing and laughing at each other all day long<\/p>\n
A lil more we learned\nEvery time we talked\nFrom past stories to secrets\nWe shared it all<\/p>\n
It was the fool's month\nWhen we confessed our emotions\nI felt the love I was searching for\nIt was you, for whom I've waited this long<\/p>\n
Your messages and calls\nMakes me feel special and strong\nThe day when you said \"I love you\" in your deep voice..\nDarn! I wish to relive that moment a billion times!<\/p>\n
Wishing that this will work\nWe would take it slow\nSo that the time in store\nCould bring us close.<\/p>\n","id":"1513887306561","type":"txt"}]
Patrick Bateman from American Psycho would have gone crazy in 2017's world where yuppies forgo chasing money and being in his way, thus fuelling his murderous rampage, but instead spend hours online arguing about which smartphone is better. <\/p>
This is what capitalism has reduced us to, to a culture of arguing fiercely, actively and shamelessly about inanimate phones and corporations, defending them as if your life depended on it. I usually refrain from being caustic on this platform but I have to call this one out, just how stupid are you?<\/p>
The objective of a cellular phone which has now taken the classification of being 'smart' because of the software and being constantly connected to the internet is to constantly keep us connected and updated with the news, reach our friends instantly and make our lives easier. Yet, in true human fashion combined with capitalism, we've formed tribes around the kind of phones we use to feel special and chosen because apparently there's not much else going on in one's lives. So insane have these groups become that they've taken a turn for the worse as the inevitable comparisons between the two camps happened. We do not know who struck the first blow, but for the love of everything that is holy, be the first one to shut the hell up about this nonsense, no matter which side of the spectrum you are. <\/p>
Just look how happy Patrick Bateman is in the picture below, using a thick cellphone to book a table for two and Dorsea. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1513852596121","data":"5a3b8f50b970b"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1513852605938","data":"
For the record, I'll never be able to see Christian Bale as anyone else except Patrick Bateman for his excellent performance and no, not even the Dark Knight trilogy can change my mind. But coming back to the point. <\/p>
It really makes me wonder why people attach their sense of self-worth, their entire existence up until present time, on who makes the device they use to click pictures, talk to friends and surf the web. Like, who cares if your phone has a glass back or plastic, that is hardly the issue at all! What should matter is if the phone lets you do the stuff you want to do, that is make calls, text people and watch stuff, something that can also be done on cheap phones, so why on earth does it even matter what phone you're using? <\/p>
Is your life so shallow and so boring that the most interesting thing about your life is what kind of a phone you're carrying in your pocket? For absolute shame! <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1513853387331","data":"5a3b93fe3e968"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1513853389580","data":"
It doesn't matter who buys what, there is nothing more sadder and pitiful than a person who thinks buying a phone will make them look cooler, and don't even get me started on the geniuses who parade around iPhones as if they are status symbols and the guys who own android phones and go around telling people that they can tear it down to pieces and build it again because the software is that friendly, being open source. <\/p>
The average consumer does not care, in fact, nobody outside your little man-children caves cares about which phone is better, you know why? Because smartphones do the same stuff no matter what build or make, that's why. <\/p>
Like damn, get some culture in your life and debate about how we can possibly move forward as a society and brainstorm for solutions, not worry about RAM in phones, often cases higher than some laptops these days, which still end up lagging every now and then because of course they do. <\/p>
It's time to stop. <\/p>"}]
This seems to be a norm in Asian cultures, but overworking and staying late at work until your brain starts to look like tomato soup seems to be somewhat of an accepted trend, so much so that even your managers expect you to stretch and kill your mind body and soul and take on additional stress instead of spending quality time with your family just to get something done, something that can also be completed the following day. <\/p>
Here's a radical thought, go home on time. <\/p>
Shocking, I know, but what's so horrible about it? Just go home on time, go spend time with your family and friends and come back to work the next day with a smile. How is this possible, I hear you ask? Well, I'm going to let you in on a little secret. <\/p>
Overworking is overrated. <\/p>
<\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1513850135234","data":"5a3b88b1557b7"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1513850137045","data":"
There's simply no nobility in you staying late at work and killing your soul despite what society might think. Such pervasive and prevalent is this attitude that some of the most brilliant people I know have burned out and cannot be bothered to do their jobs anymore because of severe demotivation. <\/p>
Not only does overworking kill your enthusiasm, there are even geniuses who not only overwork but also take on additional work because apparently they are gluttons for punishment. Here's another secret, nobody is going to hand you an award for being a glutton for punishment, the only reward you're going to get is a deepening sense of under appreciation and a lot of depression because it feels like you're ding everything in the office, even when that is not true. <\/p>
Oh and of course there are companies that may appreciate you for working too much, that is just a trap because this is still a capitalistic society and as long as you're making money for the company, shams like 'best employee' award will be handed to you to ensure you keep killing yourself internally instead of living your life outside the confines of your office. <\/p>
Live a little, ladies and gentlemen, always leave office on time. <\/p>"}]
Born on December 28, 1932, Dhirajlal Ambani would go on to become one of the most successful entrepreneurs of independent India, and became an inspiration for many an entrepreneur across the country and the world. Today, as we remember his achievements on his 86th birthday, let us take a look at the entrepreneurial lessons one can learn from Dhirubhai Ambani<\/p>
1. Always remember your goals <\/b><\/p>
Dhirubhai Ambani was focused on becoming successful, and had a treasure trove of ideas to work with. What set him apart from the rest of entrepreneurs of his time was that he never was satisfied with his position, and consistently worked towards reaching his goals. Steadfast and unwavering, thy name is Dhirubhai Ambani. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1545982672165","data":"5a3b83349d62d"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1545982672166","data":"
2. He was a risk taker <\/b><\/p>
'A Ship in Harbor Is Safe, But that Is Not What Ships Are Built For' goes a saying, Dhirubhai was the embodiment of this. One of his early buisness ventures put him in a partnership with a man who wanted to play it safe, but Ambani would not stand for it, his first office had two attendants, three chairs, one small room and a table, and he started his career there, importing polyester from Yemen. Today, Reliance industries is the biggest manufacturer of Polyester in the world. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1545982672167","data":"5a3b8347f2da9"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1545982672168","data":"
3. He had revolutionary ideas, wanted to give back to the country<\/b><\/p>
Dhirubhai didn't just want to make a profit, he wanted India to be respected worldwide. His ideas allowed him to gain a much acclaim in practice after starting Reliance Industries, and one of these visions is the reason cell phone communication caught on in India, Reliance communication revolutionized the cell phone industry of the country, with Dhirubhai's dream of seeing every strata of society connected to cellular networks. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1545982672169","data":"5a3b83623737d"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1545982672170","data":"
4. He had a great respect for his team<\/b><\/p>
Dhirubhai understood the importance of having a good team for building his company, he focused on building a team that had brilliant ideas, ideas that he would patiently listen to and encourage. A mark of a truly good entrepreneur is how much you respect your team that builds and maintains the product for you, because often their ideas can drastically improve your services. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1545982672171","data":"5a3b83781cccb"},{"type":"txt","id":"rich_1545982672172","data":"
5. He understood the importance of innovation and adapted accordingly<\/b> <\/p>
The only constant in life is change, change of times brings changes and innovations in technology and new fields of study, Dhirubhai understood this well and was always willing to adapt. He saw an opportunity for a business according to the times and went through with it. It was this belief that led to the cell phone revolution in India, and today, with India being one of the biggest market for smartphones, we have Dhirubhai Ambani to thank for that. He strove to be greater than people could think of, and he had the grit, determination and the guts to go through with it, this is the reason why he is one of the biggest inspirational figures for students and entrepreneurs alike, across the world. <\/p>"},{"type":"img","id":"img-uid-1545982672173","data":"5a3b838f28388"}]
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