Monthly Archives: June 2011

Kodagu Celebrates Arjun’s Selection as Hockey Captain

Arjun Halappa, lad from Kodagu will lead the Indian Hockey team in the Sulthan Ajhlan Shah Cup hockey tourney to be held in Malaysia, next month.
Indian Hockey team captain Arjun HalappaIt is after several years that a Kodava will be leading the Indian Hockey and with this selection, Kodagu district has a reason to celebrate as hockey has been an inseparable part of Kodagu culture. 

Arjun is the son of B K Halappa and Pramila from Somwarpet. Arjun has been playing in the hockey team for the last 11 years.

With Arjun Halappa leading the team, he becomes the 6th Kodava to lead the India Hockey team, after M P Ganesh, B P Govind, M M Somaiah, B P Subramani and A B Subbaiah.

Basking over his son’s achievement, proud father B K Halappa speaking with the reporters said that he was sure that his son would get the opportunity to lead the Indian team one day or the other.

Mother Pramila, recalling Arjun’s childhood days, said that he used to take part in school-level hockey tournaments and had led the team at various levels. “I am sure he will excel as the captain of Indian Hockey team. It is a big responsibility but I have great confidence that he will do his duty with all dedication,” said Pramila.

Arjun’s wife Bhavana expressing her feeling said that Arjun has gained lot of experience after being in the team for 11 years and captaincy for him can be a platform to revive the glory of the national game.

However, the hockey fans who have always felt that Arjun should have been selected as the captain long back, still have a reason to rejoice because it is better late than never.

 

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / DHNS / Somwarpet / April 07th, 2011

 

 

Making Mark at Natl Circuit

Tennis Having won three singles and doubles titles in the last two months, Vasisht Cheruku of Mysore is sure to top the national rankings, observes Manish
Vasisht Cheruku practising at the Nagaraj Tennis Centre, Mysore. Dh photo by Anurag Basavaraj“ Nothing can be a substitute for hard work. I had to put in the time to get back. And it was a grind. It meant training and sweating out every day. But I was completely committed to working out to prove to myself that I still could do it,” were the words of legendary tennis player and former world number one Andre Agassi that could serve as an inspiration to a budding tennis player from the city, Vasisht Cheruku. 

Having won the ‘Ramesh Desai Memorial Tournament’, a national title tournament held in Mumbai recently, Vasisht has made his presence felt in the Under-12 and Under-14 categories.

Speaking to City Herald, Vasisht’s coach and mentor R Nagaraj pointed out the lad had a powerful forehand that could help him reach the top of the national rankings to be announced by the All India Tennis Association (AITA).

Stellar performances

Ranked third in the country in the Under-12 category, Vasisht will be hoping to reach the top spot in the coming month, with his stellar performances during the past two months.
Vasisht has emerged champion in three singles and doubles titles each in the seven tournaments held during the last two months.

He also surged ahead  to two singles finals and one doubles final. Vasisht has won the Championship Series organised in May 2011 at Mumbai and also the Under-12 singles and doubles title at the Super Series organised by Harvest Tennis Club in Jassowal, Punjab.

However, his biggest success has been being runner-up at the Asian Ranking Tennis Tournament in the Under-14 category beating the likes of Escobar Moises of UAE, S Gokul of Tamil Nadu and Udayan Bhakker of Rajasthan.

Vasisht has won several doubles titles teaming up with Sumit Pal Singh of Jammu and Kashmir.

Strength

While Vasisht’s strength lies in playing on hard court, Nagaraj said that the upcoming tennis player has been working hard in improving his game in backhand.

Nagaraj mentioned that his serve has also been the focus of practice sessions at the Nagaraj Tennis Centre. Assistant coach Deepak Kumar said Vasisht has the ‘fighting spirit’ needed to win titles, he has emerged winner even after being a set down.

Vasisht said that he has the continuous support of his father Vinod Reddy and mother Asha.  However, he said, his major improvements in the game has been due to coach R Nagaraj and assistant coach Deepak Kumar.

Asked about his role model in tennis, Vasisht named 16 Grand Slam singles title winner Roger Federer as his favourite.

 

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / by Manish / Mysore City Herald

 

 

Common Man’s “Sweet” Doctor of Mysore

service Physician Dr V Lakshminarayan who has received wide acclaim for his research publications in international journals is a common man’s doctor in city. Through his selfless service, he is a household name in Mysore, writes Eswar Singh K R
Dr V Lakshminarayan being felicitated at a programme organised by Mysore Clinical Society on the occasion of the release of his book on diabetes and its effects at a programme, in Mysore.  dh photoDiabetes is the leading cause of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The sedentary lifestyle and food habits are increasing the risk factors for the younger population to become prone to diabetes, even as more youngsters are found positive for high level of blood sugar. 

One name that is synonymous with diabetes in Mysore is Dr V Lakshminarayan’s. For more than three decades,  Dr Lakshminarayan is treating patients with diabetes and at the same time doing his study on the patterns of diabetes, its effects and finding ways to improve the health of diabetics. A majority of his study has been published in reputed journals in India and abroad.

Lakshminarayan was presented Vaidya Rathna award in recognition of his service in the medical field.

His study on Efficacy of Safety of Valsartan in Preventing the Progression of Nephropathy in Indian diabetes miletus patients received wider acceptance, including from American Diabetes Association.

Talking to City Herald, Dr Lakshminarayan said Microalbuminuria (MAU), the condition where the albumin exceeds 30 mg in urine requires attention. It is the earliest clinical sign of diabetes nephropathy. Many studies suggest that MAU is an independent risk factor for both cardiovascular disease, CKD and ESRD.

Over a period of 10-15 years, the improper treatment of diabetes is bound to affect kidney, which can lead to the end-stage renal disease. “Once a patient reaches ESRD,  medicine will not be of much use. The patient has to either undergo dialysis twice a week or have to go for the transplantation of kidney.

Therefore, early treatment is necessary to prevent ESRD detecting MAU in early stage by Micro Albuminuria test,” says Dr Lakshminarayan.  The 68th scientific session of American Diabetes Association held at Moscone Convention Center, San Francisco, Los Angeles, United States in 2009 declared that the study was beneficial in preventing progression of diabetes nephropathy at the stage of micro albuminuria in DMT patients.

The ADA journal also published Lakshminarayan’s study which  said that no adverse effects were found in any patients treated with Valsartan for 16 weeks.   Dr Lakshminarayan has also made elaborate study on relationship between diabetes and sexual dysfunction and other subjects.

He was the personal physician for Rashtrakavi Kuvempu for about a decade. Though, Kuvempu was not a diabetic, Dr Lakshminarayan treated him for hypertension and other general old-age related health disorders. “The service that I rendered for Kuvempu will be an unforgettable memory in my life,” the physician says.

Dr Lakshminarayan who currently runs Shreehari Diabetes Foundation on Anikethana Road in Kuvempunagar has served in various capacities in State government and in medical education field. He is widely regarded as common man’s doctor due to his selfless service in medical field. Lakshminarayan, who is a lifetime member of American Diabetes Association is invited as the honorary delegate for the annual ADA conference to be held at United States next week.

 

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / by Eswar Singh K R / June 20th, 2011/ Mysore City Herald

 

 

Postal Van that Runs on Power

BANGALORE:

Campuses across the country could run electric postal vans  if the department of science and technology (DST) makes IISc’s innovative electric postal van a model. Researchers at IISc’s Centre for Product Design and Manufacturing are excited by the idea of approaching DST while already having approached a few private companies to commercialize their in-house product.
To keep IISc campus green and clean and save energy, which can be the case with all campuses in the country, researchers led by Prof Anindya Deb have designed an electric postal van that will begin operations in two months time.

Deb explains the van is special for two reasons. “The van has been made based on the unique space frame body design. In simple terms, it is a lightweight van made out of aluminium tubes integrated through innovative engineering. The aluminium tubular frame keeps the van very light. There is no use of steel, a feature of conventional vehicles. The van is also special because it runs on battery __ an electric motor powers the van which makes it an eco-friendly product too.”

The van, named Vidyut, is 4 metres long and weighs around 800 kg. The batteries weigh 300 kg. “To offset weight of the batteries, we have used lightweight aluminium to design the van. An 800 kg vehicle spread over 4 metres makes it light,” Deb explains. For every battery charge, the van runs 60-70 km and can be charged once in three-four days if used within campus. The van approximately costs Rs 5-6 lakh.

The van is a boon to IISc as the existing van has postal boxes which are at a height of almost 6-6.5 feet making it very difficult to reach out. The new van is at the height of a car __ around 4 feet __ and has 100 mail boxes inside it ensuring easy reach.

Funded by IISc, the design of the van, which took five years, is a dream come true. “We made this van with less than 10 people. We have a workable product with virtually no manpower. We are not a company and we don’t have the privilege of having hundreds of engineers. We’re researchers primarily and not product manufacturers,” Deb explains.

Can the van be used in the city and can it be commercialized? “The van is a real product. It can be modified to run in the city, which requires certification from the automotive institute in Pune and the regional transport office concerned. Technically speaking it can be run on the roads.

“We have in fact driven the van in the city when we needed to get the paint job and maintenance work done. It performed like any other conventional vehicle. We have also run it inside the campus. The vehicle is primarily meant to be run inside campuses and can be replicated in campuses around the country.

“We have approached some companies on commercialization. In fact Ratan Tata  had evinced interest and I even drove him around campus. But what we need is support to market and commercialize it as I and my team are primarily academics,” Deb says.

The team is securing insurance for the van to offset damage. This being an experimental, research van, it has a permit from RTO to be run without registration within campus. It will need to pass certification tests and registration to run outside. The van has successfully run simulation tests for crash worthiness.

QUOTE CORNER

“A literature survey we did indicates the design of this van is special. It is not seen everywhere in the world. To that extent we have attempted a product different from existing ones.”

__ Anindya Deb

MAIL BOX

Innovation: Lightweight aluminium electric postal van

How it works: Battery-driven, runs 60 to 70 km

Utility: Can be used as postal van in all campuses

Cost: Around Rs 5-6 lakh

The Team: Anindya Deb conceptualised and designed the van, technician Eaganathan did mounting works, Sigbathullah fabricated mail boxes, S K Sinha looked into electricals, N D Shivakumar took care of fabrication and a host of students helped

OTHER FACTS

* Van will make two rounds __ morning and evening __ deliver and collect mail from and to a central point in the campus

* Mail boxes have numbers indicating the departments/centres to which mail is delivered and collected

* Van will deliver and collect internal mail between departments and external mails

* Van has been derived from the original plan and concept of a small car project undertaken by two students, funded by IISc, private company Hydro Aluminium and Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

* Patent filed for design and technology used in it

 

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / by Prashanth G M / TNN / Jun 14th, 2011

Toil to Beat Bangalore, Obama tell US Children

US President Barack Obama has exhorted American students to toil harder at school, and has told them that their success would determine the country’s leadership in a world where children in Bangalore and Beijing were raring to race ahead.

Obama has repeatedly said that American schools would have to ensure that they continue producing leagues of top professionals, so that the American hegemony in human resource continues in this century.

“At a time when other countries are competing with us like never before, when students around the world in Beijing, China, or Bangalore, India, are working harder than ever, and doing better than ever, your success in school is not just going to determine your success, it’s going to determine America’s success in the 21st century,” Obama said. “The farther you go in school, the farther you’re going to go in life,” he told students at a school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Last year, while announcing an end of tax incentives to US companies which created jobs overseas, Obama had launched the ‘Say no to Bangalore and yes to Buffalo,’ slogan. Since then, he has time and again brought up the competition presented by developing countries like China and India while asking Americans to rise to the challenge to keep the American supremacy alive.

“You’ve got an obligation to yourselves, and America has an obligation to you, to make sure you’re getting the best education possible,” Obama said in his latest remarks.

He said preparing the students for success in classroom, college, and career would also require an enormous collective effort from teachers, principals as well as the administration.

Asking students to work harder than everybody else and seek out new challenges, he said his call was directed at all Americans alike. “… I’m not just speaking to all of you, I’m speaking to kids all across the country.”

 

source: http://www.emirates247.com / By Agencies / Published Thursday, September 16th, 2010

Etisalat enters India with new Bangalore Subsidiary

 

UAE-based telecommunication service provider etisalat yesterday unveiled a new subsidiary operation in Bangalore, marking its maiden entry into India.

Going by the brand name – Technologia, the subsidiary would develop software solutions for the telecommunication domain, Press Trust of India reported yesterday.
CE
“The key objective of Technologia is to form a hub of innovation excellence to support our growing international portfolio of operators and telecommunications related subsidiaries,” etisalat CEO Mohammad Khalfan Al Qamzi said in a recent statement to the press.
Based out of 37,000 square feet office in Bangalore and registered as a 100 per cent export oriented unit, Technologia will provide software products and IT services to etisalat, its subsidiaries and other telecommunication companies in the region.
During the initial phase, Technologia will have 50 qualified software engineers, and it is expected to grow to 250 employees in the near future, the news agency said.
Internationally, etisalat provides telecommunications services in 16 countries in Africa and Asia.
Technologia will be an independent software vendor in India, wholly-owned by etisalat in the OSS/BSS domain of telecommunication services with particular focus on software products, custom software development and consultancy.

source: http://www.emirates247.com / Mar 04th, 2008

India: from Brain Drain to Brain Gain

By several estimates, between 50,000 and 60,000 IT professionals have returned to India from overseas since 2003.

Residents of the South Indian city of Bangalore, once an orderly enclave of colonial-era buildings and well tended gardens, have started wearing earplugs to dampen noise from the maelstrom on their chaotic streets. It is the noise of growth boosted in part by the return of many of India’s technologists whose departure to the West was once bemoaned as brain drain.

Call centres, software and engineering companies and some of the world’s most advanced research centres prosper on the capital – both human and monetary – of Indian emigres recently returned from abroad with foreign passports, foreign bank accounts and families sometimes more Western than Indian.

Bangalore’s frenzy is emblematic of the reverse brain drain – or reverse diaspora – that helped propel India onto the world stage in ways that were unimaginable just a few decades ago. While Indians still go abroad to work and study – there are a record 80,000 Asian Indian students now enrolled in US universities – a new class of Indian expatriates, fluent in the ways of the West, energises India. By several estimates, between 50,000 and 60,000 information-technology professionals alone have returned to India from overseas since 2003, most to the suburbs of New Delhi, Hyderabad and especially Bangalore, the nexus of what Indians call their “brain gain”.

At Bangalore’s new international airport, packed airliners arrive from London, Paris, Frankfurt and Singapore bearing Indians with degrees from the world’s top universities and plans to reconnect to Mother India. Some were recruited at job fairs in cities across the US, home to 2.32 million people of Indian origin. And most say they return to India for attractive pay packages that offer a comfortable standard of living comparable with life in the US along with greater opportunities of advancement. Others want to be closer to aging parents.

But Bangalore, home to more than 1,000 IT firms and 10,000 US dollar-millionaires, may price itself out of the market. While India’s technology and outsourced-services industries continue to boom, earning an expected $52 billion (Dh191bn) in the 2007-2008 fiscal year, wage inflation in Bangalore runs at up to 50 per cent a year, making it only marginally less expensive for sophisticated tech work than doing business in California.

As a result, some global brand names shifted operations to cheaper Indian cities such as Chennai, Kolkata and Hyderabad, where the costs of doing business are as much as 30 per cent less. A few companies are looking beyond India altogether, betting on lower-wage countries such as Vietnam and the the Philippines. If Bangalore is losing some of its lustre, it still remains the world’s fourth largest technology hub and claims to have the fastest-growing wealth base in the Asia-Pacific basin. And for many Americans, this means Bangalore is both a threat and opportunity: a threat because it now boasts at least 160,000 technology workers compared with about 175,000 in Silicon Valley. Moreover, much of this talent, especially at the middle and top levels, has been transplanted from the San Francisco Bay area to India.

Bangalore also represents an opportunity for US companies to tap into India’s prodigious brainpower and entrepreneurial spirit. From Bangalore, Americans and citizens of other developed countries are having their tax returns prepared, CAT scans and MRIs read, mortgages analysed, lawsuits researched, airline reservations confirmed and computer glitches unsnarled – thanks to broadband connections that make the city as close as the shop next door.

As Bangalore moves further up the technology ladder, it has ambitions to challenge places such as Silicon Valley and the Research Triangle at Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, as a world centre for innovation. Microsoft plans to spend $1.7m in India over the next several years and has opened a research centre there. IBM, Oracle, Cisco Systems, Intel and Hewlett-Packard also have campuses and research centres in Bangalore.

The corporate headquarters of Infosys Technologies, India’s second-largest outsourcing firm, is tucked away in a section of Bangalore called Electronics City. The view inside the Infosys campus is buoyant with double-digit profit margins, revenues in billions of dollars, and plans to hire thousands of employees worldwide over the next few years.

Typical of those young Indians moving Infosys into the top ranks of global companies is Smita Agrawal, a savvy marketing manager who has worked in Tokyo, Minneapolis, Los Angeles and Little Rock, Arkansas. Preferring Western business attire to saris, she nevertheless finds India to her liking. “After-office hours is where you lose out in the US,” she says. “There’s a cultural gap in America and you just don’t have the face-to-face interaction with Americans that we have here in India.” Confessing that, “Bangalore and its messiness take some getting use to,” Agrawal nevertheless sees India as a place to enhance her career.

Peers at companies from Yahoo! to start-ups that only the digital cognoscenti would recognise, agree that being part of the reverse diaspora has its satisfactions, both professional and cultural. In Bangalore and other major Indian cities, there’s no shortage of luxury shopping malls and housing developments to lure home expatriates. At Palm Meadows, one of the gated communities in Bangalore where the computer-savvy elite live, it would be hard to find an Indian passport holder, aside from maids and gardeners because most residents are citizens of the US and the UK, or dual nationals.

Ajay Kela, COO of software development fim Symphony Services, looks around his neighbourhood of four-bedroom Spanish-style villas and says he made his decision in a day to pull up roots in Foster City, California, and return to India. “India is an efficient location for software design and besides, the middle-class is exploding here.” But the move back to India hasn’t been problem-free, with grinding commutes over potholed roads, a yawning gap between educated and poor, and a mind-numbing conformity that inhibits the creative outside-of-the-box thinking associated with Palo Alto or Raleigh-Durham. “There is raw talent in India,” says Sridhar Ranganathan, a former Yahoo! executive and MD of Blue Vector India in Bangalore. “But how to polish that talent is India’s dilemma and my challenge.”

 

source: http://www.emirates247.com / by New York Times Syndicate / Published Thursday, December 25th, 2008

Two Children from Kolar Set to Create a Record

KOLAR :

Youngest to perform ‘arangetram’

Two children from Kolar are all set to create a record in the world of cultural field. Five-year-old M. Chitrashree and six-year-old R.V. Lehanya will perform “arangetram” at a function at the T. Chennaiah Ranga Mandira here on Friday.

It is said that they are the youngest dancers in the world to perform conventional “arangetram” in Bharatanatyam, the ancient performing art form of India.

The present feat is held by a Bangalore girl who performed “arangetram” at the age of eight.

Both Chitrashree and Lehanya are students of Sri Jayanatya Kala Academy founded by Kolar Ramesh. While Chitrashree was just admitted to standard one, Lehanya is a class two student.

Keen in dance and music, both these child prodigies, with unstinted support from their parents, got lessons in Carnatic classical music from C. Narayanaswamy. Chitrashree was initially trained in dance by Arunakumari.

Though it is the traditional “arangetram” for these child artistes, both of them have given stage performances at several places, including one at ADA Ranga Mandira in Bangalore, to exhibit their dancing talent. The “arangetram” is slated to be held at 4 p.m. Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee president G. Parameshwara will inaugurate the programme.

Ramesh Chadaga (singing), Nagaraju (mridanga), Natarajmurthy (violin), Narasimhamurthy (flute) will join hands with Ramesh (natuvanga) in the “arangetram”.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / Jun 09th, 2011

Lingadevaru Halemane

MYSORE / BANGALORE:

Lingadevaru Halemane is dead

His contribution to theatre, literature and linguistics was immense

Linguist and Director of Nataka Karnataka Rangayana Lingadevaru Halemane passed away at his residence early on Wednesday following a massive heart attack. He was 62. He is survived by wife and two daughters.

Prof. Halemane’s body was kept on the Rangayana premises for about an hour to allow his admirers,friends and the public to pay their last respects.

Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Assembly Siddaramaiah, Minister in-charge of Mysore district S.A. Ramdas, former Minister H.C. Mahadevappa, A.H. Vishwanath, MP, G.K. Govinda Rao, writer, theatre personality Srinivasa Kappanna, and several theatre artistes paid their respects.

The body was later taken to his birthplace of Alagona village in Chikkanayakanahalli taluk of Tumkur district for the last rites. Prof. Halemane’s contribution in the fields of theatre, literature and linguistics was significant, and he was a consistent opponent of communal and divisive forces. Born in 1949, Prof. Halemane did his MA in Kannada at the University of Mysore. Later, he did his MA in Linguistics from Annamalai University, and joined the Central Institute of Indian Languages (CIIL) here in 1973. He also worked as Director of the State Resource Centre (SRC).

Prof. Halemane was instrumental in organising the Kannada play Tayi, based on a novel by Maxim Gorky, and directed by Prasanna, in Mysore. When workers of a major hotel in Mysore were retrenched, he wrote his first play,Koneganada Horata, based on their plight. As a result of the play, negotiations with the management commenced and the workers were reinstated.

When Samudaya organised the ‘Raithanatta Jatha’ in 1978, he played a major role in organising workers from Kodagu, Mangalore and Mysore.

His Chikkadevabhoopa, depicting the uprising of the peasantry against the ruler Chikkaveeraraya, was a major success. His close associate Ramesh, coordinator of Parivarthana Theatre Troupe, says: “He was fascinated by the history of Mysore and its monarchy.”

Prof. Halemane’s Neralillada Manushyaru, a translation of Jean Paul Sartre’sMen Without Shadows was another success.

His major plays are Hyder, Antembara Ganda, Taskara, Shapa, Matash Raja, Mother Courage and Dr. BethuneVanaprastha was the last play that was staged.

Prof. Halemane also wrote poetry. He wrote songs for the plays Kusumabaleand Devanuru Kathegalu by Devanuru Mahadeva.

Basha Mandakini, his documentation of the cultural history of Kannada during his days at the CIIL is considered an important contribution to the cultural history of Karnataka.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / Karnataka Bureau / Jun 09th, 2011

 

He Changed People’s Mind for the Cause of Environment

HUBLI:

Overflowing drains, spilled-over dustbins and uncleaned roads. This was the scene at the Hamalis’ Colony on APMC premises in Hubli till Ramu Moolgi came to teach in Govt Primary School near the place a few years ago.
Within months of his arrival, Moolgi transformed the premises into a clean and green heaven. “Soon after reaching the place, I realized that I need to do something immediately to change the sad state of the colony,” says Moolgi.

Instead of preaching cleanliness, he rolled up his sleeves and and started cleaning the area. “I wanted to send across a strong message to the poor and illiterate locals. I knew I needed to be one among them to teach them the importance of hygiene and cleanliness and to make some impact on their minds. I didn’t hesitate to dirty my hands,” he says.

He also asked his pupils to rid the place of discarded items like tyres, waste wood and iron rods piled up on the roofs of houses. “Mosquitoes had made these items a safe haven for breeding, causing diseases. Now, the scene has changed drastically,” he says.

Not the one who believes in celebrating Environment Day once in a year, he plants number of trees in and around the school and on APMC premises. “My students also join me in watering the plants everyday. Thus, I have managed to inculcate a sense of feeling for environment among them,” he says. A PhD holder in folklore, he uses folk songs as the medium for spreading the message. “I have written many songs for the purpose, besides staging street plays on green theme,” he says.

Acknowledging his deeds, many organizations and schools have felicitated him. He is a regular invitee in NSS and NCC camps held in the district.

“I have been doing this for the past 12 years. I feel happy when I see a person watering a tree. This keeps me going,” he adds.

 

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / TNN / Jun 04th, 2011