Monthly Archives: December 2017

A museum soaked in history

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The two domed structures in front of the district hospital on Sedam Road can pass off as one of the many historical monuments that dot the city of Kalaburagi. Historical monuments they are, but they also house the Government Museum, which has many sculptures, inscriptions, palm manuscripts, prehistoric artefacts, terracotta figures, beads, coins, cannons, etc. The well-maintained garden adds to the peaceful ambience of the place.

For centuries, Kalaburagi has been a melting pot of religions like Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Islam. Talking about the history of the museum, Shivakumar, archaeological assistant, Department of Archaeology, Museums and Heritage, said that the State government took a decision to establish a museum in Kalaburagi (then Gulbarga) in 1964 to showcase its rich history. Artefacts from different periods of time and representative of various cultures, from the Maurya Empire to the Rashtrakutas, Bahamanis and the Nizam rule are placed here.

The site

“The two empty 15th-century tombs that were in a dilapidated condition were renovated and turned into galleries. The first tomb is situated on the left side of the entrance and is bigger than the second tomb, situated on the right. The third gallery, a newly constructed building, was inaugurated in 1997. The museum has three galleries now,” Shivakumar added.

Sculptures, several hundred years old, have been neatly placed on the platforms on pathways leading to the galleries. Besides, sculptures of tirthankaras, cannons, veeragallus (hero stones), nishidi stones (erected in memory of those who performed sallekhana to attain nirvana); Sati stones and other stones dating from 10th century to 18th century and those from Chalukya, Rashtrakuta, Hoysala and Vijayanagar periods have been neatly placed on platforms around the tombs. While some of the stones are carved from black stone, others are carved from limestone.

The entrance to the first tomb is flanked by two ancient cannons. A few can also be found inside the tomb. Among many idols and sculptures, a beautifully carved Natyashiva, a 12th century Kalyani Chalukya stone panel, is unique. It depicts Lord Shiva dancing with Shivagana, joined by other gods, and is carved on both sides. The sculpture, said to be part of a temple entrance, was found at Kalgi in Chittapur taluk in Kalaburagi district.

Equally beautiful is the 18th-century idol of Goddess Durga, which was found at Sedam. The Jalashayana Vishnu, a 12th-century stone panel found in Kalaburagi, and the idols of Lord Madhusudana and Shiva-Parvati are exhibited here.

The gallery also houses arrow tips and stone tools from the Neolithic era, including terracotta figures and beads, and pottery items sourced from Maski in Raichur. Palm-leaf manuscripts and models of motifs of the Indus valley civilisation are also on display here.

This apart, the gallery houses the porcelain crockery used by Colonel Philip Meadows Taylor, administrator of Surpur in Yadgir district. The collection includes a 20th-century wooden palanquin, swords, armour and a few brass and copper utensils. In the second tomb, a majority of the sculptures and stone panels are carved from limestone and date back to the first and second centuries. They were found during surface excavations in Sannati in Yadgir district and are said to be the remains of a Buddhist stupa.

Most of the sculptures and stone panels, some with inscriptions in Brahmi script, though damaged, speak volumes about the artistic skills of the sculptors from a bygone era as carving is difficult on limestone. The 12th-century black-stone idol of Lord Parshwanatha, a tirthankara, is unique as it has the carving of mango buds. The idol was found at Harasur in Kalaburagi.

Religion & royalty

In the third gallery, sculptures, stone panels and the remains of the Buddist stupa at Sannati are housed, along with a few modern paintings. A stone panel depicting winged animals with a human face bears testimony to the earliest influence of Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilisations on Indian architecture. There are many stone panels that have the carving of the multi-headed snake.

However, most of them are damaged. A fully intact stone Buddha pada (footprint) with intrinsic carving including dharmachakras is a delight to watch. Among the other stone panels, a royal couple seated with horseshoe archway is a unique exhibit. The museum also has a collection of 100 coins from various centuries. Six of them are gold coins from the Vijayanagar period and 44 silver coins are from the Bahmani Sultanate.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> Spectrum / by Rakesh Sama, Kalaburagi / DH News Service / December 11th, 2017

Himachal Pradesh CM Jai Ram Thakur married Karnataka girl

Sadhana Thakur
Sadhana Thakur

Mysuru :

Jai Ram Thakur, the 14th chief minister of Himachal Pradesh, is Karnataka’s son-in-law.

The soft-spoken Thakur, 52, a Rajput leader and five-time MLA from Seraj constituency, is the husband of Dr Sadhana Thakur from Shivamogga.
Sadhana’s parents shifted to Jaipur in Rajasthan when she was a child. Before marriage she was known as Sadhana Rao, and studied medicine at SMS Medical College in Jaipur in the1980s.

Sadhana, who was active in the ABVP, met Thakur, a full-time activist who worked in Jammu and Kashmir before contesting from Mandi on a BJP ticket. They got married and have two daughters.

Apart from her practice, Sadhana also conducts medical and blood donation camps and organizes  programmes on women’s empowerment in Jaipur.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City News> Mysore News / by TNN / December 26th, 2017

Karnataka : Kundapur lad sets sights on Mt. Kanchenjunga

Harshad Rao
Harshad Rao

This 29-year-old has made a habit out of scaling peaks. On May 21 last year, Harshad Rao summited the Mount Everest at 8.20 am, and is now aiming to scale the Mt Kanchenjunga, which he will be climbing around May next year.

Mt Kanchenjunga (8586m/28,169ft) referred to as the ‘treasure of the snow’ is the highest peak of India. Rao will take the Nepal route and attempt this extremely tough climb. The software graduate will also give his climb a unique tech touch. He will adapt Live Location Tracking (LLT) system during his climb. “This will help track my climb real time on Google Maps. This is going to be done for the first time in civilian Indian mountaineering history,” he said.

The total budget for Rao’s expedition is about Rs 20 lakh and he is currently working on the permissions and logistics for the expedition in form of oxygen, food and equipment. He is practising long-distance running, cycling and yoga. It is going to be a 60-day expedition along with an international team. He will soon be practising in the hyperbaric chamber in Pune.

“I am working towards it mentally and physically. The peak remains unclimbed in this year and in 2016. In 1988, mountaineers from India attempted to climb Mt Kachenjunga, but fell short of the summit. The summit is definitely technically difficult because of the presence of soft snow on its route. The death ratio is also higher than Mr Everest,” he said.

Rao hails from Ardi village of Kundapur in Udupi district. He gave up his job for the sake of the Mt Everest expedition, which was a tough one especially because his oxygen mask developed a leak. He developed an interest in mountaineering after going on treks regularly. He got formally trained from the Nehru Institute of Mountaineering in Uttar Kashi and the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute. In 2009, he climbed the Jaonli peak (6632 mt) and Jogin 1 and 3 in 2011. He had also undertaken a cycling expedition from Pune to Kanyakumari.

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> News> State / by Deepthi Sanjiv, Bangalore Mirror Bureau / December 21st, 2017

Belagavi swimmer sets sight on Tokyo Paralympics

After bagging three medals at the recently concluded Asian Youth Para Games in Dubai, swimmer Shridhar Malagi of Belagavi wants to qualify for the Tokyo Paralympics in 2020
After bagging three medals at the recently concluded Asian Youth Para Games in Dubai, swimmer Shridhar Malagi of Belagavi wants to qualify for the Tokyo Paralympics in 2020

Belagavi:

Shridhar Malagi of Belagavi, who represented India, at the Asian Youth Para Games held from December 8-14 in Dubai, bagged silver medal in 100m breaststroke and bronze medals in 100m butterfly and 200m individual medley. He was included in the Indian team based on his performance at the national competition in Udaipur where he won five gold medals.

Shridharis being trained by Umesh Kalghatgi, Rajesh Shinde and Guruprasad Tangankar. Shridhar told reporters: “He is now targeting the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics and is practising hard to qualify for the event.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Hubballi News / TNN / December 22nd, 2017

In the shade of history

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Mother Teresa Peace Park has an avenue with over a 100 trees created from tissue culture

A walk through Tissue Culture Avenue at St. Aloysius College in Mangaluru is a revelation. The avenue has endangered trees created from tissue culture. Over 100 trees have been produced by tissue culture at Dr Kupper’s biotechnology lab in St. Aloysius College.

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“These trees form an important lung space on Light House Hill,” Fr Leo D’Souza, director of the lab said. “Research students use biotechnology to clone endangered species, some of which are hyper endemic. I vividly remember the day we planted the first cloned cashew sapling in the world in 1989.”

Tissue Culture Avenue is at Mother Teresa Peace Park and is a haven for collegians doing last-minute preparation and revision. With the fast-approaching festive season, youngsters are also rehearsing carols. Ashwin, a student who was hanging out with his friends, was overwhelmed on learning of the history of the avenue. He hugged the 50-foot-matchwood tree saying, “I never knew you were here.”

Smitha Hegde, a researcher and former associate professor said the matchwood tree (scientific name ailanthus) was planted 26 years ago. In an article in the golden jubilee souvenir of the St. Aloysius Evening College, she writes how Fr D’Souza motivated students to clone endemic trees of the Western Ghats including the Flame of the Forest.

The millingtonia hortensis (akasha mallige) creates a carpet of white, fragrant flowers every morning. Students enjoy studying under this tree. Smitha describes the gnetum ula as a “living fossil. The tree has conical bunches of flowers. It grows on other trees.”

The trees have plates with the names of the researchers and students who have contributed to the development of the tree. These are painted regularly to motivate the students and researchers to keep up the good work.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Life & Style / by M Raghuram / December 25th, 2017

Meet real-life Mowgli, darling of monkeys, from village near Dharwad

Langurs, boy can’t live without each other; 2-yr-old brokers peace between 2 troops.

Samarth Bangari of Allapur village in Kundol taluk of Dharwad district plays with wild Langurs. DH photo by Irappa Naikar.
Samarth Bangari of Allapur village in Kundol taluk of Dharwad district plays with wild Langurs. DH photo by Irappa Naikar.

The grey langurs or the Hanuman langurs, as they are called, are often not preferred as pets. While some ‘madaris’ tame monkeys and make them dance to their tunes, the langurs are usually not so friendly.

But langurs are soulmates for two-year-old Samarth Bangari of Allapur village in Kundagol taluk, Dharwad district. He literally eats, sleep and plays with the wild langurs.

The langurs, which are tree canopy dwellers, of this village too cannot live without him. If Samarth doesn’t come to play with them at the break of dawn, the langurs go to his bed, remove his bedsheets, wake him up and ‘drag’ him to play.

It all started six-eight months ago, when the tiny Samarth, along with his mother, went to his maternal grandfather’s village. To stop Samarth from crying, his grandmother gave him a piece of jowar roti to eat. He walked straight out of the house and offered the piece of roti to a langur that was resting on a tree along with its little one.

As Samarth babbled, the mother langur climbed down the tree and took the roti from him. Relatives were wonder-struck when the 18-month-old Samarth did not even flinch when eight to 10 langurs came to him, expecting him to offer something for them too. He stood there with a giggle on his face.

The friendship has only grown ever since. The toddler lifts the young ones in the troop or sometimes hits them. The monkeys have no issues with it.

“Earlier we used to fear for the safety of Samarth. The elders used to rush to his ‘rescue,’ but the langurs would attack us,” said Mallikarjun, Samarth’s father. Many times, the elders have sustained injuries or have been bitten by them in their ‘rescue’ mission. There have been instances where these animals have chased the elders for kilometers. But Samarth has not sustained even a scratch due to the langurs.

Family members tried several tricks to make sure Samarth was out of the reach of the langurs, but failed. They had taken Samarth to another village for a few days, but were forced to bring him back, as the langurs trooped there and ransacked everything in their wasy. They virtually searched every house in the village for Samarth. “The langurs stopped the ruckus only after he returned with them,” said a villager.

The village residents said there used to be two groups of langurs in the nearby woods of Allapur and they had constant fights. This had resulted in losses to farmers and housewives, in terms of crops, utensils or eatables. But now, truce prevails as Samarth has played the perfect peacemaker.

The boy now has a fan following of sorts as people from far and wide are coming to Allapur, to see for themselves this strange but strong bond.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State / DH News Service / Hubballi – December 03rd, 2017

Sahitya Akademi award for Ashoka, Sreemathi

Noted Kannada critic T.P. Ashok has bagged the Sahitya Akademi annual award for 2017 for his literary criticism work ‘Kathana Bharathi’.

The award carries a purse of ₹1 lakh and a copper plaque which will be presented to him on February 12, 2018, in New Delhi during the Festival of Letters being organised by the Akademi.

Another Kannada writer H.S. Sreemathi has bagged the Sahitya Akademi Prize for Translation 2017 for her work ‘Mahashweta Devi Avara Katha Sahitya – 1 and 2’, translation of short stories of Mahashweta Devi (Bengali).

The award carries a purse of ₹50,000 and a copper plaque.

24 languages

The Sahitya Akademi on Thursday announced its annual Sahitya Akademi awards in 24 languages in New Delhi.

Seven novels, five books of poetry, five of short stories, five of literary criticism and one of play and essays have been chosen for the awards.

The awards were recommended by a distinguished jury members representing the 24 Indian languages and approved by the Akademi Executive Board, said a release.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / Bengaluru – December 22nd, 2017

IISc. scientists create hybrid transistor device

In a first, scientists at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc.) have combined two different types of transistors — MOSFETs (Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor) and tunnel FETs (Field Effect Transistor) — into a single device that can easily switch between power efficient and high performance modes, depending on the need.

The device has a special type of metal-semiconductor junction, which can be tweaked to make it behave either like a MOSFET or a tunnel FET.

The hybrid variety is an answer to issues that the most common MOSFETs have, that of being unable to bring down the supply voltage for MOSFETs proportionately with transistor size, because of a fundamental design flaw.

To overcome this, the tunnel FETs are being used. But they also have a disadvantage: the desired output — the current flowing when the transistor is on — is greatly reduced.

The hybrid device is capable of switching between MOSFET and tunnel FET modes using two gates instead of one, and a special type of electron barrier called Schottky junction. The Schottky barrier is created when a metal and semiconductor are joined under certain conditions.

According to a release, the dual-gated device was able to operate at a voltage lower than possible with conventional MOSFETs, greatly reducing power consumption. It also showed superior performance compared to current state-of-the-art tunnel FETs.

“You have flexibility,” says Shubhadeep Bhattacharjee, PhD student at the Centre for Nano Science and Engineering, IISc and first author of the paper published in Applied Physics Letters.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / Bengaluru – December 21st, 2017

Ace Manufacturing opens new unit in Bengaluru

Ace Manufacturing Systems (AMS), an Ace Micromatic group company, has opened its new manufacturing facility in Bengaluru. The company is a single source supplier of machines to many Indian OEMs and large-sized component manufacturers.

Many of the company’s machines find application in industries like automobile, die & mould, aerospace, medical & dental equipment manufacturing. It also caters to the need for general engineering and defence industries, including power, energy and other government sectors.

“The new facility built at a cost of Rs. 80 crore will enhance our production capacity from the present 1,200 machines a year to 3,500 machines,” said P Ramadas, Managing Director, Ace Manufacturing Systems.

“With increased production capacity, this new facility has the capacity to build large-sized horizontal machining centres. A portion of this space is dedicated for automated turnkey solutions,” he added.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Companies / The Hindu Bureau / Bengaluru – December 22nd, 2017

Visually impaired Kannada professor gets BU doctorate for Kuvempu thesis

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Bengaluru :

Disability is not a reason to give up on life, but a weapon one can use to prove that nothing is impossible. Nagashetty, 37, swears by this motto. Born blind in one eye and losing sight in the other when he was 15 years old, the gritty professor is probably the first visually impaired candidate to receive a doctorate from Bangalore University.
A notification on Nagashetty’s doctorate was released by the varsity on Thursday. Completing his thesis on the topic ‘Intuition in Kuvempu’s literary works’ (‘Kuvempu Kavyagalalli Anthardrishti’ in Kannada), from BU’s Kannada department, Nagashetty was awarded the doctor of philosophy degree and will be felicitated at the university’s convocation in 2018.

Nagashetty’s happiness knew no bounds while TOI spoke to him about his achievement. Saying his hard work and patience have finally paid off after nine years, he stated: “It took me six years to get this doctorate. I registered in 2008 and submitted the thesis in 2015. But because the panel was undergoing some changes, I received the doctorate this year.”

“I learned about Kuvempu’s work in school and realized that the prose and poetry have a deep impact on the reader’s mindset. I wanted to delve deeper and and took this up as my thesis topic,” said Nagashetty, a Kannada professor at Government PU College, JC Nagar. He added: “I got some of my PU students to read the works to a group of people and asked them to write down what they understood. Then I got them converted into braille format for my knowledge,” Nagashetty added.

Nagashetty, who lost sight in his second eye in class 9, decided to resume education at Kalaburagi’s blind school where he learnt braille. He secured 75% in SSLC exams. “That pushed me to study further,” he said.

After completing pre-university education in Gadag, Nagashetty came to Bengaluru to study at Sree Veerendra Patil degree college where he studied history, economics and Kannada. Then he joined Bangalore University to pursue postgraduation in Kannada.

Even though the laborious process of converting braille into conventional text and vice versa took up much of the time while completing the thesis, Nagashetty is determined about compiling SL Bhyrappa’s works. “This too may take a long time but I believe it can be achieved,” he signed off.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Bangalore News / by Deepika Burli / TNN / December 22nd, 2017