Monthly Archives: May 2012

Braving odds, they come out with flying colours in SSLC exams

Mysore:

The inmates of the government-run girls’ home here, who had to go through the dark realities of life, have come out with flying colours in the recently-held SSLC examinations.

Sindhu of Chitradurga secured the highest marks – 488-while Niveditha scored 412 out of 625 marks. Except one, all the 13 students appeared for the exam emerged victorious.

Girls’ home superintendent Geethalakshmi told TOI that Sindhu had struggled hard in life after her father died when she was young.

Her mother Poornima was shattered after the death of her husband Chandru. Later, she got admitted all her four girl children to government rehab centres in Hassan, Bijapur and Udupi.

Sindhu was relocated to Mysore from Hassan centre a year ago. As per her request, all her sisters were also brought to Mysore centre later. Lavanya, Ranjitha, Hemalatha, Kavitha, Niveditha, Mamatha M, Shobha S, Lakshmi N, Vidya, Kalaveni and Nirosha too had to face many challenges in their life. This success is a morale booster for them who are now hoping for a better future.

ODANADI INMATES SHINE

Six out of seven inmates of Odanadi Seva Samsthe passed the SSLC examinations this year. Rathna, who had worked as a bonded labour for two years, was one among them. Saraswathi, Nischitha, Manjunath, Ganesh and Hema are the other students. Odanadi is working for the welfare of sex workers and their children.

BLINDNESS, NO HINDRANCE

All the four students of Helen Keller Blind School in Mysore secured first classes in the examinations.

Mahadevaswamy secured the highest marks in the school with 443 marks. Prathap bagged 439 marks while Rameshnayaka and Nataraju B secured 420 and 419 respectively.

Mahadevaswamy and Prathap scored 98 marks in mathematics. Nataraju B managed to score 97 in social studies.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Home> City> Mysore / TNN / May 18th, 2012

Fashionista in the making

To wear lingerie that fits perfectly, is a dream come true for a woman, and this young NIFT student aims to do just that. 20-year-old Pooja Upadhyay just bagged the Triumph International Award in Mumbai and come October, she will be representing India in the finals at Shanghai.

Designing and art always inspired Pooja, who never thought about a career in fashion until a few years ago. “My father encouraged me to pursue fashion as a career and there has been no looking back ever since.” Though based in Mumbai, Pooja’s maternal and paternal grandparents hail from the state and she is enamoured by what the city has to offer to the world of fashion. “Bengaluru has a huge market for fashion and people are clued in to the proceedings. It’s just a matter of time before the city will be reckoned as a fashion hub in India,” claims the young design student.

The award came as a complete surprise to Pooja. She contested with several people across the country and was chosen in the top ten for the finals. “We had to depict duality in our design. I have combined the dragon and butterfly coming together in my lingerie design. I also had to consider the flow of the garment, since lingerie has to be well-fitting and accentuate a woman’s curves. The idea is to make the garment sensuous, not vulgar.”

Inspired by designers like Alexander McQueen, Ritu Beri, brands like Victoria’s Secret among others, Pooja too aims to launch her own fashion line one day. “Making the cut in this industry is not easy. Apart from a unique sense of design, you also need to have excellent social skills.” One particular designer who inspires her is, “Manish Arora. He was the artistic director for Paco Rabane and that’s very inspiring. Indian designers are being recognised by international brands.”

So what does it take to carve a niche in this fiercely competitive industry? “From what I’ve seen, handmade creations are deeply valued. At the turn of the millenium, trends were leaning towards the sporty side. Solid colours and bold cuts dominated the fashion preference. Now, people are inching towards surface ornamentation. It’s challenging and opens up a window of opportunties.”

Pooja has spent a good number of weeks in interior Karnataka, researching on local art and design. “My personal favourite is the lambani design. I would love to incorporate them in my work in the future.” In her spare time, Pooja loves shopping and reading up on the latest fashion trends. “I also sing, but that’s only in front of my close friends!” adds the bubbly youngster with a laugh.

source: http://www.DeccanChronicle.com / Home> Channels> Lifestyle> Fashion / by Sindhuja Balaji / DC, May 17th, 2012

 

US varsity honours Narayana Murthy

Tampa (Florida) May 16

The University of South Florida has honoured Infosys founder N.R. Narayana Murthy with the Global leadership and Free Enterprise Awards for his leadership and contributions to the international business world.

Presenting Infosys chairman emeritus Murthy with the awards at the Patel Centre for Global Sustainability here Monday, USF President Judy Genshaft praised him for his entrepreneurial spirit, according to a university press release.

Earlier, in an informal conversation with past and present students, Murthy said because of his middle class background, it was not as difficult for his company to maintain its values as it might be for the mass of people eking out a living.

‘You need a spirit of sacrifice and you need to have trust,’ he said.

Murthy explained how the company’s ethos has its roots in the very first meeting held at his house in Mumbai with his six fellow founders. Their discussion was focused on profitability.

Murthy focused their attention on ‘seeking respect’, ‘living in harmony with society’ and making sure ‘you don’t shortchange your customers,’ he said. When you do those things, ‘revenue will come. Profit will come’.

In response to a question from about the chances of Murthy entering politics, he mentioned his preference for ‘rational discussion’ and the difficulty the political world offers for such and expressed some hesitation.

Kaushal Chari, chair of the USF information systems and decision sciences department, said Murthy’s story is inspiring for students.

‘He’s a world-class business leader,’ said Chari, who leads a study abroad trip to India every year for business students.

IANS

source: http://www.india.nydailynews.com / Home> News> Desi News / Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Tere Bin Nahi Lagda with a jazz essence released online by Jim Ankan and Ritwika Bhattacharya

Jim Ankan Deka and Ritwika Bhattacharya, the musician duo from Bangalore released ‘Tere Bin Nahi Lagda’ online, a tribute to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

Bengaluru, Karnataka

There aren’t enough words to surmise Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan’s contribution to the world of Sufi music nor his limitless musical genius. There’s certainly no way to replicate his six-octave vocal range or his meticulous compositions. “Tere Bin Nahi Ladga”, recently covered by Rittwika Bhattacharya and Jim Ankan Deka, is an interesting rendition of the virtuoso’s soulful melody.

Jim Ankan Deka and Ritwika Bhattacharya

‘It’s a humble tribute to the incredibly gifted maestro’, the budding musicians from Bangalore had to say about their cover.

Tere Bin Nahi Lagda was originally composed by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan for the movie ‘Kachche Dhaage’. It became a super hit in the late 90s.

Rittwika’s sufi styled vocals and Jim’s incorporation of jazz elements don’t simply echo Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan’s original composition, but paraphases it as contemporary fusion. This is the second song by the musicians together, previously recorded the famous song ‘Ganga’ by Dr. Bhupen Hazarika.

The song was recorded in Eastern Fare Studio in Bangalore (Eastern Fare Music Foundation) and was released online on May 13, 2012. The song is available for streaming on Reverbnation, Youtube and iTunes

source: http://www.indiaprwire.com / Home> Music> Other News / May 14th, 2012

City-based Graduate launches new company in US

Caption: Siddarth is seen with his parents Padma & Satish and sister Anitha.

Mysore, May 11

Success does not see age or education, instead it sees hard work and enthusiasm to succeed in one’s endeavour. This is true in case of a graduate who, while most of his peers are working at entry-level jobs or in graduate school, is the Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of a medical device startup company.

Siddarth Satish, who has his roots in Mysore, started Gauss Surgical just after finishing Master of Translational Medicine (MTM) programme of Bioengineering Department at University of California, Berkeley, USA.

Siddarth has raised about $1 million in venture funding, hired several full-time staff, recruited a veteran entrepreneur as CEO, and is submitting designs to the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA).

His transition from ChemE undergrad to CTO of his own company in just under two years was due to hard work, brains, ambition and MTM programme. The MTM programme is a one-year master’s degree offered jointly by UC Berkeley and University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), aimed at accelerating the translation of cutting-edge research into advances in patient care.

Finishing up his 2010 Berkeley B.S. in Chemical Engineering, Siddarth joined MTM. He was partnered with fellow students Amer Abdulla and Charles Zhao to work with Professor in Bioengineering Dr. David Rempel. Although not all MTM graduates go on to startups or to work in industry, the unique experience helps students with ambition pursue their passion. The team explored several different projects with collaborators at Stanford Medical Center, including one on virtual instrument pedals that resulted in a patent filing and presentation at the American Academy of Pediatrics. All three decided to focus on another operating room problem: estimating surgical blood loss.

The team completed prototyping to accurately diagnose blood loss before graduating in Summer 2011, and then decided to take their work all the way and form a company: Gauss Surgical.

Siddarth is the son of Padma & Satish, residing in the US since 17 years. City’s industrialist and art patron K.V. Murthy is his maternal grandfather while late Dr. M.S. Nagaraja Rao (former Director General of ASI) was his paternal grandfather. Siddarth has a sister Anitha who will be entering medical school soon.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / General News/ May 11th, 2012

Physically challenged girl from Mandya bags Rs. 12.5 Lakh

Kannadada Kotyadipathi

Mandya, May 12

Several organisations led by KPCC member and advocate T.S. Satyanand yesterday felicitated Rekha, the 18-year-old physically challenged girl from Kalenahalli village in the taluk, who won Rs. 12.5 lakh at the Kannadada Kotyadipathi quiz programme being hosted by Power Star Punith Rajkumar on Suvarna TV Channel.

Rekha, said to be affected by a rare genetic disorder called MPS Type 4 has a stunted physical growth but has a phenomenal mental growth with a high intelligence quotient. Her witty communication skill coupled with a very good general knowledge, especially physics, mesmerised the audience and the anchor alike.

Speaking after felicitating the winner, Satyanand said “Rekha is coming up challenging the medical fraternity with her incurable disorder. The people of the district should provide moral strength and courage to the physically challenged girl.” He also said that he would approach Union Minister S.M. Krishna, who too hails from the district, to get assistance for the medical and educational expenses of Rekha, who is studying in II PUC.

Incidentally, Rekha’s elder brother, who had accompanied her to the quiz show along with their mother too, is affected by the same genetic disorder. Beating the odds and studying engineering, the boy too is said to be extremely brilliant and an expert in mimicry.

His delivery of dialogues of actor Upendra from the movie Raktha Kanneeru kept the audience and Punith spellbound.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / General News / May 12th,2012

I will work like a soldier for Sahitya Parishat: Pundalika Halambi

Caption: Pundalika Halambi (third from right), State President, Kannada Sahitya Parishat, is seen releasing two books Gayana Gange and Gana Kala Dasohi at a function held in city yesterday. Others seen are (from left) Yuvaraja College Principal Prof.S.N. Gayatri, authors Dr. Rathnamma & Dr. C.P. Krishnakumar, litterateur Prof. Dejagow, District Sahitya Parishat President M. Chandrashekar and writer Prof. Malali Vasanthkumar.

Mysore, May 10

“I will work like a soldier to uphold the dignity and integrity of Kannada Sahitya Parishat (KSP) and live upto the expectations of those who voted me to the office during the recent Parishat elections,” declared Pundalika Halambi, State President of KSP here yesterday.

He was speaking after inaugurating a seminar, book release and felicitation ceremony organised by Kuvempu Vidyavardhaka Trust at Rajendra Bhavan in JSS Hospital premises.

Sincerely thanking those who voted in a secular manner during the election, Halambi said: “Come what may, I will not compromise with the development of the Parishat and would do whatever required to ensure that the Parishat performed its duties in a transparent and effective manner to uphold the self-respect of Kannadigas.”

Referring to the comments passed on him by several of his detractors that he was ignorant about the basics of Kannada literature, he said that though he was a student of literature, he was not a litterateur and could have made several mistakes in pronouncing several words and regretted for the same. He also said that he would not stick to the post if he could not do justice.

Releasing two books Gayana Gange and Gana Kala Dasohi, biographies of Vidushi Gangu Bai Hanagal and Pandit Puttaraja Gavai, authored by Dr. K.S. Rathnamma and C.P. Krishnakumar respectively, Halambi said that biography was a complex form of writing and should not be limited to creative writing.

Pudalika Halambi, his wife Saroja Halambi and District Sahitya Parishat President M. Chandrashekar were felicitated on the occasion.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / General News / May 10th, 2012

Bitten by the B’lore bug

LEGENDARY CONNECTION

It was in Bangalore that Ronald Ross first became interested in mosquitoes. Ross would go on to make the crucial discovery of plasmodium, the malarial parasite, in a mosquito, and win the Nobel too. Bangaloreans can truthfully say that the seeds of that great discovery were sown in our City, writes Meera Iyer

In September 1883, a British doctor named Ronald Ross was appointed the Acting Garrison Surgeon in the Bangalore Civil and Military Station. The doctor initially stayed in a bungalow close to today’s MG Road. He records in his memoirs that this was when he first became interested in mosquitoes. “They devoured me,” he writes, “until I discovered that they were breeding in a tub just outside my window.” Ross got rid of the wee beasties by the simple expedient of tipping the tub. So began a series of experiments and observations on mosquitoes that eventually led to a Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine in 1902.

Ronald Ross was born in Almora, Uttarakhand, on May 13, 1857, three days after the Indian Mutiny or the First War of Independence began. He grew up in Almora, Nainital and Benares and was sent to England for his education when he was eight.

The future scientist and Nobel Prize winner displayed no interest whatsoever in science but took wholeheartedly to painting, literature and the arts. He wrote poetry while still at school and at 17, decided he wanted to be a writer. But his father wanted him to join the Indian Medical Service, and so Ross resignedly joined St Bartholomew’s Hospital Medical School in London to study medicine. Ross wrote more poetry and even some short plays while at St Bartholomew’s but remained quite indifferent to medicine. He failed a qualifying exam for the Indian Medical Service, cleared it a year later on his second attempt, and then joined the Service. Ross came to India in 1882, stayed in Madras briefly and then had the first of many stints in Bangalore when he was given medical charge of a unit of the Madras Infantry for a few weeks.

Like many others before and after him, Ross loved Bangalore. He describes how he used to go for long walks every day among “rocky crests of mountains, fir woods, dells with beautiful little trickles of streamlets”. The sun and the breeze, he says, “were those not of earth but of heaven.” In a complaint that sounds all too familiar to us today, Ross says that when he looked for these same places ten years later, he found they had all been swallowed by development.

Over the next few years, Ross returned to Bangalore several times and also served in Quetta, Burma and the Andamans. He churned out more plays, novels and dramas, became very interested in mathematics, played a lot of tennis, whist and golf, but remained a completely ordinary doctor. It was only when he was on leave in England in 1888 that something ignited a spark in him: “I determined now to interest myself much more in my profession,” he writes, and he returned to India with renewed vigour.

Back to Bangalore

Ross was posted in Bangalore once again in 1890, as Staff Surgeon of the Civil and Military Station. Now married, he and his family lived in High Grounds, “in a delightful house facing the golf ground, called Uplands”. (Incidentally, this very house was where Sir M Visvesvaraya stayed for a time after his retirement in 1908). According to his Nobel lecture, it was during this 1890-1893 period in Bangalore that Ross made his first studies of malaria.

He also wrote his first research papers on the disease, including some that rejected the ‘bad air’ theory but speculated (wrongly, of course) that malaria might have an intestinal cause.

In the 1890s, scientists had begun to realise that parasites in blood caused malaria, but no one had any idea how these parasites moved from sick people to healthy people. In 1894, while on leave in England, Ross sought out Patrick Manson, a tropical disease expert who had recently discovered that mosquitoes spread the disease filariasis.

Manson told Ross he believed mosquitoes also spread malaria. This was the beginning of a long association between the two scientists.

Ross returned to India, and plunged into research, determined to prove Manson’s ‘Grand Induction’ as he called it.

Within a few months, Ross became an expert on dissecting mosquitoes, identifying parasites and diagnosing malaria. In his memoirs, Ross states that from April 1895 to February 1899, he wrote 110 letters to Manson about his research, “containing almost exactly 1,000 words each, or about one word to every ten people killed by malaria in India alone every year.”

At West End

But another disease also killed hundreds in India in those days. In 1895, Ross was called to Bangalore on special sanitary duty to contain the frequent cholera outbreaks here, especially in Shivajinagar, Ulsoor and parts of the pete.

Ross took up residence in a tent on the grounds of the (now Taj) West End Hotel. Over the next two years, he organised an overhaul of refuse-cleaning systems, suggested improvements in drainage, mapped the locations of wells and had them disinfected, and posted hospital assistants at stations to detect cases. He also frequently accompanied scavengers in their early morning work. “These experiences are not easily forgotten,” he writes.

Of the scavengers, “the poor men themselves, the last pariahs and outcasts of society, toiling while others slept,” says Ross, “None shall know of your labour, no one shall thank you, you shall die forgotten,” and yet, “the civilisation of the thronged cities was based upon their labour.” Though occupied by his sanitary work, Ross still eked out time for malaria. Until then, both he and Manson had thought that when malarial mosquitoes died, they somehow infected the water they bred in, which when ingested, caused malaria in humans. It was in Bangalore that Ross came up with another hypothesis that later proved correct: In May 1896, he wrote to Manson, “…the belief is growing on me that the disease is communicated by the bite of the mosquito. She always injects a small quantity of fluid with her bite — what if the parasites get into the system in this manner.”

Ross set out to test this hypothesis by the decidedly questionable method of getting mosquitoes to bite volunteers, mostly ‘natives’ of course, including the Assistant Surgeon of the Bowring Civil Hospital.

But as Ross had yet to discover that only the Anopheles mosquito carried the malarial parasite, his results remained negative. It wasn’t until 20 August 1897 (now commemorated as World Mosquito Day), when Ross was posted in Secunderabad, that he made the crucial discovery of a Plasmodium, the malarial parasite, in a mosquito. He came back to Bangalore on short leave a month later, staying at the West End once again (in a room this time, and not a tent!), and wrote up his exciting discovery. The paper, “On some Peculiar Pigmented Cells found in two Mosquitoes fed on Malarial Blood,” appeared in the British Medical Journal in December 1897.

In Secunderabad, the building where Ronald Ross made his landmark discovery is now called the Sir Ronald Ross Institute, and bears a plaque in appreciation of Ross’s work. But Bangaloreans can truthfully say that the seeds of that great discovery were sown in our City.

ROSS, THE POET

* Ronald Ross was known to be a poet, novelist and painter.
* His collection of poems include: ‘psychologies’, ‘Poems’, and ‘Fables and Satires’. He composed this verse about his first impressions of malaria that killed millions:

In this, O Nature, yield I pray to me.I pace and pace, and think and think, and takeThe fever’d hands, and note down all I see,That some dim distant light may haply break.The painful faces ask, can we not cure?We answer, No, not yet; we seek the laws.O God, reveal thro’ all this thing obscureThe unseen, small, but million-murdering cause.

(Courtesy: malariasite.com)

source: http://www.DeccanHerald.com / Home> Supplements> Spectrum / by Meera Iyer / May 07th, 2012

Innovation award for Skanray

Caption: Balasubramaniam, Director & CTO, Skanray Technologies, receiving the award from K. Jose Cyriac, Secretary, Dept. of Chemicals & Petrochemicals, at New Delhi recently.

Mysore, May 3

Skanray Technologies Pvt. Ltd. won an award for innovation in polymeric products at the 2nd National Awards ceremony for technology innovation in various fields of petrochemical and downstream plastics processing industry held in New Delhi recently. The award is instituted by Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilisers, Govt. of India.

Skanray Technologies won the award for developing ‘Use of Engineering Plastics for Diagnostic X-ray equipment.’

Balasubramanian, Director & CTO, Skanray Technologies, received the award from K. Jose Cyriac, Secretary, Dept. of Chemicals & Petrochemicals.

Skanray was founded in 2007 by a team of reputed engineering and business professionals with decades of experience in industrial and medical devices sectors and having global exposure. Skanray moved into its state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Hebbal, Mysore and commenced commercial business in 2011.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / General News / May 03rd, 2012

Dubai : Bunts UAE Conducts Blood Donation Campaign

Dubai, May 6:
Bunts UAE this year successfully kicked off and concluded ‘Blood Donation’ Campaign at Latifa Hospital, Dubai on the 4th of May, 2012, Friday from 10.00 AM to 2.00 PM with record number of donors participation.

Sudhakar Alva the main man behind this campaign thanked the authorities for being tolerant and supportive in the campaign and promised more contribution to the Blood Bank from all the Indian Communities living in UAE. The Donors poured in great numbers from various parts of UAE into Lathifa Hospital enthusiastically for this great cause. It was also great to see Presidents and Office Bearers of most of the regional Community Associations of Karnataka together in one place for this noble cause. A record was created with more than 100 numbers participation.

As per the Dubai Blood Donation Centre (DBDC), the need for blood is ongoing and must be met every day. The demand for blood is growing faster than the collection rate and DBDC has been requested to have an instant response to the rapid growth in blood demand which is obviously proportionate to the fast growing population of the city along with healthcare facilities. DBDC is the only blood supplier in Dubai. Its services extend to Thalassemia patients (Thalassemia Center at Al Wasl Hospital), road accident and burn victims (Trauma Centre at Rashid Hospital), patients with neonates and maternity health complications (Lathifa Hospital), cases diagnosed with cancer or scheduled for open heart operations (Dubai Hospital) as well as to all private health facilities within Dubai that are entitled for transfusion services.

The Members volunteered along with hospital authorities were busy welcoming donors and filling up the required forms, examining blood samples and getting ready for the extraction of blood all with smiles on their face. They were issued a ‘Donor Card’ exclusively as a proof of their support.
The campaign kicked off with good numbers of Bunt’s voluntarily taking part along with female members and youths. Other patriotic associations who have been willingly doing these types of blood donation campaigns are Karnataka Sangha Sharjah, UAE Amchigele Samaj, Ramarajya Khsatriya Sangha UAE, Padmashali UAE, Kodagu and Dakshina Kannada Gowda Samaja Dubai, UAE Bunts, Billawas Dubai & Northern Emirates, Billawa Balaga Dubai who have already recorded their names in the list of blood donors of India in UAE.

Bunt’s UAE staged a breakfast stall with Snacks, Tea, Coffee, Fruits, Juices etc. at the blood donation campaign was given a boost with the support and participation of prominent community leaders like Sarvotham Shetty of UAE Bunts, Lokesh Puthran, President along with Vice President Yadav Kotian and main co-ordinator of Blood donation campaign in UAE, Bala Salian of Mogaveers UAE, Sudhakar Alva of UAE Bunts, Ravi B. Shettigar, President of Padmashali UAE, Satish Poojary President of Karnataka Sangha Sharjah, Anand Bailoor, Jagannath Bellare, Sudhakar Poojary of Billawas Dubai & Northern Emirates, Sudhakar Thumbe, President of Billawa Balaga Dubai, Representatives of Vishwakarma Seva Sangha & Shodhan Prasad of Nama Tuluveru UAE. Also were Ashok Belman of Gulf Kannadiga and many other prominent members of other well known associations.

The event concluded at around 2 PM
Report: Shodhan Prasad
Photos: Ashok Belman (Gulf Kannadiga)

source: http://www.DaijiWorld.com / Dubai, May 06th, 2012