Monthly Archives: March 2013

This mum can cook

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Kate Bracks might be a celebrity chef back in Australia but she was indeed very shocked to find that she had fans in India too. “I didn’t know people watchedMasterchef so seriously over here! When Matthew Cooper, (general manager, Bengaluru Marriott Whitefield ) sent me an email and asked me if I would like to come to Bangalore to do a few activities, I wasn’t too sure. I had never seen India and I had to think over it.

But then we chatted on the phone and I agreed; I am so glad that I did. Bangalore is fantastic — I am loving it. We went out yesterday andI ate at Queens, which I thought was brilliant, cooked naan at the hotel and ate the best butter chicken I have ever had. So yes, it has been a pretty good start,” says Kate, with her signature laugh. In town to launch Whitefield Baking Company at the hotel, Kate has a stuffed schedule over the next few days that she is here.

The story behind the title

That’s the thing about this celebrity cook— she doesn’t like being called a chef; her infectious positivity will force you to believe that you can make quite a lemonade out of lemons. “I am extremely passionate about cooking. When the first edition of Masterchef Australia was announced, my husband asked me to apply. But when I was going through the form, it had a question that asked if I was willing to stay away from my family for three months. My daughter was only one year old at the time. I couldn’t do it. But I watched a few episodes of it. And then when season two happened, I watched every single episode.

At the end of the show, there was an ad on TV inviting applications for the third season and I applied. But I forgot about it until they called me up two months later for the auditions. I was like, “errm.. I am not sure. Let me get back to you. I need to talk to my family”. I never knew I’d do it and I never knew I’d win. Neither did my husband! Every time I passed an elimination test, I’d call and tell him, “I am still in!” says Kate, of her entry into one of the coolest culinary contests to be aired on television.

The Masterchef kitchen was a massive learning process for Kate. “What you see on TV is only a part of it. We shot for seven months, with breaks of course, and the sessions were intense. But we are constantly learning something. We have master classes, training programs and we cook in professional kitchens and most of all, we are constantly discussing food in the ‘house’. So you’re constantly surrounded by these fabulous people and food… it’s life changing,” she says.

Not just yet
So why is there no restaurant from her yet? “It’s because of my family. I can’t do something that will take away all my time and focus from the children. But I do a lot of things when the kids are away at school. I hold cooking demonstrations; I teach kids to cook; I wrote my recipe book The Sweet Life, among other things.

For instance, I do a pop-up kitchen with Chef Michael Manners who’s a very popular chef there. And that gives me the opportunity to actually work in a professional kitchen without having to get involved full time into the operations and logistics. I am also working with chef Shaun Arantz, who has earlier been chosen as the Regional Chef of the Year and is also from Orange, NSW (Kate’s hometown); we’re planning to bring out a range of culinary and food products together….”

So, is there not going to be a restaurant — ever? “No, no. I will perhaps have one when my kids are all grown up. I have one mantra — if I do something, it has to be perfect and I want it to do well. So when I can actually give that much time to a restaurant — I am definitely going to have one!” assures Kate.

Family first, seriously

Her devotion towards her family is quite admirable. For a woman who’s never “got any formal training in cooking like many other celebrity chefs”, it is her innate love for cooking that led her to win the coveted title two years ago. However, she couldn’t quite stop reiterating how much she owes her family for it. “It’s hard to stay away from the kids for so long and I have never done it before. It was their constant support and courage that has led me this far… I would like to be a mum first and everything else after,” she says.

source: http://www.dnaindia.com / Home> Lifestyle> Report / by Priyadarshini Nandy, Place:Bangalore, Agency:DNA / Thursday, March 14th, 2013

9 D Action to Bangalore

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There are many firsts to the credit of Garden City, Silicon City, and Concrete City – Bangalore. Now adds the 9 D action theatre at Mantri Mall in Malleswaram.

According to technical expert Karthik Ramesh, director of Blue Chip this is just not 9 D effect but one could get 15 dimension effects.

9 D actions come alive for the first time in India with 6 projects, all environmental effects, Arc cinema scope screen with 7.1 DTS is launching on 14th of March 2013 at LG 27, Opposite Auchan, Mantri Square, Malleswaram. It is entertainment beyond your imagination.

It is a 28 seat capacity and Rs.1 crores investor is Ravi Rajagopal. The ticket price is Rs.200. it operates from 10.30 am to 10.30 pm. For every two hours there will be tow shows. It is 25 minutes duration. As of now 10 films of Hollywood made in 9 D have been acquired for screening. The English and Kannada dubbing will also be made available stated Karthik Ramesh technical head. In the career of 12 years this is first one from Karthik Ramesh. For the weak hearts and pregnant woman this is at their own risk says Karthik Ramesh.

It took three months as the requisites were not normal. Because Bangalore is world class city says Ravi Rajagopal. In the coming days Ravi Rajagopal would like to bring in 360 degree effect. He has a project with Indonesia.

Mr Dilip also connected to this feast for 9 D effects was also present.

source: http://www.indiaglitz.com / Home> Watch Movies / Friday, March 15th, 2013

Achievers felicitated on women’s day

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From left:  Gowramma (coconut vendor), K. Ningamma (KSRTC employee), Lakshmidevamma (progressive farmer), Kalpana Surendra (entrepreneur) and Jayalakshmi (post-woman) are seen with Dr. D.S. Leelavathi, Chairperson, DoS in Economics and Cooperation and others.

Mysore, Mar. 11 :

Five women achievers were felicitated by the Planning Forum of the Department of Studies in Economics and Co-operation, University of Mysore, at Manasagangotri here on Friday to mark International Women’s Day.

Septuagenarian tender coconut vendor Gowramma, KSRTC employee K. Ningamma, progressive farmer Lakshmidevamma, entrepreneur Kalpana Surendra and post-woman Jayalakshmi were honoured for their contribution to society.

Responding to the felicitation, Lakshmidevamma said more youth should take up farming and highlighted the benefits of hard work.

Citing the example of a farmer in K.R. Pet taluk who got 20 quintals of ragi per acre, she suggested that lessons on agriculture should be introduced in schools and children should be encouraged to plant saplings in their school campus.

KSRTC driver-cum-conductor Ningamma, who is reckoned to be the first female public bus driver here, narrated how she came up in life and in her profession.

She has been a role model for breaking into a male-dominated profession. “Success in any profession is possible only with hard work,” she said.

Gowramma, who sells tender coconuts on the roadside in Saraswathipuram, Kalpana Surendra and Jayalakshmi also spoke. Dr. D.S. Leelavathi, Chairperson, DoS in Economics and Cooperation, University of Mysore, presided.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / Home> General  / March 11th, 2013

‘Grow mushrooms and enjoy protein-rich food

Mushroom seed packets to be produced for the first time in city

Mysore, Mar. 11

MushroomBF16mar2013Mushroom seed packets are being prepared in Mysore for the first time in the State, said Dr. M.S. Raju, Senior Assistant Director of the Horticulture Department, State Zone.

He was delivering the presidential address at the day-long training programme on mushroom cultivation held under the aegis of Laboratory Development Scheme of the Horticulture Department at Kukkarahalli lake here recently.

“A total of 15,000 packets weighing 250 grams and costing Rs. 10 each will be distributed among unemployed youth, women and farmers,” he said and added that the protein-rich mushrooms have great demand within the country and in foreign markets, fetching good revenue for the farmers.

“A week-long training in mushroom cultivation will be provided in Mysore city itself,” he said and added that along with the Watermelon Mela and Mango Mela, Mushroom Mela too will be held in the next month.

“Nutrition can be increased by consuming mushroom as a regular diet. Apart from being protein-rich, it helps in curing anemia, reduces body fat and controls diabetes,” said Dr. Raju.

Prof. Janardhan of the Department of Botany, Mysore University, speaking on the occasion, said that mushroom can be easily cultivated as a commercial crop using moist paddy straw. Mushrooms are the fruit-bearing parts of fungus whose extracts are used for manufacturing anti-biotic drugs, tonics, etc.

“In the future days of climate change and scarcity of agricultural land, growing food crops using less land and less manure with less effort is a challenge,” he said and urged farmers to take up mushroom cultivation.

Information Dept. Asst. Director G. Chandrakantha launched the training programme.

Asst. Horticulture Officer Narayan welcomed, Assistant Horticulture Officer (Technical) Pooja and others were present.

More than 100 participants of the training programme were given a demonstration of mushroom cultivation.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / Home> General News / March 11th, 2013

Puttur: SDM College, Ujire crowned champions at ‘Media Rang’

Puttur, Mar 14:

In the recently concluded media fest ‘Media Rang’, held on March 13, organized by the Department of Journalism of Vivekananda College, Puttur, post graduate students from SDM College emerged as the overall winners of the fest.

Vinod KS, chief reporter of Vijayavani (Mangalore), was the chief guest and Dr Madhav Bhat, principal; Vivekananda College presided over the program. Dr Arun Prakash, lecturer from economics department, Vivekananda College was also present on the occasion.

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The fest witnessed tough participation from the students of various colleges in the several competitions organized as a part of ‘Media Rang’.

Finally, MCJ (PG) students of SDM College, Ujire emerged overall champions by winning most of the competitions. Alva’s college from Moodbidri  won the runners up honor.

source: http://www.daijiworld.com / Home> Karnataka /  by Sumanth Kashyap, Daijiworld Media Network – Puttur / Thursday, March 14th, 2013

Two friends: A tribute

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Colin de Souza and Kulamarva Balakrishna

Caption:  Colin de Souza (left), with the author, at Aswan, Egypt, in 2010. Picture right: Kulamarva Balakrishna (wearing Gandhi cap) and his wife Eva, with the author, at a bus station in Vienna, in 2010.

By M.P. Prabhakaran, Editor & Publisher, The East-West Inquirer, New York, USA

I lost my two lifelong friends in a span of two months. Colin de Souza left me two months ago and Kulamarva Balakrishna last week. Their deaths have created a big void in me. As those of us who are over-the-hill know, lifelong friendships are hard to come by in this world. I have been blessed with a few. My friendships with Colin and Bala, as the latter is called by his close friends, were among them. [See Abracadabra ‘Remembering my friends of Bombay days’ on page 8]

Colin and I met as journalism students, in the late 1960s, at Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay (now Mumbai). We were also roommates in the college dorm. After we finished college and started working as journalists, we shared a chummery with another journalist who became another lifelong friend of mine. He is K.B. Ganapathy, the owner and Editor of Star of Mysore, a leading English daily published from the southern Indian city of Mysore.

We three spent most of our free time together — going to movies and plays; chatting at Irani restaurants over pani cum cha (the equivalent of what is small-size tea in the US) and kara (salty) biscuits; and doing silly things, which I am not all that comfortable recalling. We also had lots of fun together. The fun included occasional visits to “aunties’ bars.” The speakeasies of Bombay were called aunties’ bars, because most of them were run by elderly women who originally came from Goa. Time was when the Government of Maharashtra had not yet realised that prohibition was a total failure.

Colin started his career as a Copy Editor on The Economic and Political Weekly of India. Unlike Ganapathy and me, he was blessed with a boss, who, he never tired of saying, was “a pleasure to work with.” The boss was the late Krishna Raj, Editor of EPW at the time and the man who built it from scratch into the prestigious journal that it is today. Krishna Raj was one of the finest human beings I met in my life.

Blame it on our age, we were part of that West-aping crowd in Bombay. And you may blame that on Hollywood movies, which we used to be among the first to see when released in Bombay, and newspaper stories on Pentagon Papers and Watergate scandal, which journalists around the world found awe-inspiring. When things got hard, we would try to perk up one another with that hackneyed American expression, “Go West, young man,” though in a slightly different sense. To us, the West was America as a whole, not just the American West. “America is the Mecca for journalists” used to be another expression we frequently bandied about. In the India of the 1970s, things were really hard and we, I shamefully admit, were looking for ways to leave the country in search of greener journalistic pastures in the West.

I was the first to leave. After wandering around the Middle East and Europe, I ended up in New York, in 1975. Colin tried to join me, as a student, but with no success. He was collecting rejection letter after rejection letter from various American Universities when he got a chance to make his first Westward move, though not to the US. He got a job as a Senior Copy Editor on Khaleej Times, Dubai. The daily newspaper brought out its first edition on April 26, 1978, and Colin was part of the team that did it.

Other than that the money was good, he had nothing positive to say about the job. Though he had not expected the kind of journalistic freedom he enjoyed during his decade-long work in India, he found some of the editorial policies of the paper disgusting. According to one such policy, which all journalists on the paper were asked to follow, the word Israel was not to be used anywhere in the paper. Any time the word appears in a news story, it was supposed to be deleted and replaced with “the Zionist Entity.” Colin was unhappy following policies of that nature.

He was left with two options: quit the job and go back to Bombay or grin and bear the unhappiness as long as he could. He chose the latter. The attractive salary the job fetched and the free and fully furnished apartment the employer provided did play a role in making that choice. After all, he said to himself, weren’t those the factors that enticed him to accept the job in the first place? He decided to stay and take stock of his life. “We are not getting younger,” he wrote me after deciding to stay on the job. “At some point we have to get married and settle down in life. Both of us are the marrying type.”

His superiors at Khaleej Times found him very valuable. His editing was flawless. His English vocabulary was rich. He also had a photographic memory, and could rattle off facts and figures from history effortlessly. The last quality made him an asset to his fellow Copy Editors. We are talking about the pre-Google-search era when fact-checking used to be a time-consuming process.

He spent a few aZnnual vacations in India looking for the right woman to share his life with. On that front, he was not lucky. “If I can’t find the right one, so be it,” he told me over phone every time he came back from vacation, frustrated.

After the year 2000, he did another stocktaking of his life and decided that he had made enough money to be able to retire comfortably in India. Two years later, he bought a flat in Bangalore and retired there.

Nihal Singh, the veteran Indian journalist who was editor of Khaleej Times at the time, gave him a parting gift. He made him a part-time Correspondent for the paper, based in Bangalore. When a new Editor replaced Nihal Singh two years later, he took that gift back. Though he was not keeping good health — he had chronic diabetic problem — he didn’t lose the job. He died on December 24, 2012, at the age of 68.

Colin was a religious Catholic and came from a very religious family. His sister Wilma is a nun. She is now Provincial Superior of the Salesian Sisters of Mumbai Province, covering 31 convents. In our Bombay days, on Sundays when I had nothing else to do, I used to accompany him to church. On the way to church I would often say things like, “Colin, are you not risking your secure position in Heaven by taking an agnostic-Hindu to church?” He would laugh it off.

That was the secret behind our friendship being lifelong: his willingness to recognise and respect the fact that a good person is a good person, whether he is religious or agnostic. Or even atheistic. That fact, I am sure, he didn’t learn from any of the priests whose sermons he listened to on all those Sundays.

By the time I met Bala, also in the late 1960s, he was already an established journalist in Bombay. I was still a journalism student. His exposés of Bombay’s underworld, while working as a reporter on the daily newspaper Free Press Journal, had won him praise from fellow journalists and admiration from journalism students like me. He took a liking to me at the very first meeting. Later, he was instrumental in my landing in my first job in journalism — as a cub Reporter on Current, a weekly newspaper (now defunct) known for its influence among the movers and shakers of Bombay at the time.

His first book in English, A Portrait of Bombay’s Underworld, which was an expanded version of the exposés that appeared in Free Press Journal, was well received by the public. It was a remarkable achievement for a man who taught himself English. The languages he was more facile with were Sanskrit, in which he was a scholar, and his mother tongue Kannada. Until he arrived in Bombay, his journalistic work was limited to what he did in a couple of Kannada journals in his native Karnataka State. It was in Bombay, and in English journalism, that he made a mark as a fearless reporter. The fearless reporting also earned him the enmity of many in govern- ment circles.

Another exposé by Bala, published in 1970 in The Times Weekly (a Sunday supplement of The Times of India at the time), stirred the conscience of many in India and made him the bête noire of the government and media of Nepal. The article discussed how innocent Nepali girls were sold into the “cages” of Bombay. It provoked some Nepali journalists to call Bala “the Katherine Mayo of India” — an allusion to the late American writer Katherine Mayo, whose 1927 book, Mother India, was condemned by Mahatma Gandhi as “the report of a drain inspector.”

Fearless reporting and bold positions he took on controversial issues put Bala on the watch list of India’s central government, too. As long as the country remained committed to democracy and freedom of the Press, he could afford to ignore how the government reacted to his writings. But there was a brief but infamous period in independent India’s history during which its reputation as a vibrant democracy suffered a setback. I am referring to the 18 months in 1975-77, known in India as the Emergency period. The late Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared a state of Emergency in the country, suspended all civil liberties and arrogated dictatorial powers. Most journalists in India meekly submitted to censorship regulations imposed on them in the wake of the Emergency declaration. (Remember BJP leader L.K. Advani’s famous jab at journalists soon after the Emergency was lifted? “You were asked only to bend,” he told them. “But you decided to crawl.) The few who refused to do it ended up in jail. Bala was left with the option of either ending up in jail or leaving the country. He chose the latter. The choice became easy when he got evidence that he was being followed by secret Police.

I was already in New York when this was happening in India. In a small way, I was also on the watch list of the Indira Gandhi government. The Voice of India, a monthly I published from New York, had become a forum for free expression for anti-Emergency activists in the US and in India. Open communication with like-minded people in India became difficult for me. I lost touch with Bala.

Two years later, we were able to reconnect. After wandering around Europe for a while, he reached the Austrian capital of Vienna. With help from an Italian journalist friend, he was able to settle down there.

After several months of struggle, which is the case with any new arrival in a foreign country, he landed a job as a gardener for the city administration of Vienna. His childhood experience on his family farm back in India came in handy, he told me. Though he was able to make a decent living as a city employee, the journalist in him was thirsting for an outlet. Getting a job in any of the local newspapers was out of the question, because he did not know German. He contributed to The Voice of India frequently. His last dispatch for The Voice was a three-part series, under the title “How Fascism Came to India.” The series made a critical analysis of the events in India that ultimately led to Mrs. Gandhi’s declaring Emergency. He also worked as a stringer for the Press Trust of India, the Khaleej Times of Dubai and a few other English publications around the world. Though monetary compensation was far from expectation, the work he did for all those media outlets enabled him to keep his press credentials and be a part of the press corps in Vienna.

The Emergency was lifted after 18 months and Mrs. Gandhi was thrown out of power in the election that followed. But the crafty politician that she was, she maneuvered her way back into power in the next election. Bala told me once about a funny exchange he had with Mrs. Gandhi when she was on a State visit to Austria after being reelected. At a State dinner hosted by the Chancellor of Austria in her honour, Bala was seated among the local press people. He was the only Indian among them. That prompted Mrs. Gandhi to ask: “What are you doing here?”

Bala put his journalist’s hat aside, wore his city gardener’s hat and told her (I am paraphrasing it): I sweep public gardens and parks in Vienna, I water and manure plants and trees in them, I trim their leaves and I do a lot of menial work. I am a manual laborer in Vienna.

Mrs. Gandhi’s response: How is that we Indians have no problem doing such things once we come out of the country? Back home, we have a tendency to look down upon them.

That gave Bala the opportunity for a sweet revenge. He told her: Do you think I will be invited to a party hosted by the Head of State in India, if I am a manual laborer?

The press aide to the Chancellor, who was introducing Mrs. Gandhi around, took her to the next guest.

Vienna had been on my travel wish list for a long time. Ever since Bala settled down there, and especially after he married his Austrian wife Eva, he had been persistently inviting me to visit him. The invitation that came in 1999 was in the form of an ultimatum and quite an unnerving one. “Come now,” it said. “This may be your last chance to see me alive.” He was preparing to undergo a major surgery to remove his defective pancreas.

For reasons beyond my control, I was unable to make the trip, even after that ultimatum. I sent him a letter expressing my confidence that he would surely survive the surgery and my wish that both he and I would be around many more years, paying visits to each other many times.

As I had expected, the surgery was a success. And thanks to Austria’s excellent health care system which is freely available to the rich and poor alike and to his strict post-surgery regimen and discipline, he had been able to live a life more productive than most people who have their pancreas intact. Every day, he posted two or three articles on his blog, Humans Austria. The articles were social and political commentaries, often provocative. The blog was dedicated to “promoting human oneness and unity.”

Nearly a decade after his surgery, I was able to visit him. I did it twice, first in 2008, then in 2010. On both occasions he took me around all important and interesting places in Vienna — museums, galleries, theaters, gardens and parks. He was more concerned about making my sojourn in the city comfortable than his physical condition. I had to frequently remind him that he was on medication and had been advised by his doctors not to exert much.

At the end of my 2010 visit, he and Eva came to the bus station to see me off. Eva, an artist by profession, had not been able to come around with us during my 2010 visit, because she was busy preparing for an exhibition of her paintings. She was feeling guilty about it. Handing me a bag containing breakfast she had prepared for me, she said, “I have not been a good hostess this time. Please have this breakfast on the way.” I was touched.

About two months ago, I called Bala from New York to check on his health. Towards the end of our conversation he said, “As long as I have the energy to sit in front of my computer, I will post something on my blog. But coming to the phone and talking has become more difficult than sitting and working on the keyboard.”

Since then, we had been communicating through e-mails. The last e-mail from him came on February 13. He was cheerful as ever and there was no inkling in it that his end was near. The end came on the morning of February 27. He collapsed in the bathroom and died of cardiac arrest. He was 78.

“Please come to Vienna as often as you can,” Eva told me, after I conveyed my condolences over the phone.

“I will,” I said.

And I know that I will. But Vienna won’t be the same for me in the absence of Bala. As Bangalore won’t be the same for me in the absence of Colin.

On a positive note, the deaths of these two dear friends have made me come to grip with my own mortality. I am ready.

Note: This article was first published on Mar. 6, 2013 in the author’s The East-West Inquirer. The author may be contacted on email: letters@eastwestinquirer.com.

source:  http://www.StarofMysore.com / Home> Feature Articles /By M.P. Prabhakaran, Editor & Publisher, The East-West Inquirer, New York, USA /   March 08th, 2013

Green signal for spiritual university evokes sharp criticism

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Harsha Kriya Foundation brochure. /  Photo: K. Murali Kumar / The Hindu

It is a blatant attempt to saffronise higher education’

From a tiny room on the first floor of a small building in a quiet area of Basaveshwaranagar, the Harsha Kriya Foundation runs its affairs. The Foundation has recently got the green signal for setting up the Amrutha Sinchana Spiritual University, the first of its kind in Karnataka.

Speaking to The Hindu in an office filled with such arcane objects as gems, shells, floating stones, and photographs of spiritual healers at work, Harish M., trustee of the Foundation and the university, said: “The university will offer degrees and diplomas in courses such as human energy field, feng shuirudraksha, numerology, gems and crystals. Academic courses are likely to start from 2014-15. We want to offer specialised courses to promote Indian traditions.”

Mr. Harish’s printed bio-data states he is a “healer, counsellor and trainer,” who has “counselled and healed more than 1.5 lakh cases, ranging from cardiovascular and endocrinal disorder to medically rejected cases.”

The Amrutha Sinchana Spiritual University Bill was one of the 17 passed recently by the Assembly to set up private universities in the State.

The Governor has signed eight of these bills into law. This clears the decks for the universities to start functioning as soon as they set up their infrastructure.

The Amrutha Sinchana Spiritual University Act, 2012, states that the university will impart “value-added education, life and life-skills, [and] minimise [the] suffering of fellow human beings to promote and popularise drugless energy.”

Alongside, it has the mandate of “advancement of the spiritual in the form of adyathma or spiritualshakti given by ancient yogis established in the healing process through systematic instruction, teaching, training, healing process.[sic]”

Its 40-acre campus will be located at Ghati Subramanya in Doddaballapur on the outskirts of Bangalore.

The university has drawn criticism from educationists, student bodies, scientists and political parties alike. “The basic criteria for forming a university have not been met,” said Ananth Naik, State president of the Students’ Federation of India. In a memorandum to the Governor, the SFI called the Act a “blatant attempt to saffronise higher education.”

Academic and writer G.K. Govinda Rao said academics should oppose this “most unscientific varsity.” “We can’t sleep over this, we must oppose it. The State appears to have forgotten its responsibilities.”

Sabyasachi Chatterjee, professor at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics, pointed to the constitutional provisions such an Act violated. “Article 51A (h) of the Constitution has highlighted the need to develop scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform. Instead, here the State is promoting irrationality.”

Prabhu Nott, a professor of the Indian Institute of Science, said that while he was not opposed to research in spirituality, he was “uncomfortable” as “this government holds a record of promoting Hindu religion over other religions.”

Minister defends Act

But Minister for Higher Education C.T. Ravi defended the Act. “Research can be conducted to revive ancient Indian traditional methods,” he said.

Asked whether this fulfilled the stated objective for opening private universities, namely, the increase of Gross Enrolment Ratio in higher education, he said that while universities were focussing on job-oriented courses, there was a huge need for in-depth research into traditional methods too.

source:  http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> National> Karnataka / by Tanu Kulkarni / Bangalore, March 11th, 2013

TECHNIEKS-13 TO KICKSTART

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Mysore, Mar. 7 :

National Institute of Engineering’s (NIE) three-day annual techno-cultural fest techNIEks-13 will kickstart tomorrow at the Golden Jubilee Complex of the College on Manadavadi Road here.

Cine actor and Founder of Natana School of Drama Mandya Ramesh will inaugurate the fest at 10 am. The programme will be presided over by NIE President S.R.Subba Rao.

techNIEks 2013 is being held not only to create the best entertainment platform Mysore has ever seen, but also to make the audience socially responsible.

techNIEks 2013 will see the campus feature the carNIEval, the Village and the Dance Floor, wherein the campus will be decorated accordingly to showcase the feature.

The carNIEval will have the college decorated in multi-colours, creating an awe-inspiring bonanza. The Village will see the students from different parts of the country depict their cultural heritage using various media. The parking lot will be converted into a dance floor wherein the students and public will showcase their dancing skills and also features dances by professional street dancers.

Major events lined up during the fest are African Band, Beat Boxing, Rock Arena, Radium Dance, 10k Marathon, Mirror Dance, Thematic Fashion Show, totalling to over a 100 events spread throughout the fest.

Day 1: Rock Arena: Competition among the top student rock bands of South India will be held from 10 am to 5 pm at the Diamond Jubilee Sports Complex in the college premises.

NIE Raodies: A series of challenging events testing the will power of the participants from 10 am to 5 pm.

Karaoke: A hunt for the best singers from 10 am to 5 pm.

Wanna be RJ/VJ: A competition to hunt the best RJ/VJ at 11 am.

CPU Assembly Contest at 11 am; Cooking Without Fire at 11.30 am.

Art Hub: Art expo showcasing cultural heritage, landscapes and abstracts by local artists at the Golden Jubilee Block from 10 am to 5 pm.

The Village: Showcasing various cultures of India by students at NIE parking lot from 11 am to 5 pm.

Classical dance by Nithyashree Shetty at Diamond Jubilee Sports Complex at 6 pm and Mile Sur Mera Tumhara group singing by NIE Group at 7.30 pm.

Day 2: Air Crash: Character virtualisation to convince the judges to save your life at 12 noon; Drum Duet by the students of NIE at Diamond Jubilee Sports Complex at 6 pm and Radium Dance by Beyond Taalas at 8 pm.

Day 3: techNIEks 10k Marathon for general public on the cause Vote to be the Change at Diamond Jubilee Sports Complex from 5.30 am to 9 am.

Minute to Win it: A series of challenges to be completed within a minute at 11 am; Fastest Finger First: A challenge for the fastest text message typist at 1 pm; Remote Controlled Car Race at 3.30 pm.

Fashion Show by the students of the college based on several innovative themes at Diamond Jubilee Sports Complex between 7 pm and 8.30 pm and Mirror Dance by Ashvithi Shetty and Adhvithi Shetty at Diamond Jubilee Sports Complex at 7.45 pm.

For details, contact Jyeshta Shetty (99867-58855) or Shahed Hashmi (95912-46789) or visit website: www.technieks.com.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / Home> General News / March 07th, 2013

Made for all communities

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Modern aspirations: A sketch of the temporary shelters set up in Malleswaram during the outbreak of plague. / Photo: Bangalore Plague Report of 1895  / The Hindu

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Modern aspirations: An 1889 map of the layout of Malleswaram. / Photo: Bangalore Plague Report of 1895 / The Hindu

From rehabilitation area to posh neighbourhood, Malleswaram’s come a long way

One of Bangalore’s oldest layouts, Malleswaram celebrates the 125th year of its founding next year. Founded in 1889, Malleswaram was created by the Wadiyars of the Mysore kingdom to provide a modern lifestyle to all communities, in which they could live in hygienic conditions.

Most of the city was under the authorities of the British Cantonment in the 19th century, and had various well-planned layouts such as Richmond Town, Cox Town and Benson Town. The Wadiyar government planned and executed similar planned layouts in 1880s, leading to the formation of Basavanagudi and Malleswaram.

Interestingly, both these new layouts were created on foothills: Basavanagudi lies on the foothills of the Bull Temple, Bugle Rock and Lal Bagh, while Malleswaram is on the foothills of the Kempegowda watchtower and Palace Guttahalli. Malleswaram’s advantage lay in its access to a water source — a big stream (now the Rajakaluve) ran through it — and along with Basavanagudi, it was meant to provide temporary shelter during large epidemics (such as the plague) and during famine.

Named after a temple

No vernacular or English historical records before the 1880s support the existence of a village named ‘Mallapur’ or ‘Malleswaram’. However, the area originally came under the village of Ranganatha Palya, as an 1878 Survey of India map indicates. Just as Basavanagudi layout was named after the Basavanna temple, Malleswaram was named after the Kadu Mallikarjuna (Malleswara) temple.

Both Basavanagudi and Malleswaram were originally planned to accommodate all communities. While previous layouts such as Chamarajpet or Benson Town accommodated particular sections of society according to their original plans, Malleswaram was created to provide accommodation to a range of communities. That an inclusive society was no new concept can be seen in the old inscription found on the outcrop of the Kadu Malleswara temple, which refers to the grant given to Medaralingana village by Maratha Sardar Venkoji or Ekoji in 1669 for the upkeep of the temple.

Multicultural medievals

The inscription cautions that no one should alter the grant given by Venkoji, including Hindus and Muslims. The inscription clearly refers to various communities of the medieval period, including Muslims and Hindus. This historical evidence indicates that there was a significant population of Muslims in Bangalore in the mid-17th century, and this multicultural society continued into the modern period. In the new layout of Malleswaram, there were separate wards for Muslims, native Christians, and various Hindu castes including Brahmins, Lingayats, Vaishyas and Shudras.

According to historical records, Malleswaram was developed on 291 acres. It stretched from the old Raja Mills or Mysore Spinning and Weaving Mills (Mantri Mall stands in its place) to 15th Cross including Sankey Tank in the north, and from the Bangalore-Arasikere railway track in the west to the Kadu Malleswara temple in the east.

Steady ascent

Although the government created the new layout and invited people to purchase sites and settle there, it met with little response. It then formed a committee with members such as V.P. Madhav Rao, Mir Shaukat Ali and Rao Bahadur Arcot Srinivasachar and K. Srinivasa Rao to develop the new area in 1892. By 1895, the committee handed over the layout to the city municipal authorities, and from then onwards, Malleswaram became an integral part of the city urban administration.

It remained an ordinary neighbourhood until after Independence, when those who worked in the government and the upper classes chose to live there. From a site for rehabilitation to a posh neighbourhood, history bears witness to Malleswaram’s growth.

(Dr. Aruni is Deputy Director of the Indian Council for Historical Research, Bangalore)

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Bangalore / by  S. K.  Aruni /  March 06th,  2013

Honest laundry owner

Returns jewellery worth Rs. 1 lakh found in customer’s trousers

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Caption: Laundry owner Shivakumar. The gold jewels found in the customer’s trouser.

Mysore, Mar. 6 :

In a rare display of honesty, Shivakumar, owner of SEL Dry Cleaners at K.R.Circle in city, promptly handed over a gold bracelet and a ring valued at about Rs. 1 lakh to a customer, who had reportedly left them in the pocket of his trouser which he had given for dry wash.

It is reported that one Ramesh, a resident of Nayakara Beedi in Chamundi Hill, had given a trouser and a shirt for dry wash at SEL Dry Cleaners on Feb. 26. On taking delivery of his clothes on Mar. 1, Ramesh discovered that a bracelet and a ring were missing. He recollected that he had left the jewellery in the pocket of his trouser (which he claimed was his practice).

On approaching Shivakumar at the laundry, Shivakumar reportedly told Ramesh that he had found the jewellery in one of the pockets of the trouser given for wash and promptly returned the same to Ramesh advising him to be careful in future. Meanwhile, Ramesh, speaking to SOM, lauded Shivakumar for his gesture.

Shivakumar, on his part, said, “I would have handed over the jewellery to an orphanage if Ramesh had not claimed it.” Stating that his family had been in the laundry business for over 55 years, Shivakumar said he believes in service rather than aspiring for wealth belonging to others as taught by his father.

Recalling the incident of Feb. 26, Shivakumar said that he found the bracelet and the ring falling from the trouser given for dry wash but could not identify whose jewellery it was as there were many customers. He thought that when the real loser would approach him, he would hand over the same.

“After taking delivery of the trouser and shirt, Ramesh came and complained of having lost his jewellery to which I responded and handed them over to him,” Shivakumar recalled.

source: http://www.StarofMysore.com / Home> General News / March 06th, 2013