Yearly Archives: 2012

“Make differently abled children feel special”

 Deputy Commissioner of Police (law and order) R. Thirunavukkarasu releasing a handbill during the World Differently-abled day in Madurai, Tamilnadu, on Monday /  Photo: R. Ashok / The Hindu /

Mercy Pushpalatha, the principal of Lady Doak College, signed a MoU with Bethshan Special School pledging the college’s support to them.

“Differently abled children should not be pitied. We should make them feel special,” said R. Thirunavukarasu, Deputy Commissioner of Police (law and order) at the World Differently Abled Day Celebrations, held here on Monday.

“Children with disabilities are more likely to be in low income group, who have less awareness of rights and entitlements. They are subjected to strong social stigma in the community and family. We should lend them help in whatever way we could to support them”, he told the students. Mercy Pushpalatha, the principal of Lady Doak College, signed a MoU with Bethshan Special School pledging the college’s support to them. Mr. Thirunavukarasu then released an awareness handbill on the rights and entitlements of the differently abled.

Caroline Nesabai, Head, Department of Social Studies, Lady Doak College, said that there is a need to promote an inclusive society, in order to help the differently abled integrate into the mainstream.

Ameen from Kalyani Associates Private Limited, said a lot of corporate companies here are eager to contribute a part of their profit to help the differently abled. “We have been associated with Bethshan Special School for nine years. We have recruited a few students from the school to our company to help them enter the mainstream”, he said.

L. Murali Krishnan, managing director, Kalyani Associates, received the first copy of the handbill released by the Deputy Commissioner.

Stephenson, managing trustee of Bethshan Special School, and Jeyapaul, co-ordinator of the school, spoke.

sources: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Madurai / by Staff  Reporter / December 04th, 2012

‘My work speaks for itself’

Nirvikalpa Natarajan of Chennai has notched up so many formidable accomplishments that her peers in medicine find it hard to believe that she is only 30 years old.

Those accomplishments include performing hundreds of surgeries, and treating even more hundreds of patients in India, Ireland and Britain. Dr Nirvikalpa is a practitioner of oral and maxillofacial surgery, one of a only handful of women in her field.

That distinction, of course, attracts praise from her colleagues at Chennai’s Apollo Hospital. It sometimes also invites envy. The envy invariably comes from less accomplished people, and it takes the form of whispers that perhaps Dr Nirvikalpa is too young for her position, or that she’s a relentless seeker of success.

Such behind-the-back criticism doesn’t faze her. Dr Nirvikalpa has a simple credo: “My work speaks for itself.” It does indeed. In recognition of her work, she received a hugely prestigious award, the Dr M. S. N. Ginwalla Trophy for the Best Scientific Paper at the 37th National Conference of the Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons of India, last Saturday evening.

More than a thousand surgeons from across India and from abroad had gathered for the conference at the Hyderabad International Convention Centre, a facility where the auditoriums are so cavernous that a speaker on the stage can seem dwarfed.

But not Dr Nirvikalpa. Attired in a striking green sari, the tall surgeon with flowing black hair glided to the podium and gave a 10-minute oration that had the audience riveted. One could be forgiven for mistaking her for a fashion model.

She was so lucid that even an attendee unfamiliar with the field’s lingo could follow her. The way she projected her voice, and the manner in which she highlighted the salient points of her address on a screen presentation, spoke of her self-confidence. That self-confidence has been hard won. A graduate of Government Dental College in Mumbai, Dr Nirvikalpa went on to do post-graduate work at Saveetha University in Chennai. She has received two memberships at the Royal College of Glasgow, and a coveted fellowship from Royal College in Ireland. She has been selected for a fellowship in cranio-maxillofacial surgery in Hannover in 2013.

Oral and maxillofacial surgery is a unique specialty that deals with conditions, defects and esthetic aspects of the mouth, jaws and face. It is especially relevant in India, which has the world’s largest number of traffic accidents; such accidents often result in severe traumas to the head and face.

What sets oral and maxillofacial surgeons apart from other specialists is their in-depth understanding of the skeletal and dental framework of the face. Much as the foundations of a building are made from iron, the foundations of the face are its bones and teeth.

Knowing the subtleties of this allows them to deal effectively in areas of cosmetic jaw surgery, facial trauma, craniofacial surgery, oral pathology, temperomandibular joint surgery, oral implantology and oral cancer.

“Oral and maxillofacial surgery is ‘The Next Big Thing,’” Dr Nirvikalpa says. Why? Because it’s a super specialty in medicine, and because the technologies are advancing so rapidly that opportunities to serve bigger cohorts of people are increasing exponentially. Moreover, there’s a shortage of surgeons with requisite experience and skills in the field.

It is a multi-disciplinary field, one that requires surgeons like Dr Nirvikalpa to be deeply familiar with neuroscience, ophthalmology, dentistry and audiology, among other fields of medicine. It is a field that pays surgeons far more in the West than in India, and Dr Nirvikalpa could have just as easily joined the 400,000 physicians of Indian origin who practice medicine in the United States, Britain, Europe and Australia. But she chose to work in her homeland because of the rich diversity of patients, because of patients’ needs, and because, ultimately, “one has to give back to one’s own country.”

There’s also the fact that India, an economic giant, sorely needs more doctors. (Some 45,000 doctors graduate from the country’s medical school each year, and about 3,000 of these go abroad annually.) Even though India is a major supplier of physicians and nurses to industrialised countries, there are just about 600,000 registered allopathic physicians in India, according to the Union Ministry of Health. That translates into one doctor per every 2,000 of the population.

There’s one thing more that keeps Dr Nirvikalpa in India. That’s the benevolence of the man who founded Apollo Hospitals nearly 30 years ago, a cardiologist named Dr Prathap Chandra Reddy. Both Dr Reddy, and Apollo’s director of medical services, Dr N Satyabhama, serve as her
mentors.

Another mentor is Dr Vinod Narayanan, who is highly experienced in oral and maxillofacial surgery, and who is a consultant at Apollo Hospital. Dr Nirvikalpa also looks to Preetha Reddy, managing director of Apollo Hospitals, which has 55 institutions around India, and is one of the world’s largest healthcare systems.

So is she a relentless seeker of success? It’s not a question that Dr Nirvikalpa Natarajan will answer. After all, her work speaks for itself. And the fact that she’s still single at 30 also speaks for itself. One is tempted to add that she’s a very eligible 30-year-old surgeon. Anyone aspiring to change that situation should be prepared to put up with Dr Nirvikalpa’s 18-hour work days, seven days a week, and the fact that she shows no signs of slackening.

Pranay Gupte is an author and veteran journalist

source: http://www.KhaleejTimes.com / Home> International / by Pranay Gupte / December 04th, 2012

Beginnings of Indian cricket

MADRAS MISCELLANY:

Looking for a definitive date for the beginnings of cricket in Madras, a Daniells painting seemed to indicate that it would have been 1792. By the 1840s, European clubs, British military teams and Planters’ XIs had begun to play the game a bit more seriously and by the 1860s, more competitively. By the 1860s too, they had introduced the game to Indians, who began to play it in schools and colleges and in friendlies between scratch teams. But it was the founding of the Madras United Cricket Club in 1888 that resulted in Indian cricket being born as an institution. That Club, now called the Madras United Club, will begin celebrating its centenary year from December 8, a few days away.

Responsible for founding the Club was M. Buchi Babu Naidu of the Dera Venkataswami Naidu clan, and a few of his friends who shared his passion for the game. Buchi Babu’s own passion for the game developed when the English nurses he and his four brothers had, used to take them to watch the sahibs at play. It was said many years later, “Buchi Babu lived and died like an Englishman with all the English love for horses, cricket, tennis and fox-hunting.” It was this love for the game that had him gathering as many teenagers as possible in his neighbourhood to learn the niceties of the game in the spacious grounds of the family mansion in Luz. His fellow-founders of the Club did the same in their homes. And these recruits were the nucleus of the MUCC team when it got its own ground on the Esplanade where its clubhouse still is, though those grounds have been taken over by Government.

With the MUCC having a ground and a team, Buchi Babu was determined to take on the first formal cricket club in South India, the ‘Europeans Only’ Madras Cricket Club. This was easier said than done, with Indians not being allowed the use of the pavilion. Buchi Babu, who came from a family of dubashes (of Parry & Co) and who himself was a dubash, was, as a result, on friendly terms with many of the members of the MCC. One of them was P.W. Partridge of that leading law firm of the time, King and Partridge, which had a big say in the affairs of the MCC. And when Buchi Babu and Partridge worked out a formula whereby the MUC could use the pavilion but lunch on Indian food at a separate table, the first MCC-MUC match was played c.1890. Indian cricket was on its way. This fixture was to lead to what was Madras’s ‘Big Match’, the Presidency Match played annually during Pongal between the Presidency Europeans and the Presidency Indians.

The first match almost did not come off, Buchi Babu passing away a few months before the scheduled dates at the end of December. But his lieutenant B. Subramaniam felt the best way to honour Buchi Babu’s memory was to play the match. The European XI was mainly a MCC team, whereas the Indian XI was mainly college players and Subramaniam, P.D. Krishnaswamy and R. Chari from the MUC. The next year (1909), Subramaniam organised the Buchi Babu Memorial tournament which is still with us. The MUC ran the tournament till the first representative organisation for Madras cricket was formed in 1933.

Over the years that followed its founding, the Club began looking at other sports activities. After all, its bye-laws stated that to become a member, you had to participate in some sport or the other. And so the MUCC became the MUC when the membership decided to introduce other sporting activities. A MUC team took part in the first hockey tournament played in Madras, the Madras Hockey Tournament, for which the MCC offered the trophy. The MUC team and a Royal Artillery team from Bangalore were the first to take the field when the tournament started on July 22, 1901. The MUC team included Buchi Babu at full back and its best player, as reported at the time, was centre half S.V. Chetty. But the Indian team was thrashed 15-0 in the match, something which did not happen in later years when M.J. Gopalan began playing for it.

Tennis too was a sport in which the MUC played a leading role in ensuring participation in the game by Indian clubs. This was in 1913, with J.G. Ramaswami Naidu of the Club playing a key part. When in 1917 the South Indian became the MCC Lawn Tennis Tournament, with Indians included in the competition; the MUC was offered two places on the organising committee. And by 1925, the MUC was organising an All-India tournament of its own on its courts.

When the Club started playing football, following the lead of the Madras Gymkhana, the two clubs teamed together with Harry Buck of the YMCA to form the Madras Football Association in 1934. The MUC members behind the formation of the Association were J. Subbuswami, Dr. V. N. C. Rao and ‘Comet’ Ramaswamy. The Association’s offices were at the MUC for many years and its grounds were one of the most popular venues of the game.

Billiards, snooker and bridge were all other games in which MUC players made a mark in the city and, in some, nationally. Today, these three games, tennis (on two courts) and cricket in a lower division, but with no home ground of its own, survive and are supported by an enthusiastic membership. That membership in the year ahead will remember that their Club was the first Indian club to be formed with a total focus on sport. Will the centenary year see the drawing up of plans to bring back those halcyon days when the Club was a leading representative of Indian sport in the city?

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> Arts> History & Culture / by S. Muthiah / Chennai, December 02nd, 2012

The Handwritten Story

Chennai-based The Musalman, considered the only surviving calligraphic newspaper in the world, is being archived in the Netherlands

In a nondescript building on Triplicane High Road, the oldest neighbourhood of Chennai, there’s an unusual newsroom. There is no din of the printing press or the frenetic urgency of “breaking news”. Instead, as the ceiling fan rotates without a noise, a group of four men and women sits on wooden desks with large sheets of paper in front of them. Using calligraphy pens, they carefully script the news of the day in Urdu. This is the office of The Musalman, possibly the only handwritten paper in the world, whose story has been featured in a recent documentary The Musalman: Preservation of a Dream. Not only this, the newspaper has also found a place at Tribal Perspectives in Netherlands, an organisation that archives ancient and rare publications from around the world.

Conceptualised and directed by Delhi-based Ishani K Dutta, the 10-minute film traces the legacy of The Musalman, a name that has survived 85 years of political, social and communal turbulence in India. From Syed Azmathullah who founded it, to Syed Arifullah, his grandson who currently heads it — the newspaper cherishes calligraphy, which has kept the 1927-born establishment together.

“I’ve been thinking of making a film on The Musalman for very long but had no sponsors. Then I approached the Ministry of External Affairs, who gave their support and we set off to make the film in 2010,” says Dutta. The task, however, was made difficult by Arifullah, who is exceedingly reserved and refused to talk to the crew. “But once he opened up, he had a whole treasure to reveal,” she says.

As the documentary concisely breezes through first-hand accounts of people who are part of The Musalman, the legacy is made clear by one visual — that of the dingy 800 sq ft office, which seems frozen in time. “There may be a few changes here or there, but largely, things have remained the same. You’d think you have been transported to 1927,” says Dutta. The film nevertheless sticks to the core of the publication — calligraphy, something they call “the heart of The Musalman”, and the respect and loyalty it has earned them.

The documentary, within three weeks of being uploaded on YouTube, received widespread positive response. “It was all over the social networking websites and many people called us to get in touch with Arifullah. People wanted copies of The Musalman and offer donations,” says Dutta. Arifullah, however, remains nonchalant to all this.

With a meagre salary of Rs 80 per day given to the ‘katibs’ or calligraphers, The Musalman is carefully penned word-by-word by them, most of whom have been working her for over 20 years. Interestingly, the chief reporter belongs to the Hindu community, and has been working there for over 30 years.

The paper gives crisp and ample space to international, national, local as well as sports news. While a blank slot is kept aside everyday for last-minute changes, a segment is also devoted to verses from the Quran. Its masthead, despite the shift in India’s political and communal landscape over the years, did not have to be changed. Explains Dutta, “While talking to them, I got the impression that this is because of the reverence the effort of calligraphy has garnered from loyal readers. Secondly, their content is balanced.”

Earlier this year, Dutta was approached by Tribal Perspectives, to whom she had sent a copy of the publication. It was followed by the organisation recently adding the newspaper to its collection of rare and ancient documents from the world over. There is, however, a faint doubt that laces everyone’s mind. How long will it last? “There is monetary pressure and there are very few loyal patrons left who give advertisements and buy the paper. It’s just the passion and pride of these people that keeps the newspaper going. I don’t think they know it yet but in its own small way, The Musalman has made history,” says Dutta.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / Home> IE> Story / by Pallavi Pundir / Saturday, December 01st, 2012

Vani Jayaram to get Bharathi Award

Acclaimed playback singer Vani Jayaram at an event in Visakhapatnam.  / Photo: K.R. Deepak / The Hindu 

The Annual Bharathi Festival will be celebrated from December 9 to 11 at Bharathi Memorial, T.P. Koil Street, Triplicane.

Subramanya Bharathi’s songs will be rendered by eminent singers; scholars will give speech; dance, debate, quiz and other programmes will be organised during the festival. The highlight will be ‘Jathi Palakku’ (palanquin procession of Subramanya Bharathi’s idol) on December 11 morning and conferment of Bharathi Award in the evening.

This year’s Bharathi Award will be conferred on Vani Jayaram, playback singer, who has sung in all the 18 languages referred by Bharathi.

The award will be presented by musicologist Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna. Film director Dr. K. Balachander will felicitate Vani Jayaram.

source:  http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Chennai> Downtown / Chennai, December 01st, 2012

Madras Miscellany: The Battle of the Adyar

A map of the various tanks.

The Battle of the Adyar

What do you think was the most significant battle in modern Indian history (1498-1948), I was recently asked by a researcher who called on me. I had no hesitation in replying, “The Battle of the Adyar River.” Much to her surprise.

The battle was a consequence of Fort St. George surrendering to the French early in October 1746. On October 15, the Nawab of Arcot — whom the English had supported — sent troops under the command of his son, Mahfuz Khan, to invest Fort St. George and ask the French to return the settlement to the English. Instead, the French broke out of the fort and dispersed the Nawab’s troops. Mahfuz Khan, reinforcing his army, it is said, to about 10,000 men, then moved south, seized San Thomé and formed a battle line on the north bank of the Adyar River on October 22 to prevent the French moving up reinforcements from Pondicherry. Two hundred French and French-trained Indian troops led by a Swiss mercenary, Captain Paradis, force marched from Pondicherry on the same day, crossed Quibble Island and took positions on the south bank of the Adyar River where they came under ineffective artillery fire from Mahfuz Khan’s forces.

On the 24th, Paradis decided to ford the river with his 200 men after he heard that a similar sized force led by de la Tour was on its way from Fort St. George to attack the rear of Mahfuz Khan’s line. But in the event, de la Tour arrived too late to support Paradis whose troops, with disciplined firing and then charging with bayonets, broke the Nawab’s line. Mahfuz Khan’s troops fled and, so, the Battle of the Adyar River, which began on the morning of October 24, 1746, ended by that evening, with the French occupation of Fort St. George consolidated.

In terms of later battles and today’s ones, the Battle of the Adyar River was not much of a clash of arms. But it proved one thing. That disciplined European troops and Indian sipahis trained in the European manner of soldiering could rout thousands of Indian soldiers with little training and less discipline. And that lesson was not lost on the English who, the same year, in their last bolt-hole on the Coromandel, Fort St. David, Cuddalore, began raising and training what became the Madras Regiment that was to be the nucleus of the Indian Army of today that grew from those beginnings. It is with that Army that the British created an India that has grown into the modern nation of today. Triggering English thought to create such a military force that was to spearhead the drive for Empire and the creation of modern India is the significance of that battle that many treat just as a footnote to history. From my point of view, it was a pivotal point in history.

Where are the tanks?

Not long ago, about a 100 years ago, Madras had within its municipal limits something like 300 water bodies. Today, there are hardly a couple of dozen. The rest have all been built over. And that includes three of its biggest ones: the Long Tank, the Vyasarpadi Tank and the Spur Tank. And lest we blame the authorities of post-Independence Madras, we should recall that the process of replacing precious water with brick and mortar began around 1920.

The Long Tank was a boomerang-shaped one, about 6 km in length from the southernmost tip of what was called the Mylapore Tank to the westernmost tip of the tank it flowed into, the Nungambakkam Tank. The Mylapore Tank stretch was one of the early venues (1870s-90s) of the Madras Boat Club regattas, having as it did “a fine expanse of water from the Cathedral Corner (where Gemini Studios used to be) to Sydapet…”. Blacker’s Garden, near what is now called Cathedral Garden Road (and then occupied by successive high Government officials) was where the boathouse was and where the Governor, his Lady and their entourage, together with his Band and other spectators (‘Europeans Only’) gathered to watch the finishes.

When there was a debate in the 1890s on whether this stretch or the Adyar (which is now the Club’s home course) was preferable, the supporters of the Long Tank pointed out, “Although the glare of the setting sun off the broad stretch of water was somewhat trying, a good view of the whole course could be had, which is not obtainable on the Adyar. The Long Tank provides a long broad stretch of deep water, the course being straight from start to finish, so that, for racing purposes, it is infinitely preferable to the river which winds about a great deal and presents at low tide, a shallow and uneven course almost throughout.” What a body of water to lose!

But lose it we did when, in 1923, the Town Planners decided that growing Madras needed more land for housing and proposed the Mambalam Housing Scheme for whose 1600 acres it became necessary to breach the Long Tank and let its waters into the Adyar. The breaching was done in 1930, and the development of Theogaraya Nagar (T’Nagar) began. Then, in 1941, the ‘Lake Area’ was developed on part of the Nungambakkam Tank and was followed by 54 acres being given for the campus of Loyola College. The last vestiges of the tank were handed over, in 1974, for the Valluvar Kottam complex.

The Vyasarpadi Tank, into which the water from 28 tanks once flowed, gradually gave way to post-Independence development and finally vanished under the weight of the Tamil Nadu Housing Board’s Vyasarpadi Neighbourhood Scheme and the Vyasarpadi Industrial Estate in the 1960s and 70s. And the Spur Tank all but vanished from around the 1920s as buildings came up for what is now the Kilpauk General Hospital. All that’s left of it is what is called Chetpet Lake, which is dry most of the time.

When the postman knocked…

Aruna Gill, in a response from Princeton on my item this past week on her book The Indus Intercept, writes that she has been neither to Pakistan nor its troubled Baluchistan province. “I have to thank,” she explains, “Google Maps for allowing me to zoom in on the terrain and the streets of Quetta for a bird’ eye view and a street’ eye view.” She then tells me, referring to her interest in the Indus script, that while her husband Gyan Prakash, who teaches at Princeton, is focussed on modern Indian history, her interest has always been “in the ancient worlds.” She adds, “Reading the history of ancient cultures humbles me — that they could know and think and do things with such limited resources. Ancient scripts are just one manifestation of this, while we take the written word so much for granted.”

* Additional information on the brothers Vembakkam Sadagopacharlu and Rajagopalacharlu (Miscellany, November 5) has been sent to me by reader V.C. Srikumar, the Editor of the Law Weekly.He tells me that the journal was founded in 1914 by V.C. Seshachariar, an advocate, the son of Rajagopalacharlu, whose elder son was V.C. Desikachari, Chief Judge of the Madras Small Causes Court. Referring to the appointment of Sadagopacharlu to the Madras Legislative Assembly, the first Indian to be so appointed, reader Srikumar points out that he was one of the three non-official members nominated in 1862 by Governor Sir William Dennison under the then introduced Indian Councils Act, 1861. The other two were Robert Campbell, chairman of the Madras Chamber of Commerce, and an earlier chairman of the Chamber, William R. Arbuthnot. The three first sat in Council on January 22, 1862.

Commending the choice of a person it later described as “a native pleader in an East India Company’s Court,” The Hindu stated, “He is a man of extensive and varied information regarding the country and its wants; is a sound practical lawyer; has come in contact with almost all sections of the population of the Southern Districts of the Presidency; is highly esteemed for his popular sympathies… and (he) possesses in abundance the essential requisites of a public man, to wit, sound judgment and tact.” Several acres of his property in Alamelmangapuram, Venkatesa Agraharam and what is now Raja Annamalaipuram were, on his death, endowed by his wife Echamma to the Sri Vedantha Desikar Temple, Mylapore, which has given much of the acreage on 99-year leases for housing development.

* Library Week, which was celebrated throughout the country from November 14 to 20, was, I am reminded by a reader, the outcome of the first All-India Public Library Conference which was held at the Gokhale Hall on November 14, 1919. Another significant outcome of the Conference was the founding on the same day of the All India Public Library Association. This was five years before S.R. Ranganathan, the ‘Father of Library Science’, entered the field. I wonder, then, who was the driving force in Madras who initiated the Conference and headed its Organising Committee. Someone indeed to be remembered.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Chennai> Madras Miscellany> Arts>  History & Culture / by S. Muthiah / November 25th, 2012

Malaysian Tamils urged not to lose identity

all ears:Participants at the conference on ‘Malaysian Tamil Literature: yesterday and today’ in Thanjavur on Monday.Photo:B. Velankanni Raj.

all ears: Participants at the conference on ‘Malaysian Tamil Literature: yesterday and today’ in Thanjavur on Monday. / Photo:B. Velankanni Raj. / The Hindu

Literature is not leisure-time writing. It represents a country’s culture, language, and race, said P.Rajendran, president, Malaysian Tamil Writers Association, here on Monday.

Speaking at the international conference on ‘Malaysian Tamil Literature: yesterday and today’ organised by the Department of Tamil Studies in Foreign Countries at Tamil University, Mr.Rajendran said that literature reflects the life and time of a community. “Through Tamil literature , we learn the valour, love, and dignity of the Tamil community,” he said.

The Tamil literary tradition in Malaysia is 150 years old. In the first 100 years, the Tamil literary works that originated in Malaysia talked about places such as Thanjavur, Salem, and Tiruvannamalai and lives of the people in those areas. Since1950, there was a renaissance and stories and writings reflected the life of Malaysian Tamils.

“I’m delighted to know that 15 to 20 students of Tamil University have taken up research on Malaysian Tamil literature. There is no point in us talking about our literature. You should study it critically and talk about it . Likewise, we should speak the fame of your literature,” Mr.Rajendran said.

He also called for making use of the memorandum of understanding signed between Tamil writers of Malaysia and Tamil University for exchange visits by students and teachers . “It has not gained momentum. Only one such bilateral visit has taken place; there should be more,” he said.

Malaysian Tamil Writers Association has been doing a lot for promoting Tamil literature in Malaysia. Annual conferences are conducted on short stories and poems and awards are given for best books. “We would like to meet the Chief Minister, when we visit Chennai next week”, Mr.Rajenderan said. M.Thirumalai, Vice Chancellor, Tamil University, appealed to the Malaysian Tamils to not lose their identity .

He also said that Tamil University has signed a MoU with Colon University of Germany for joint research and exchange visits by students and teachers. “We have also sent a proposal to UGC for starting a PG diploma in Diasporic Studies.”

While presenting books to the 35-member Malaysian delegation led by Rajendran , Mr.Thirumalai said that Malaysian youth should be introduced to modern Tamil literature. K.S.Senbagavalli, joint secretary, Malaysian Tamil Writers Association, spoke .

V.Rajeswari, Malaysian Tamil writer, Gunanathan Arumugam, secretary, Malaysian Tamil Writers Association, A.Karthikeyan, Head of Department of Tamil Studies in Foreign Countries, Tamil University, and S.Udhayasuriyan, conference co-ordinator, also spoke.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com  / Home> National> TamilNadu / by Special Correspondent / Thanjavur, November 27th, 2012

Research from Anna University Broadens Understanding of Fuel Research

Data detailed on Fuel Research have been presented. According to news originating from Tamil Nadu, India, by NewsRx correspondents, research stated, “In this study, the production of methyl ester from Oedogonium sp. oil was studied using an isolated thermo-, solvent-, and sono-tolerant Bacillus sp. lipase immobilized on celite. The application of ultrasound during the reaction reduced the reaction time significantly.”

Our news journalists obtained a quote from the research from Anna University, “The effect of sonication time, enzyme dosage, water content, methanol/oil molar ratio, and solvent addition on the performance of transesterification was studied. The reaction time required in the presence and absence of ultrasound was 2 and 40 h, respectively. Under optimum conditions, 75 and 82% fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) yields were obtained for normal and ultrasound-assisted transesterification, respectively.”

According to the news editors, the research concluded: “The reusability of the immobilized enzyme after five cycles did not show much loss in enzyme activity, and this indicates that the isolated enzyme was not affected as a result of the application of ultrasound.”

For more information on this research see: Production of Methyl Ester from Oedogonium sp Oil Using Immobilized Isolated Novel Bacillus sp Lipase. Energy & Fuels, 2012;26(10):6387-6392. Energy & Fuels can be contacted at: Amer Chemical Soc, 1155 16TH St, NW, Washington, DC 20036, USA. (American Chemical Society – www.acs.org; Energy & Fuels – www.pubs.acs.org/journal/enfuem)

The news correspondents report that additional information may be obtained from R. Sivaramakrishnan, Anna University, Dept. of Chem Engn, Madras 600025, Tamil Nadu, India (see also Fuel Research).

source: http://www.equities.com / Global Financial network / Home> Materials / By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Life Science Weekly / by Fuel Research NewsRx.com

IIM-Tiruchi to set up incubation centre

Madurai, NOV. 27:

Indian Institute of Management – Tiruchi (IIM-T) plans to offer free consultancy through its proposed incubation centre in the areas of finance, branding, human resource management and marketing.

According to Prof Prafulla Agnihotri, Director, IIM, the initiative is intended to impart an economic thrust to the region. It will be akin to OPD (Outpatient Department) in hospitals. Prospective entrepreneurs will be provided space to operate at a very nominal cost and centralised facilities will be made available free of cost.

Even after they moved out after establishing their businesses, the centre will continue to render hand-holding support.

Entrepreneurship in manufacturing sector is the key for the growth of the regional economy. Faculties will visit the incubation centre on a daily basis and render free consultancy for small and medium enterprises.

source: http://www.TheHinduBusinessLine.com / Home> News > Education / by the Hindu Correspondent  / Madurai, November 27th, 2012

Tiger reserve reopened

(File Photo),  Deccan Chronicle

The Anamalai Tiger Rese­r­­ve (ATR), which had been closed for the last four mo­nths, was thrown open for tourists on Tuesday.

However, there were ha­r­dly any visitors during the day. “The public wouldn’t ha­ve known about the re­serve opening; however we expect tourists to come for sight-seeing from this weekend,” said Pollachi District Forest Officer Mr Velusamy.

The tourist lodging facilities comprising rooms wi­th a total of 120 beds had been kept ready by the Forest department to acc­o­mmodate tourists. Howev­er, the tourists will not be able to go on elephant safaris at ATR as the animals were given rest in view of the rejuvenation camp that begun on Tues­day.

“The elephant safari has been suspended for 48 days from Tuesday to provide complete rest to the animals. Normally three male elephants are engaged for carrying tourists in the forest for around two kilometres,” added Mr Velu­sa­my.

The rejuvenation camp for 18 forest elephants has started in ATR a day after the beginning of a similar camp for temple elephants at Mettupalayam. For the forest elephants, the diet and refresher activities will be the same as that of temple elephants.

With the reopening of ATR, several tourist pla­ces like Top Slip, Monkey Falls, Chinna Kallar Falls, Nallamudi View Point, Manampalli and Amara­va­thi Crocodile Farm will see tourists.

The ATR had been closed since July 25 following an interim ban by the Supreme Court on all tourist activities in core tiger reserves across the country.

Though as per the prescribed Supreme Court guidelines, tourism activities can be allowed within the stipulated 20 per cent of the core area, the Forest department has decided to allow tourism in only 6.1 per cent of the core area.

“Tourism will be allowed in the same areas where it was permitted before the implementation of the ban,” said Mr Rajiv Srivastava, Field Director of ATR.

source: http://www.DeccanChronicle.com / Home> Channels> Cities> Regions> Coimbatore / by V. Ashok, DC, Coimbatore / November 28th, 2012