Monthly Archives: September 2013

Turning the tables on top DJs

Turning the tables on top DJs / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Turning the tables on top DJs / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu

After thirteen long years, the DMC World DJ Championship came to India and Chennai was in the spotlight with DJ Kave bagging the first runner-up prize in a close battle with some of the top DJs of the country. DJ Kave’s tryst with the turn table began in 1999, when he saw Dj QBert create magic with music. Before he knew it, he was taken in by the profession.

To participate in the championship was his dream, which was realised after a long wait. “This championship, unlike other competitions, tests how technically sound you are and a DJ has to know his stuff before enrolling for it. It was supposed to be hosted in India in 2007 but was dropped for reason unknown. I was disappointed. I sent a CD with my mix to the DMC headquarters. They liked it and invited me to participate in London, but due to financial constraint, I couldn’t go,” says Kave.

When he heard about the competition this time around, he was fully prepared to prove his mettle.

But, Kave is not new to fame. He has performed with A.R. Rahman in the Jai Ho concert in 2009. “Popular rapper BlaaZe introduced me to the Oscar winning music director and he immediately roped me in for the Jai Ho concert. For the first time in my life I performed in front of a huge crowd. I have also performed in Malaysia along with Yuvan Shankar Raja,” says Kave, a resident of T. Nagar.

After finishing his schooling in Doha, he came to the city to do a course in audio engineering. For this IELTS trainer, DJing was only a part-time career in the beginning, which later went on to become his profession.

Six years ago, he started his DJ school in T. Nagar. “I started Skratch Lab in my bedroom and after receiving a tremendous response, I expanded. Now I have a high-tech studio where aspiring artists learn the nuances of the art. The course has been designed by me and experts conduct classes. Rolling Stones has ranked it No. 4 DJ School in India,” says Venkatesh Jayaraman, aka DJ Kave.

“DJ Venkatesh doesn’t sound cool. So I jumbled up the letters of my first name and came up with Kave,” he syas.

Skratch Lab is at Flat No 3, Abiramee apartments, Door No 11, Thirumurthy Street, T. Nagar. Phone no: 9884245833

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Vipasha Sinha / Chennai – September 17th, 2013

Finally, work on Poompuhar fishing harbour gets going

Chennai :

Chief minister J Jayalalithaa on Wednesday laid the foundation for the Poompuhar fishing harbour in Nagapattinam through video-conferencing from the secretariat. The fishing harbour, a long-pending proposal, would be set up at a cost of 78.5 crore.

Presently, the harbour at Poompuhar is not conducive to mechanized fishing boats to offload their catch on the shore due to strong waves. They also struggle to take diesel and ice cubes needed to preserve their catch. The harbour project, initially proposed in 1995, was revived in 2001 after the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) gave its approval.

The ASI had earlier opposed the project in Poompuhar, considered an historical town, and declined to grant clearance. It is believed that Poompuhar had submerged under the sea after a tsunami washed it away.

The proposed harbour will have modern facilities like net-mending shed, fuel supply and storage, fish auctioning hall and cold storage facilities. Bays to park 150 mechanised fishing boats, 350 country boats and other fishing vessels will be constructed as part of the harbour, said a release. Nearly 30,000 people will benefit from the project, the release said.

source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai > Archaelogical Survey / TNN / September 12th, 2013

Get proof from royal family on Katchatheevu: Karuna to TN govt

Chennai:

DMK President M Karunanidhi on Wednesday asked Tamil Nadu government to obtain documents offered to be provided by members of a royal family in connection with the Katchatheevu issue and submit them along with others in the Supreme Court in support of its plea for retrieval of the islet ceded to Sri Lanka.

The kin of Ramanatha Sethupathy, a former king of Ramanathapuram, had reportedly said there were documents to show that the islet came under their father’s erstwhile administration and that they were ready to give the documents in this regard to the Chief Minister, Karunanidhi said.

“They have also assured all support to state government for the retrieval of Katchatheevu… Therefore, I insist that state government gather the (documentary) proof mentioned by the Ramanathapuram royal family and those in its possession and come forward to present them in Supreme Court,” he said responding to a set of questions in party mouth-piece ‘Murasoli.’

Tamil Nadu Government has filed a petition in the apex court seeking retrieval of Katchatheevu, an islet in the Palk Strait, which was ceded to Sri Lanka by India in 1974 by way of an agreement.

Karunanidhi has also moved the Supreme Court on the matter.

The Centre had recently submitted in the court that no Indian territory, including Katchatheevu, was ceded to Sri Lanka, and the question of retrieval did not arise.

Karunanidhi also lauded BJP MP Tarun Vijay who had recently demanded in Rajya Sabha that Tamil be made the second official language of the country, and recalled that DMK had made a similar pitch in its 2011 election manifesto.

PTI

source: http://www.zeenews.india.com / Home / Wednesday – September 11th, 2013

Indians are master navigators: Historians

K.R.A. NarasiahCF23sept2013

Chennai:

As many as 120 trading ships crossed Red Sea every year from Alexandria to ‘Mu­ziri,’ now called Pattanam in Kerala, during the 1st century AD. His­to­ri­ans in the city said the concept of globalisation was not something newly invented.

Historians and chroniclers from Chennai said seafarers from Greek and India in earlier centuries were master navigators.

“The ancient methods of sea navigation were remarkable and several observations made by Greek sailors during the 60 AD give us a different perspective of Indian rulers. Till the first century, traders and seafarers considered the entire Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea as the Erythrean sea,” sa­id eminent historian K.R.A. Narasiah, who delive­r­ed a lecture on the topic ‘Pe­riplus of the Erythrean sea’ (Guide to the Red Sea) on Th­ursday at the state archaeology depa­rt­m­ent.

Hig­hlig­hting how San­gam literature had captured the trade be­t­ween the west and east, he said, “During the first century AD, the kingdoms were highly prosperous and several foreigners had made the sub continent their home since at least 2,000 years ago.”

Interestingly, seafarers used the Ganga for navigation, according to historians. “The ships were smaller in size and were not heavy. Thr­ough Gangesh these ships carried goods till Pat­al­ip­ut­ra, now Patna,” he added.

Historians also said  several mysteries are yet to be un­covered. “‘Periplus of Ery­th­r­ean Sea’ was gleaned from as­sorted records from di­a­r­ies of early ancient Greek sa­i­lors.

It was first tr­a­n­s­lated by famed historian Wil­fred H. Schoff in 1912, and his work is widely acc­ep­ted as the most precise translation of what transpired in trade between these great na­tions during 60 AD,” said Prof. C. Somasundara Rao, retired professor of history, Andhra University.

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> News> Current Affairs / by Prashanth Vijayakumar / September 20th, 2013

Memories of a bygone era

GravesCF23sept2013

Would any of us know that the city of Madurai not only encompasses the monumental remains but also the graves of the important persons belonging to the history? Therefore it comes as no surprise that the city has been nicknamed the ‘Athens of the East’.

The St. George’s cemetery located in Kakathoppu (crow’s grove) houses some of the graves of the British that date back to the time of East India Company’s regime in Tamil Nadu. The oldest graves in the cemetery dates back to 1773 and it is said to have belonged to Captain Christopher Theophilus and Samuel Evas. Sulaimaan, Retired Assistant Director of the Art and Culture Department of Madurai, sheds light on the historical evidences that have been revealed through studies conducted at the cemetery. “When the East India Company was entirely established, they decided to allot an exclusive graveyard as the population grew manifold. They selected this area in Kakathoppu and buried the war heroes of those times including their friends and relatives. The cemetery is more than two hundred years old and houses the bones — including that of the famous General Alan who was the first British person to raise the tax claim to the then ruler Veerapandiya Kattabomman.

The graves in the cemetery are built in a European style. An old hearse that was used to carry the bodies still exists on the premises. Pooja Venkatram, a college student, who came to know about the cemetery, recently says, “After my friends told about this old cemetery and history associated with it, my curiosity was piqued. I visited it with few of my friends for a college project and delved deep to study the history of the place. It was shocking to know that most of the graves belonged to the babies of those times. We were told that it was due to the unbearable heat that led to the death of these little ones. It is such an overwhelming feeling to cross the place every time and it gives me a feeling that the glories of the centuries that was once roaring with praises have been now locked and laying silent inside.”

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> Lifestyle> Travel / DC / byu Teena Limitton / March 20th, 2013

Flower sellers turn entrepreneurs

Suganya is seen with a bouquet at a college event held recently. – DC
Suganya is seen with a bouquet at a college event held recently. – DC

Chennai: 

Twin sisters Suganya and Suriya pursuing BSc Maths in MOP Vaishnav College for women in the city are making their parents proud.

Daughters of flower sellers, these girls string flowers together after college hours and their parents sell them to their regular customers. After knowing the family’s financial position, the college principal Dr K. Nirmala Prasad offered scholarships and also asked them to enroll in bouquet making classes at the college free of cost.

“We learnt bouquet making and now we have plans to start our own business. Thanks to our college lecturers and friends. The college also purchases flowers and bouquets from us for various events,” say Suganya and Suriya.

Though it was not a smooth journey for the twins and their younger brother, Suganya says, “Amma and Appa encourage us to study well. Sometimes we string flowers even till 8 pm and then my mom and dad go on cycles to sell them.

We want to study well and make our parents proud,” says Suganya, who wants to pursue IT and get a job. Suriya wants to develop her family business. “I want to become a florist and also work for deaf and dumb children,” she says.

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> News> Current Affairs  / DC / January 28th, 2013

Sastri was first Tamilian Supreme Court Chief Justice

M Patanjali Sastri, the first member of the Madras Bar who became the Chief Justice of India in 1952, was indeed a Tamilian and hence holds the distinction of being the first CJI from Tamil Nadu, it now emerges.

Since the popular perception among members of the Chennai judiciary is that Sastri hailed from Nellore in Andhra Pradesh, which was mentioned in Express on June 30 in the report on the elevation of Justice P Sathasivam as the next CJI, Saran Patanjali, the grandson of Sastri, has sought to set the record straight. He clarified that his grandfather was born in Mandakolathur (see passport copy on top right), which is in present day Tiruvannamalai district. The old passport of Sastri, preserved by the grandson along with black and white historic photographs, proves that his place of birth was indeed Mandakolathur.

Saran Patanjali said the ‘error/anomaly pertaining to the nativity’ had hurt the family members, and added: “Sri M Patanjali Sastri was the son of Sri Krishna Sastri, a Tamilian who was a Sanskrit scholar and Headmaster of Muthialpet School in Chennai.” Since Sastri is a Tamilian, he was the first CJI from Tamil Nadu, said Patanjali, who is the son of P Nagarajan, the eldest of Sastri’s sons.

Of Sastri’s eight children — three sons, five daughters — a daughter, Tirupurasundari, resides in Bengaluru and even she was upset over the report mentioning her father as a ‘Telugu’, said Patanjali, who studied law but pursued a career in management and is now Vice president of El Forge Ltd in Chennai.

Among Sastri’s descendents, only one grandson, V Balachandr­an, had had a career in law. He had practised at the Madras High Court till his death about three years ago.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Express News Service – Chennai / July 03rd, 2013

‘My Stamp’ initiative gets overwhelming response

RBI regional director J. Sadakkadulla (right) unveiling ‘My stamp’ at the head post office in Chennai on Friday. — DC
RBI regional director J. Sadakkadulla (right) unveiling ‘My stamp’ at the head post office in Chennai on Friday. — DC

Chennai:

Soon people can get themselves featured in postal stamps along with their pets as the ‘My stamp’ initiative is gaining popularity across the country. Already, this novel idea of the postal department has hit record sales with over 60,000 people having booked for ‘My stamp’ covers.

Young crowds have been lured to include their image as sender, say officials of the postal department. “The applicant merely needs to fill a form and submit a photo to the department which will issue his or her photo embedded in the stamp,” said an official.

Surprisingly youth have taken the lead in buying ‘My stamp’. “I love writing letters to my friends. It always helps oneself to improve their language also it will be good memorabilia. and this ‘My stamp’ initiative is a great idea,” said K. Karthika, a college student.

Applicants can receive the form at all philatelic bureaus in the state or at district HQs of the postal department and in Chennai, the philatelic bureau on  Anna Salai is handling the ‘my stamp’ application. “The main aim of the project is to attract youth as sending personal letters between people have become a thing of the past. This measure will evoke a sense of attachment with the post,” said an official.

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> News> Current Affairs / DC / May 04th, 2013

Guess who’s walking the Co-optex ramp

The three-hour programme, the brainchild of Co-optex’s new managing director U. Sagayam, will favour ‘ordinary’ people — farmers, weavers, and their wives will showcase their latest line of outfits. / Photo: S. Sivasaravanan / The Hindu
The three-hour programme, the brainchild of Co-optex’s new managing director U. Sagayam, will favour ‘ordinary’ people — farmers, weavers, and their wives will showcase their latest line of outfits. / Photo: S. Sivasaravanan / The Hindu

Farmers, weavers, transgenders will display line of clothes on Saturday

On Saturday, the city will play host to a unique fashion show. Eschewing svelte models in favour of ‘ordinary’ people, Co-optex has decided that farmers, weavers, and their wives will showcase their latest line of outfits.

Alongside them on the ramp will be folk artists, physically challenged residents, and members of the transgender community.

The aim? To survive in a cut-throat market and to bring Co-optex’s products closer to those who matter, but are generally sidelined by mainstream showrooms.

The three-hour programme is the brainchild of Co-optex’s new managing director U. Sagayam, who has set a high target for the organisation.

For it to survive in the market without the advantages of an advertisement blitzkrieg, he said, it was necessary to challenge cherished facts.

And so, in a daring experiment, regular residents, who know next to nothing about walking the ramp, will display Co-optex’s clothing line.

Mr. Sagayam said he hoped this, along with other sales campaigns, would help make Co-optex a popular brand among a sizeable section of the population before the year is out.

The fashion show, to be held at Co-optex’s Thillayadi Valliammmai complex, will also include a performance by visually impaired people.

The National Institute of Fashion Technology will provide technical support. “But the participants will wear our garments. Weavers, farmers, transgender community members and physically challenged persons survive on the margins of society and are rarely recognised for their work. Co-optex will honour their contributions,” Mr. Sagayam said.

The show will also be organised in Madurai, Coimbatore and Tiruchi.

“During a visit to Arupukkottai soon after taking over here, I was impressed by the hospitality of the weavers,” he said, adding that this inspired him to go ahead and experiment.

Last year, for the first time in its 78-year history, Co-optex managed to earn profits, by netting Rs. 244.61 crore through retail sales.

The organisation has set a target of Rs. 400 crore for the current financial year. “The competition is high now,” Mr. Sagayam admitted.

Several novel initiatives that were introduced last year, such as the ‘Mapillai’ set (clothes for bridegrooms), ‘silk for all’ and ‘old for new’ saris, were a huge hit with customers, Mr. Sagayam added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by R. Sujatha / Chennai – May  03rd, 2013

Hobby horses

Cycling, martial arts, books, designing and entrepreneurship… youngsters’ hobbies range from the conventional to the unconventional. Vanshika Mohta talks to a few youngsters about their avocation.

The word ‘hobby’ originated from the old ‘hobby-horse’, a common name given by the English to their ponies, something the kids, who often played with their wooden toy versions, were fond of, and gradually evolved to mean a favourite pastime.

Hobbies are like the fingerprints of one’s desires and emotions. If you want to keep the zeal on, be it professional or personal, your hobby can supply your mind and self with the indispensible bouts of freshness it needs to keep going. If you have a hobby, realise it, pursue it and live it. It’s the true inner refuge from the cacophony of the outside.

Shyamini Pillai: Reads books with a passion. / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Shyamini Pillai: Reads books with a passion. / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu

Book worm

She was four when Shyamini Pillai, now a 26-year-old Chartered Accountant with Randstad in Chennai, discovered solace in books. A voracious reader, she is currently taking three books down simultaneously! She prefers anything from murder mysteries to chick-lit to mythology, by Indian or foreign writers in the electronic or paperback form, and picks books based on her mood. “I had crazy work timings during my Articleship days as a CA student, returning around one or two in the morning, and my friends would wonder how I’d still have the energy to stay up to read,” claims Shyamini, who cannot sleep without turning a few pages. She falls short of space here, but “back home, in Kochi, I could take you on a tour from wall to wall filled with rows of books. Don’t be surprised if you find some under the bed too,” she laughs! Inspired by words, she tried her hand at writing poetry and short stories when in her Std X, but doesn’t plan on pursuing that further. A die-hard shopping buff, she calls that her second love. No prizes for guessing which series by Sophie Kinsella she enjoys reading! “I relish spending my free time with family and friends. Otherwise, I’m a sports enthusiast and a gym-freak.”

Harsh Gagrani: Makes time for cycling despite a busy professional life./ by Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Harsh Gagrani: Makes time for cycling despite a busy professional life./ by Special Arrangement / The Hindu

Two tyre story

He juggles between tutorials, authoring books and being a part-time quizmaster, but forces himself to squeeze in space for his hobbies which include cycling, a lot of reading and watching movies/TV. With his own share of busy and not-so-busy periods,

Harsh Gagrani, 25, founder – LegalEdge Tutorials and author, from Bhopal makes a conscious effort to allot, however limited, time for cycling every day. “My hobby, for me, is much more than just a way to detach myself from my work for a certain amount of time. It acts as an amazing stress buster, it often instigates me to think out of the box and best of all — it often gives me a much -needed break from all the running around I do while I’m working,” he discloses.

He got his first cycle when he was 10 years old and would seize hours to catch a ride with his friends. Not surprisingly, cycles were replaced with other vehicles, but he managed to pick it up again after college and now, one can often find him rejoicing in a ride alone in one of Bhopal’s cycling clubs. Although he doesn’t go on regular expeditions, he grabs the opportunity if he can and declares that, “if my passion and interest for the same continue, and I manage to sneak in some more time from my work for cycling, I might think about going on long cycling trips.”

Rahul Saraf: Part of a peer group club. / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Rahul Saraf: Part of a peer group club. / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu

Sporty steal

In a profession which involves travelling for about 15-20 days of a month, Rahul Saraf, 26, Director, Kaizen Cold Formed Steel, manages to steal some time for sports, something which has stayed with him since school days. “I joined the Presidency Club a while back and mostly play badminton, golf and snooker. Cricket happens twice or thrice a week,” he recounts. “It’s been 10 years since I played my first badminton match and I developed a liking for it right away.”

Other than being a field for him to socialise and catch up with friends, it gives him a challenge to face and overcome.

He often participates in Inter-club or Intra-club tournaments when possible, peer groups being one of his primary motivating factors. “Playing gives me a different high altogether. It’s an amazing equalizer for all the ups and downs one faces in a normal day and is a productive way to vent one’s frustration,” he admits. He strives to be in shape and is also trying to get into a regular gym routine.

Roli Maheshwari: Dancing for physical and mental upliftment. / by Special Arrangement / Th e Hindu
Roli Maheshwari: Dancing for physical and mental upliftment. / by Special Arrangement / Th e Hindu

Happy feet

Roli Maheshwari joined her first dance class under Shiamak Davar’s when she was five and hasn’t left dancing since. “During family weddings, we never hire a choreographer and I prepare almost all the dance routines for the family functions.”

Operating her own business, this 23-year-old fashion designer from Delhi starts work at nine in the morning and goes on till seven in the evening. Busy seasons see her working into the wee hours of the night, but when she heard of belly dancing classes, she re-organised her schedule.

Having always wanted to learn dance, Roli steals three hours out of her work pattern, twice a week and has been managing comfortably for a year now. “The training is ardous and by the end of it, my stomach muscles ache so much, I have difficulty eating,” she accepts, “but if you can’t find time for your hobby, there’s no point in working hard elsewhere,” she believes. The satisfaction of learning something new keeps her going.

 

Take a stroll

She was one step away from pursuing an MBA when she decided that she didn’t want to study further and enjoyed something else much more. Having interned under a designer for six to nine months, Hasmeet Chawla, 23, Mumbai, started her own line of accessories – Get Accessorised —and has been working on her own for a year now. “I never concentrated much on classes and would end up sketching something or the other. But once I went to Stds XI and XII, I did not think about it again and got into the usual college procedures. It was only after I finished my graduation that I finally revived this hobby and managed to turn it into a profession,” she narrates.

She finds inspiration from nature, common objects, etc. If I have to take a break, I watch movies, go on my evening walks, or listen to music. Mostly of the times, I work for hours together with music in the background,” she says. Five-day long exhibitions and one in every two months are all part of this pursuit. “I bring out in images what people imagine in words and that gives me an inexplicable joy.”

Sachin Agarwal: Pursuing Articleship and entrepreneurship side by side. / by  Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Sachin Agarwal: Pursuing Articleship and entrepreneurship side by side. / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu

Sporty sessions

While work is hectic through the week, respite comes on weekends for Sachin Agarwal, 23, doing his Articleship with Deloitte in Mumbai. “I love to meet with my friends, give out creative ideas, and have debates. All of us are from such different backgrounds that there’s a lot to learn. Three months ago, four of us launched a website, an online retail platform, on hearing about its market from of friends,” explains Sachin, who has been taking time out to work on the website for the past six months, and admits that the venture is less work and more fun.

With one-and-a-half hours per day for three days a week, the gym is his other haunt. “It’s a brilliant kick-start to my mornings and helps me overcome lethargy, making me more agile and energetic for the rest of the day. Moreover, the trend among my peers encourages me to keep going back even when I have not been regular,” he reveals. Saturday evenings are earmarked for football, cricket or volleyball and he also takes regular trekking trips with once the monsoon kicks in.

Nishant Shah: Passionate about gaming and martial arts. / by Special Arrangement / Th e Hindu
Nishant Shah: Passionate about gaming and martial arts. / by Special Arrangement / Th e Hindu

Gaming guru

“I come across a new challenge and experience a surprise every day. My speed, dexterity, strength have all enhanced,” articulates Nishant Shah, 23, Market Analyst, Chennai. He undergoes one and a half hours of intensive training in mixed martial arts, each day after work for five days a week and has been doing so for the past eight months. “When I was younger and I’d watch Karate kid or see people do cartwheel, I’d say to myself that I could never do all that. Now I’m actually doing much more! There are times when we’re just running, running like maniacs, or learning how to retaliate and roll out of a troubled situation,” he says, exhilarated.

The other two days of the week he returns to his hobby — video games. “Gaming has evolved from just jumping left and right and shooting to so much more.” To him, they are like short narratives, an experience not very different from reading a book or watching a movie, except that the story is in the player’s control. “I’m completely immersed in the characters; they transport me to a parallel universe. If I read about a great game online, I don’t mind staying up a few hours extra to try it out,” he confesses.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Vanshika Mohta / Chennai – July 03rd, 2013