Category Archives: Inspiration/ Positive News and Features

A housewife who found her calling at 60 to be a writer

Coimbatore:

V Vedavalli, who was leading the life of an orthodox housewife from a middle class family that was reluctant even to let her work, responded to a bigger calling at the age of 60 and started writing books. Her first book was released at the age of 64. Now at 70, she has completed the draft of three books – one on Indira Gandhi, one on Buddha and the other on Velunaichiyar, the valiant queen who fought the British.

She says at the age of 59 when she looked back at her life, she realized that she hadn’t achieved anything. All she could see was that she had been a daughter, a wife, a mother and a home maker. “I wanted to leave my mark and do something that would remain long after I am gone,” she says. Interested in history, social science, politics and spiritual studies, she wrote her first book on Mahabharatam at the age of 60.

Vedhavalli belonged to a very orthodox family and was not even allowed to work after marriage. “Only when we faced a financial crisis, was I allowed to work as an accountant in a company. After the company shut down, I indulged in some handicraft. But I always loved reading and writing,” she said.

But when she decided to write a book, everyone including her family mocked at her. “Everyone laughed and asked me if this was necessary at this age. As I came from humble backgrounds, nobody took me seriously as well,” she said. Not one to be discouraged she started reading voraciously and after reading over 100 books and travelling to various universities to get help from professors, she completed her first book ‘Vedhavalliyin Mahabharatham’. With little knowledge of computers and internet, she said her main aim was to ensure that her book was error free. She was even felicitated for her book by the Tamil Sangam. “When my first book was published, I was on top of the world. I felt I had achieved something and that is when my family also started taking my work seriously,” she said.

She has also written three other books and has travelled extensively for those. She is working towards getting these books published. “I got very little support from my family and so I struggled a lot in my research work. I would get up at 4 and write till 6.30 am. Then after completing my household chores, I would visit libraries at 4 pm and return by 6 pm. Again I would start writing at 11 pm and work till 12.30 am on my book,” she said. When she had to stay for 14 days in Madurai alone to research for her book on Velunaichiyar, she said she was very scared. “I had never lived alone before. That was a challenge and I am glad I have overcome it successfully,” she said. Her book is available at the government libraries. “The other three books will also be published by April and will be available at government libraries,” she said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Coimbatore / by Komal Gautham / TNN / March 08th, 2016

Engineers to pedal, push for traditional farming methods

Chennai :

Two city engineers who gave up the cushy confines of their IT offices to take up farming have planned to cycle across villages of India next month, with the goal of accumulating knowledge about traditional farming methods that have lost significance since the rise of chemical farming. The second phase of the cycle expedition will see the two farmers travel through eleven countries in southeast Asia.

Vinodh Kumar, 31, and Raja S Pandian, 27, left their jobs two years ago and have since been ploughing the fields in their hometown with a focus of bringing back traditional farming.

Vinoth says, “Chemical fertilisers and pesticides have brought down the quality of farming output. We want to revive the traditional crops.” Vinoth grows millets and local vegetables like ladies’ fing er, brinjal and broad beans in his one and a half acre organic farm in Cheyyur, 90 km from Chennai.

“We were exposed to farming during our school summer holidays. After school closed, we were sent to the fields in our village where we herded cattle and spent the day under the sun in the banana plantations,” says Raja.Raja hails from Valliyur, a village near Tirunelveli, while Vinoth is from Cheyyur.

Vinodh who had worked at companies like Zoho, Standard Chartered Bank and Groupon gave up engineering when he realized his true calling.Vinoth, along with Raja, took two years off and backpacked across the villages in the country covering almost every single state. “I made more money than I had time to spend it,” says Vinoth who chose health over wealth.

“Our food habits have gotten worse. Once health deteriorates you cannot buy it back with money,” adds Vinoth who passed out of SRM Engineering College.

It then directed the owners to pay `10 lakh as compensation for causing men al agony , `3 lakh as losses suffered by Natesan, ` 35,000 as refund and `Rs 20,000 as case costs.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Chennai / by Abdullah Nurullah / March 03rd, 2016

Only Pancreas; 1st Time in India

ApolloCF27feb2016

Chennai  :

Apollo Hospitals Chennai has recently transplanted a pancreas.

Generally, the pancreas is transplanted along with kidneys.

The pancreas harvested from a 20-year-old brain-dead person was flown in from Coimbatore and successfully taken to Apollo Main Hospitals, Chennai, with the help of Chennai Traffic Police who created a green corridor from the airport to the hospital.

The recipient is a 33-year-old man with insulin dependent diabetes and ‘hypoglycemia unawareness’. These patients do not get warning signs of low blood sugar (sweat, heart pounding etc) and consequently just drop when the sugar gets critically low.

The organ was transplanted by a team of surgeons at the Center for Liver Disease and Transplantation, Apollo Hospitals, Chennai. Dr Anil Vaidya le the surgery.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Express News Service / February 25th, 2016

She is an officer and a woman

When Chennai girl Divya Ajith Kumar became the first lady cadet to bag the prestigious Sword of Honour from the Officers Training Academy (OTA) in 2010, little did she know she was inspiring girls across the nation. Renu Shekhawat from Rajastnan followed in her footsteps and joined the OTA last year. Like the 33 other lady cadets about to pass out of the academy this March, Renu hopes to bag top honours. The women will have to compete with 150 other gentlemen cadets including trainees from across the world.

Divya soon became Captain and was the first woman to lead a CRPF contingent at the 2015 Republic Day parade in the capital. “When I read in the newspaper about Divya’s achievement I decided to join the Army . Gender is no barrier here at the academy .We are all put through the same gruelling course,” says Renu.

Just last year, it was academy under officer M Anjana from Ernakulam who won the Sword of Honour. Anjana, 25, worked at a law firm after studying at the Government Law College in Mumbai. A trained Bharatnatyam dancer, she also holds a master’s degree in fine arts. She outclassed more than a hundred other male cadets to bag the credit for merit and overall performance after 48 weeks of gruelling training. The cadets are put through unforgiving physical tasks including route marches where they run for distances ranging from 20km to 40km through perilous terrain.

The trainees this year missed out on participating in the Chennai Marathon as they had just completed the mandatory 40km run the previous day at Hanumanthapura. Anjana was a podium finisher at the marathon when she was in Chennai undergoing training. Sahadev Rathore, who completed the run says, “It is the toughest of the endurance tests.”

Women match men in strength training and other physical tasks that include a 14-obstacle courses, to the point that one can hardly differentiate between men and women training at the academy . Age or marital status is no bar either as proven by 2015 `Veer Nari’ recipient Ruchi Verma who joined the academy after her husband Major Vineet Verma died in action in the insurgency-hit Balipara, Assam L in 2013.

The ‘veer nari’ title given to army widows wasn’t enough for Verma: She stepped out of the comforts of her home and virtually took over her husband’s duty to the nation. Last year, 24year old Ruchi was among the 185 cadets of OTA who were formally inducted as officers of the Indian Army . “My life has turned upside down since I joined the training academy, ” Ruchi had said after the piping ceremony that commissioned her as lieutenant. She hopes her six-year old son Akshat Verma will join the Army someday .

The trainees at the academy are looking forward to this year’s piping ceremony, to be held on March 12, where winners of top honours including gold, silver and bronze medals, and the coveted Sword of Honour will be announced. Women cadets stole the show last year where Anjana also won gold, while the bronze medal went to another lady cadet, Madhavi Rai.

The passing out officers will be posted at various army bases across the country where they will command troops of soldiers starting April.
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> India /by Abdullah Nurullah / TNN / February 26th, 2016

HOD With Disability, a 1st at Presidency College

Chennai :

Associate professor Jayachandran’s is a story of many firsts. A first-generation graduate from an agricultural family, he was also the first visually challenged student to earn a PhD in Tamil literature at the international level. Last year, he was made the Head of Tamil department in Presidency College, the first visually challenged person to become HoD of a department in the college’s 175-year history.

The 53-year-old is the senior most professor in his department. “I was made the HoD based on my seniority,” he says modestly, while dictating notes to an assistant at his office. The furniture in his office and the infrastructure of the classrooms and the department in general seem to have been unaltered since the year the department was formed in 1856. “There are no office assistants and sanitary workers appointed and not enough financial assistance. So, we have to pay from our own pocket,” says Jayachandran.

A native of Kumalam village in Villupuram district, Jayachandran studied in Cuddalore till Class 5 and completed his schooling at the Poonamalee School for the Blind. It is here that his desire to become a professor was born.

“I had a visually challenged teacher when I was in Class 5. I thought, probably this is the line destined for people like us,” he recalls. College education at Pachayappa’s and a PhD at the University of Madras followed — he was a student of the varsity’s former vice chancellor, Professor Porko.

 

Dr R Jayachandran  P Ravikumar
Dr R Jayachandran  P Ravikumar

Jayachandran considers himself lucky, as he could not see the ‘looks’ from people who discriminated against persons with disabilities. But, his hearing sense, which works perfectly, had to bear some of the insensitive remarks. “Please don’t sit on the first bench! Feels like bad omen,” a lecturer had told him when he was a college student.

In 1990, he got his first posting at Kolanjiappar College, Virudachalam, where the students too used to take advantage of his condition. “Compared to my initial days, students at Presidency College are more cultured. They help us out,” he recalls.

Jayachandran, who had climbed the steps of The Great Wall of China in 2006, says he still has a long way to go. His interest now is to help visually challenged students with computer training. His expertise extends to the Braille teaching methods on a computer and he has also helped develop the Braille and audio division at Anna Library.

His wife, Vennila Juliet, is a teacher at a Corporation school and the couple have a daughter.

FACTOIDS

9 Visually challenged professors in Presidency College, including Dr R Jayachandran

5 Professors out of 22 are visually challenged in the Tamil department

3 Visually challenged professors in the English department and one in the History department too

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Srikanth Dhasarathy / February 24th, 2016

Awards presented

Rathinam Group of Institutions presented the Icons of Coimbatore Award to 16 individuals at a function held on Friday and lyricist Vairamuthu handed over the awards.

The awardees were Corporation Commissioner K. Vijayakarthikeyan, G.C. Shyam Sunder of ACC cements, Hemalatha Annamalai, CEO of Ampere Vehicles, Devika Ramesh of RMP Group of Companies, Suresh Bhandari of Clean Cities Foundation, Journalist R. Muthukumar, P. Kanagaraj of Government Arts College, V. Jeevananantham, president of Chitrakala Academy, V. Balasubramanian, retired Medical Superintendent of ESIC, P. Mahendiran of Eera Nenjam NGO, Karate black belt winner Sai Kunthavi Senthil Kumar, National award winner for person with disabilities Master S. Sabari Venkat, Sri Ramakrishna Engineering College principal N.R. Alamelu, Sudha Manoharan of Sri Eshwar College of Engineering, Manmathan, CEO of Sankara Eye Hospital and V. Purushottaman, director of Hotel Anandhaas.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by  Special Correspondent / February 21st, 2016

Meet Swetha, First Narikurava Engineering Girl from Tamil Nadu

The first Narikurava engineering girl wants noon meal organiser post to serve her people
The first Narikurava engineering girl wants noon meal organiser post to serve her people

Tiruchy :

The urge to do something for the people of her community pushed the 22 year old first Narikurava engineering graduate of Tamil Nadu to apply for noon meal organiser’s post in the primary school in her colony here with the district collector on Monday.

“Most of our children suffer of anaemic due to malnutrition. We are known for good physical condition once owing to our food habits. But now, those food items are not available to our community and so most of them are suffering a lot” Swetha, the first BE in Computer Science in Narikurava community told Express.

Though Swetha, who studied BE in a local engineering college was selected for a company in Chandigarh through campus interview, she refused the offer and was seriously thinking of her community people who mostly drop out after  primary school education. The main thing in my mind is to make our children from present symptoms with anaemic problems. She opted for the post as the staff retired recently and the post is lying vacant in the school- Thiruvalluvar Gurukula Primary school, an aided school run by Narikurava education and welfare society.

“Previously, the staff use to go away after two hours work. If i am selected, i can stay along with our children and do whatever they are in need. Let me make them healthy first” the determined Swetha stressed.

As usual, she has been ridiculed by her community people and a few of her college mates.  But, Swetha, is firm in her decision and will work for the people by all means.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by S J Michael Collins / February 15th, 2016

Skiing champ gets hip replacement done in city

Chennai:

In 1976, Frederick Schmidt was part of the Austrian team that won a silver medal for skiing in a qualifying competition for the Innsbruck Winter Olympics.

Agonised over severe pain of the hip in December last year, this athlete-turned-physical trainer logged on to the internet in search of a hip surgeon.

It took him to Chennai orthopaedic surgeon C Vijay Bose who specialises in joint replacements. “Many friends supported my idea,” said Schmidt, after a 3km walk towards the Mamallapuram beach on Thursday.

Schmidt underwent a hip replacement surgery at SIMS Hospital in Vadapalani on January 28. Doctors declared him fit for discharge on Thursday.

Schmidt said he would be flying back home soon.

Doctors at the hospital said Schmidt developed secondary osteoarthritis after he sustained hip injuries in a bike accident.

“He was medically managed but he told us he was in pain,” said his surgeon Dr Bose.

Schmidt had refused surgery in Sweden because he was told there would be a lot of restriction on his sports activities. “When we spoke to him about hip resurfacing, he was convinced that he could start competing again in endurance races,” he said.

During the surgery doctors cut the capsule along the femoral head the highest bone on the thigh without disturbing the other parts of the bone.

“So we preserve blood vessels along the femoral neck, which may in turn preserve blood supply for the femoral head.This will improve longevity of the resurfacing and enable a faster recovery,” Dr Bose said.

Schmidt left the hospital on Thursday evening, promising to return as a participant for the 2017 Chennai Marathon.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Chennai / TNN / February 05th, 2016

TN IPS officer first woman to head paramilitary force

Chennai  :

Archana Ramasundaram, a 1980-batch IPS officer of Tamil Nadu cadre, has been appointed director general of Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB), a paramilitary organisation guarding the country’s eastern frontiers with Nepal and Bhutan. She is the first woman IPS officer to head SSB since its inception in 1963 and will continue in that post till her retirement on September 30, happy to head next year. “I am happy to head SSB and want to use my years of experience to improve the force,”Ramasundaram told TOI over phone.

In 2014, she was caught in a tug-of-war between the Centre and Tamil Nadu government when the UPA government was in power. She was selected as additional director of CBI in Delhi after clearance from the state government. But the state did not relieve her from TN police after she was selected for the CBI post. Ramasundaram, who has replaced B D Sharma, another official from her batch, who retired from service on January 31, was director of National Crime Records Bureau in New Delhi since June last year. The Union government had upgraded the post of director NCRB to that of director general of police to accommodate her in that post.

In 2014, based on instruction from Centre to join duty at CBI headquarters, she sent a letter to the chief secretary of Tamil Nadu and shifted to Delhi in 2014. This resulted in her suspension by the state government on charges that she deserted office. The Centre, last year, quashed her suspension. Though the state moved the Delhi high court on appeal, the petition was dismissed.

Ramasundaram, known among her colleagues as an upright official, is the senior most IPS officer in Tamil Nadu cadre at present. The pre sent DGP of Tamil Nadu Ashok Kumar, is two years junior to her. She hails from Ballia in Uttar Pradesh and is married to S Ramasunda ram, a 1979 batch IAS officer from Tamil Nadu, who took voluntary retirement from service in 2011.

There are five paramilitary forces SSB, Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) Border Security Force (BSF) Central Industrial Security Force and Indo Tibetan Border Police and none has ever had a woman chief.

Besides Ramasundaram, IPS officers, K Durga Prasad and K K Sharma, have been appointed directors general of CRPF and BSF, respectively.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Chennai / TNN / February 02nd, 2016

ISTE award for engineering college professor

N. Santhiyakumari, Professor and head, Electronics and Communication Engineering, Knowledge Institute of Technology, Salem, receiving the Indian Society for Technical Education award at the 45th ISTE annual convention in Amravathi, Maharashtra.
N. Santhiyakumari, Professor and head, Electronics and Communication Engineering, Knowledge Institute of Technology, Salem, receiving the Indian Society for Technical Education award at the 45th ISTE annual convention in Amravathi, Maharashtra.

The India Society for Technical Education (ISTE) has announced 20 awards in various disciplines in connection with the 45th ISTE annual convention, 2015.

The ISTE recognises research work from all over the country.

N. Santhiyakumari, Professor and Head, Electronics and Communication Engineering, Knowledge Institute of Technology, Salem was selected for the Maharashtra State National Award – 2015 in recognition of her outstanding research work in the area of biomedical image processing. She received the award from Anandrao Adsul, MP, at a function organised by the ISTE, New Delhi, at the HVPM’s College of Engineering and Technology, Amravati, Maharashtra.

Dr. Santhiyakumari won the award for her research work on implementation of medical decision making system for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease analysis, a press release from the college said

ISTE recognises research works from all over the country

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Tamil Nadu / by Special Correspondent / Salem – January 31st, 2016