Category Archives: Records, All

Yards to dream upon

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From portraits to Christmas patterns, the recently-concluded International Quilt Show showcased creative works of various sizes, shades and nationalities

Jim Morrison strikes a pose with his guitar as disco lights twinkle overhead. Then there are glasses of martini — shaken not stirred — dancing peacocks, cobbled stone paths and landscapes… all on quilts. The recently-concluded International Quilt Show, part of India Quilt Festival 2019 (organised by India Quilt Foundation), displayed patterns that ranged from creative and dramatic to quirky.

“This is the first time this event is being organised in India,” says Tina Katwal, who started India Quilt Foundation along with Deepa Vasudevan and Varsha Sundararajan in January 2018. The event was divided into two sections: competition and exhibition. The competition featured around 290 quilts. With its dizzying colours, varied themes and intricate work, the displays made sure the attendees had their phone cameras out the whole time. The lure of the quilts also ensured heavy traffic outside Sri Sankara Hall, the venue, as people came in droves to witness works of art.

The exhibition section had around 70 quilts, some on loan from countries such as the US, Hungary, Guatemala, Korea, Kuwait, UAE and Scotland.

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“India has a large number of talented quilters. While quilting festivals happen the world over, we wondered why it hadn’t been organised here before. We have an online community called Desi Quilters. They seemed excited about the idea of a quilt show. And that’s how it started,” says Tina, who owns a quilt store called The Square Inch.

All about talent

Chitra Mandanna can hardly stop smiling. Of her six exhibited works, four have won her awards. “These include Best of Show and Judges’ Choice in the Art category, and a first prize and an honorary mention in the Theme category,” says Chitra.

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A striking portrait of her uncle, made using cheesecloth and denim, stands out. “It took me a month to create this. Working with cheesecloth can be challenging,” says the 42-year-old, adding, “It took me seven months to complete all six quilts. I’ve used techniques such as beading, fabric manipulation, upcycling, confetti quilting…” Only after she lists the different techniques do we realise that there is so much more to quilting than just stitching together layers of fabric, usually saris.

The show also had entries by children, their quilts brimming with things that occupy their thoughts — cupcakes, ice cream sundaes and ice lollies. Ten-year-old S Ritika’s quilt is just as petite as her. The 26X40 inch quilt features a patchwork of chubby yellow, green, orange, pink and brown birds against a black background. “My mother introduced me to quilting. We have two machines at home and sew together,” says Ritika, who took two weeks to complete her quilt.

What also stands out is a hot pink quilt, with rectangular bars in sea green, brown, tan and shades of pink, created using patchwork and machine quilting techniques. Something that would look great as a sari. People around fondly refer to it as the “muttai pink delight”.

Monochrome on Fabric
Monochrome on Fabric

“It’s actually a throw,” says Kamala Murali, its 29-year-old creator. “I am a textile designer and use a lot of quilts in my work,” she says, adding, “My grandmother has always collected quilts and since there is something so comforting about quilts, I gravitate towards it.” Kamala is also launching her own textile label titled Kambli, which means quilt in Tamil (nothing to do with Vinod Kambli, the cricketer!).

Quilting is no longer a hobby of the older generations. “I’ve noticed a lot of young people taking to it. I think it’s because they get a large surface to express what they want to say,” says Kamala.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Entertainment> Art / by Priyadarshini Paitandy / January 28th, 2019

The music keeper

It’s 11.30 am as we walk our way through the bustling streets of radio market on Anna Salai.

John came to Chennai in the 1980s for a television repairing and service course  Ashwin Prasath
John came to Chennai in the 1980s for a television repairing and service course  Ashwin Prasath

Chennai :

It’s 11.30 am as we walk our way through the bustling streets of radio market on Anna Salai. A three-storied building with a board ‘Torvin Audio System’ catches our attention. As we step into the building, we notice a huge projector mounted on the wall along with advanced speakers, amplifiers and home theatres arranged in a studio-like set-up to our right. An assistant guides us to M John Thankachan’s room on the first floor. John is the founder of Torvin Audio System, and is passionate about music and audio electronics.

Ingeniously Indian
John Thankachan is popular in the Indian audio industry. His selfless contribution towards taking music to audiophiles and people from all walks of life through affordable and made-in-India gadgets has earned him the title ‘Father of Indian audio systems’. Down-to-earth, open-minded and hard-working — these are the three words to sum up his persona. Dressed in a white shirt and black pants, John welcomes us into his room with a smile. Electronic magazines are piled up on his table, shelves are stacked with encyclopedias, client folders, and awards, and walls are filled with paintings and motivational quotes. Books, greenery, and music are an inevitable part of his life.

“I like enriching myself with updates and advancements in technology daily through Internet and magazines. I have hard disks with thousands of songs. I’ve been on a solo journey from the beginning. To design music equipment, you need to be a music lover after all,” says John, who lives in Anna Salai with his family. He came to the city 40 years back. John, son of a farmer, was born in a village called Poomala in Thrissur. He completed his diploma in electronics and communication and worked in Murphy Service Center in Kerala for four years. John came to Chennai in the 1980s for a television repairing and service course.

The man behind Torvin
Talking about the inception of his brand, John says, “That was a phase when there were several hindrances in servicing international brands due to the unavailability of spare parts. What started out on a small scale to offer servicing solutions to audio equipment later turned me into an equipment maker. I founded the Power Electronics & Technologies in 1980. In 1990, I started the brand Torvin Audio System and we’ve been in this building for 23 years now,” says John. He was honoured as a Doctor of Audio Engineering and Research by America West University, California, in 2005.

John kickstarted his business in a 150-sq ft room. Currently, he has his own servicing unit, a manufacturing place, and outlets. Unlike a typical workspace, his office has four large speakers with exceptional sound emanating from them. Transparent boxes with connectors, moulded samples, sockets, diodes, and knobs are neatly labelled and arranged on the shelves. The motherboards of the amplifiers and spare parts of gadgets are scattered on the side table, there are a few demo models under testing, and charts with diagrams hung on the walls. His service room is no less than a lab.

“The three challenges in electronic industry are  lack of spare parts, skilled labour, and competitive mushrooming of foreign brands. I emphasise on the tagline, which is also my logo, — ‘It’s Indian’. All the equipment here is made with Indian components as much as possible and are priced affordably. But, the radio markets are flooded with Chinese products and people fall for that. We Indians are capable but do not appreciate or support one another. Secondly, engineers go for IT jobs for good pay. Nobody takes up electronics, so there’s always a shortage of labour. It takes years of experience to earn recognition in this field,” he says..

Musical experiences
John’s first innovation was a single station radio for `40 in the 1970s. Subwoofer amplifier, tower speakers and audio systems — he has manufactured them himself. His latest creation under progress is called the project 1.3 speaker system and his best work is a six-foot tower speaker. In the 90s, John was the first to introduce virtual home theatres to Indians. He also built the fully-protected amplifier to bring a theatrical impact at home. He also has a huge collection of electronic gadgets, spanning different eras, stored in a dust-free room on the second floor that is vacuum-cleaned once in three months. One of the oldest of the lot is a radio from the 1950s. John’s favourite is a walkman with a mini-reel player from the 70s. Radios, gramophones, disc players, vinyl, laser discs,and  mics, are some of his priceless possessions.

“Given the time and opportunity, I’d like to pass on my knowledge by conducting workshops for sound and electronic engineering students. Lastly, people should listen to good music that captures the sound of every instrument and enhances the singer’s voice,” he says.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Vaishali Vijaykumar / Express News Service / January 29th, 2019

MSU’s IT Incubation Centre dream realised

Vice-Chancellor, MSU, K. Baskar, middle, and Senior Finance Officer, Software Technology Parks of India, Devekara Venkanna, exchanging MoU documents in Tirunelveli on Thursday. | Photo Credit: t
Vice-Chancellor, MSU, K. Baskar, middle, and Senior Finance Officer, Software Technology Parks of India, Devekara Venkanna, exchanging MoU documents in Tirunelveli on Thursday. | Photo Credit: t

Signs an MoU with STPI, New Delhi

Manonmaniam Sundaranar University’s long cherished dream of setting up the Information Technology Incubation Centre on its premises has finally been realised.

A Memorandum of Understanding with the Software Technology Parks of India (STPI), New Delhi, for setting up an Information Technology Incubation Centre to cater to the needs of the young entrepreneurs in this region by providing an extent of three acres of land on the University campus was signed on Thursday.

The agreement was signed by Vice-Chancellor K. Baskar and Senior Finance Officer, STPI, Devekara Venkanna, STPI in the presence of Registrar, Dr. S. Santhosh Baboo.

Based on the MoU, the STPI will soon invest around ₹ 30 crore for creating infrastructure, export of computer software, IT-enabled services including export of professional services and electronic hardware.

The MoU will facilitate the students of Manonmaniam Sundaranar University to train themselves on a par with the industry standards using the IT Incubation Centre. It will further help to start new IT companies inside the campus which will eventually create the job opportunity to the students.

Though the Manonmaniam Sundaranar University planned to establish the IT Incubation Centre on its premises quite long back, the land required for the venture could not be allotted to STPI. The reason was that there was no separate patta in the name of the University for its 546.98 acre in the Abhishekapatti campus that still belonged to the Department of Animal Husbandry, the actual owner of the land.

Following the steps taken by Dr. Baskar, Manonmaniam Sundaranar University recently received patta for the entire 546.98 acres of its Abishekapatti campus after paying ₹11.50 crore to Department of Animal Husbandry and Live Stock that subsequently paved way for signing of MoU with STPI, New Delhi, a Ministry of Information and Communication’s venture.

The 3 acres of land will be used by the STPI for a lease period of 30 years to run the IT Incubation Centre primarily for the development of young students residing in Tirunelveli, Thoothukudi and Kanniyakumari districts with employable qualities and transform them into entrepreneurs.

Moreover, young entrepreneurs and people across the country can also utilize the facilities by setting up their own companies at the IT Incubation Centre of Manonmaniam Sundaranar University.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Madurai / by Special Correspondent / Tirunelveli  – January 24th, 2019

Chennai’s Omandurar Hospital sets another record with minimally invasive heart surgery

The doctors performed Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI), a minimally invasive surgical procedure that repairs the valve without removing the old, damaged valve on two senior citizens.

Chennai :

Another feather has been added to the cap of the Tamil Nadu Government’s Multi Super-Specialty Hospital at the Omandurar Estate with the private doctors performing advanced heart surgery, first-of-its-kind procedure, on two senior citizens in the government sector hospitals in the State recently.

The State Health Department signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in 2018 with paediatric cardiologist Dr Neville Solomon and interventional cardiologist Dr A B Gopalmurugan, who head the Heart Team India, to perform the advanced procedure at government hospitals for the initiative.

The doctors performed Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI), a minimally invasive surgical procedure that repairs the valve without removing the old, damaged valve on two senior citizens at the Tamil Nadu Government Multi Super-Speciality Hospital at the Omandurar Estate on November 16.

“The State Health Department signed MoU with Heart Team India to perform the procedure and it is an initiative of Health Minister C Vijaya Baskar,” said Dr V Anandakumar, Nodal Officer, Tamil Nadu Multi Super-Specialty Hospital.

Speaking to Express, Dr Gopalmurugan said, “So far it was limited to private hospitals only. Now things have changed with the procedure performed at the Government Multi Super-Speciality Hospital at the Omandurar Estate,” he added.

“In conventional procedure, the main valve aortic valve is replaced by an open heart procedure, but in TAVI, the new valve is implanted in the place of old valve through a blood vessel. Just like stenting,” Dr Gopalmurugan explained the procedure.

“The procedure is generally done for people beyond the age of 60 here. But, it can be performed on anybody who needs aortic valve replacement from low-risk group to medium-risk group for open heart surgery. Though in other countries open heart procedures were almost stopped and shifted to minimally invasive procedures, in India still open heart procedures are being done,” said Dr Gopalmurugan.

“This advanced procedure was only available at private hospitals, but with the initiative taken, it has reached even the poor. It is performed under the Chief Minister Comprehensive Health Insurance Scheme,” he said. “The procedure was performed on two senior citizen, one from Rajapalayam and other from Erode. The patients were doing well and discharged subsequently,” Dr Anandakumar told Express.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Express News Service / January 14th, 2019

Showcasing visionaries of Coimbatore

Portraits of illustrious entrepreneurs of Coimbatore are on display along Race Course on Friday. | Photo Credit: M. Periasamy
Portraits of illustrious entrepreneurs of Coimbatore are on display along Race Course on Friday. | Photo Credit: M. Periasamy

TiE Coimbatore, under the theme Fostering Entrepreneurship, is organising “The Visionaries – Dreamers who built Coimbatore” as part of Coimbatore Vizha.

As part of the event, portraits of 20 great personalities of yesteryears, who had contributed immensely for the growth of Coimbatore and who reaffirmed the entrepreneurial spirit, will be on display along Race Course till Sunday.

The objective was to show the young minds the contributions of these dynamic entrepreneurs, said Ranjana Singhal and Hemalatha, secretary and president of TiE Coimbatore.

The portraits are that of L.G. Varadaraj, N. Mahalingam, SRP Ponnusamy, SP Narashimalu Naidu, Sir Robert Stanes, Swamikannu Vincent, R.S. Shamugam Chettiar, P.A. Raju Chettiar, Sri Ramulu Naidu, PSG Brothers, G.K. Devarajulu, GD Naidu, R.K. Venkatasamy Naidu, K. Damodarasamy Naidu, N.K. Mahadeva Iyer, A.P. Thiruvenkatasamy Mudaliar, P. Somasundara Chettiar, Textool Balasundaram, P.B. Krishnamurthy, and DPF Narayanasamy Naidu. The portraits will have a small note explaining their contributions.

Family members of a few personalities attended the inauguration event on Friday.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Special Correspondent / Coimbatore – January 12th, 2019

Ponnaiyan, poet Thiyaroo among nine to get Tamil Nadu state awards

Each award carries Rs 1 lakh, gold medal and a citation.

Chennai :

The State government on Monday announced the names of recipients of nine awards being presented to mark the Thiruvalluvar Day celebrations.

The awardees are: Pazha Nedumaran (Kamarajar award), C Ponnaiyan (Periyar award), Soolur Kalaipithan (KAP Viswanatham award), Poet Thiyaroo (Bharathidasan award), Dr K Ganesan (Thiru.Vi.Ka award), M Bharathi Sugumaran (Bharathiyar award), M Aikkan (Perarignar Anna award) C Ramaguru (Ambedkar award), and MG Anwar Batcha (Thiruvalluvar award).

Each award carries Rs 1 lakh, gold medal and a citation.  It will be presented by the Chief Minister on January 21.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Express News Service / January 15th, 2019

Eighth edition of Muthiah’s Madras Rediscovered launched

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A city called home: S Muthiah’s Madras Rediscovered, recently launched in its eighth edition, is a leisurely read of Chennai, its people, places and history

City chronicler S Muthiah ferrets out a copy of Madras Discovered, first published in 1981. The book’s dust jacket has turned sepia — some of the stories in it are old, laced with nostalgia and fraying at the edges, while others have passed into the realm of memory. And yet, the tome, once priced at Rs.10 for 172 small pages that has now grown to 600 larger pages with a new title, continues to be considered a seminal work on this gracious southern city.

Raised and educated abroad, Muthiah chose Madras as his home in the late 1960s. One of his first assignments at his new job at TTK Maps was to write the text to accompany a street guide to the city. “The book was published by East West Books and most of the material was discovered in the course of a search that was part of a bigger project. Some of it, such as the ‘Tales of Old and New Madras’, were published in Aside magazine,” says Muthiah. “What fascinated me as I continued to read about the city was that, in a sense, Madras was the first city of Empire. It was here that Robert Clive, Warren Hastings, Wellington and Elihu Yale started their careers; here that the foundations for the school of Engineering and Survey was laid.”

Although the current edition travels back eons to dwell briefly on the city’s Megalithic and early Tamil history, its forte lies in showcasing the years when it was Britain’s colonial outpost.

As Britain moved from commerce to conquest, its scarlet stains spreading across the world map, marking the extent of its Empire, the book closely follows the story, holding its own amidst the glut of literature that has been written on the political, commercial, social and cultural equations that Britain and India have shared.

“The early editions were references to the initial years of the British in India, but in the eighth edition, we travelled back and looked at the city before the European period. This was a nod to the fact that parts of the city, in some way, existed before the establishment of Fort St George,” he says.

With the keen eye of an observer and without descending into the tidal shifts of coloniser and the colonised, Muthiah captures vignettes of Madras in his inimitable old-fashioned, witty prose.“There are two levels to the book — the history of buildings in Madras, and the stories connected with them,” he adds, flipping through the book that alternates between places and anecdotes. “If you are interested in the city, you’d read the first part but if you love the stories of the people who made the city then ‘Once Upon a City’ is for you.”

So, the reader is handheld through the building of the Fort overlooking the Bay’s sludgy waters topped with white foamy chevrons, while also reading on the scandalous romance of Hastings and Marian (a German baroness) that began here and culminated in marriage in Calcutta. The action then moves to the club and press institutions of Mount Road, the founding of The Hindu as a major opposition paper in imperial times and its contribution to the Indian Independence movement, the sport this city plays, its seat of Theosophy, mercantile giants such as Binny and Parry, its Indo-Saracenic architecture, its educational and cultural institutions and its changing face.

“Whatever has been filed on the city — whether it be by historians such as Sriram V or Chithra Madhavan or by others — is vetted and added to subsequent editions. It is a continuous process and work for the next edition has already begun,” says 88-year-old Muthiah.

The book, interspersed with rare black-and-white photographs and colour maps, ends with a chronological history of Madras and an extensive bibliography. It is a remarkable effort to understand the weft of a modern metropolis as much as it is a love song to a city we know so well.

(Madras Rediscovered, published by Westland is priced at ₹799)

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Deepa Alexander / January 10th, 2019

Danish man comes to Chennai in search of his roots

The orphanage closed down about 35 years ago, after which David and Martin were taken to Denmark by George, who used to run the home, in 1979.

(Above) David alias Shanthakumar. (R) with his mother | Express
(Above) David alias Shanthakumar. (R) with his mother | Express

Chennai :

Tracing his roots, a 40-year-old Danish man, David alias Shanthakumar has reached the city. He was given for adoption three decades ago. Born in 1978 to Dhanalakhsmi and Kaliamoorthy, David and his brother Martin alias Rajan were handed over to an orphanage in Pallavaram.

The orphanage closed down about 35 years ago, after which David and Martin were taken to Denmark by George, who used to run the home, in 1979.David was adopted immediately by a Danish couple, the next year Martin was also adopted by another Danish family. George then returned back to Chennai.David first came to Chennai in 2013. He wanted to begin the search for his roots from George. But he learnt that had died almost a decade ago. He had hit a roadblock.

“After continuous searching, David found out that his birth name was Santhakumar and that he had a brother whose birth name was Rajan, later rechristened as Martin. He found out that Martin also lived in Denmark,” said Anjali Pawar, a lawyer who is helping David find his parents.Thanks to social media, David found Martin on Facebook and connected with him. In 2014, David got in touch with Arun Dohle, the co-founder of  ‘Against Child Trafficking’, an NGO helping people reunite with their birth parents.
The NGO workers helped David check the Chennai Corporation’s birth registry, and David found his brother’s birth certificate.

The document had an address of a residence in Tondiarpet — perhaps where his parents lived at that point in time. Through subsequent investigations, David found out that his parents had shifted to Tiruvottriyur. Now, David has a photo of him with his mother and his brother Martin. His search will continue.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Express News Service / January 10th, 2019

A Danish citizen searches for his roots

Looking for answers: Casper Anderson showing reporters a photo from his childhood. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
Looking for answers: Casper Anderson showing reporters a photo from his childhood. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

43-year-old Casper Anderson was adopted from India when he was 4 years old

Casper Anderson, a 43-year-old Danish citizen is a long way from home. He has travelled from Aalborg city, in Denmark, to Linganoor in Coimbatore to trace his family roots.

Born to T. Ayyavu and Saraswati of Linganoor in 1975, Mr. Anderson was put in a children’s home when he was only 30 days old. In 1979, a Danish couple adopted him. “Ever since I came to know that I was adopted, I wanted to know about my biological parents. Before adoption, I was called Raja Kumar,” Mr. Anderson told reporters in Coimbatore on Saturday.

This is the second visit of Mr. Anderson, a graphic designer, to Coimbatore in his attempt to find his biological parents. He approached the media after his efforts did not yield results. He said he spent his early years at the Blue Mountain Children’s Home, Coimbatore, which was run by Mary Catherine and Prakash.

The reason stated in the adoption order was that Mr. Ayyavu could not take care of the child after he suffered a paralytic attack and his wife left him. Based on an order from the district court, a Danish couple, Keld and Birthe Anderson, had adopted the child. A Netherlands-based organisation named Against Child Trafficking (ACT) came forward to help Mr. Anderson.

Trip to Linganoor

In his second visit, Mr. Anderson visited Linganoor with the help of ACT’s executive director Arun Dohle, ACT’s consultant in India Anjali Pawar and members from the Tirupur-based Centre for Social Education and Development. They were told that a person named Ayyavu was living with his mother Mariammal near Karuparayan temple at Linganoor.

Elderly residents said that they had never seen Ayyavu after he sold his property and left the place around 1986.

Though the team attempted to collect documents related to the adoption, nothing could be traced.

“We are doubtful about Mr. Anderson’s ‘adoption’ as he was not an orphan and had his father and grandmother. It could have been a case of child trafficking. Child trafficking has happened on a large scale in the name of adoption in the past when the formalities involved were not considered very seriously by the authorities. The sad fact is that such trafficking is still happening,” said Ms. Pawar.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Wilson Thomas / Coimbatore – January 05th, 2019

Tamil Nadu gets 33rd district with Kallakurichi as headquarters

The chief minister said an IAS officer would be appointed as Special Officer to carry out the administrative processes involved in creating the new district.

an IAS officer would be appointed as Special Officer to carry out the administrative processes.
an IAS officer would be appointed as Special Officer to carry out the administrative processes.

Tamil Nadu will soon get its 33rd district with Kallakurichi as its headquarters. The new district will be created by bifurcating Villupuram district, one of the large districts in the State.

Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami announced this in Assembly on Tuesday while replying to the discussion on the motion of thanks to the Governor’s address.

The chief minister said an IAS officer would be appointed as Special Officer to carry out the administrative processes involved in creating the new district.

Law Minister CV Shanmugam and some MLAs from Villupuram district thanked the CM for this announcement.

However, the move has met with some opposition from Villupuram. For instance, R Nithiyandhan, a lawyer from Thiruvennainallur in Ulundurpet Taluk of Villupuram said Thiruvennainallur is one among the most backward areas in the district.

“If this area is added to Kallakuruchi district, people here will face the same issues that had been raised by people of Kallakuruchi when they demanded a separate district headquartered in Kallakuruchi,” he said.

“Now, we are able to reach the district headquarters in less than half an hour. If this are comes under the new district, we will have to travel 70km over some two hours to reach the new headquarters at Kallakuruchi. There was no direct bus facility from Thiruvennainallur to Kallakuruchi town. So people have to waste a whole day if they wanted to visit any of the government offices in the district headquarters, including the collectorate,” he complained.

The demand of those who oppose the bifurcation of the district is that Thiruvennainallur remains within Villupuram district although Ulundurpet is likely to become part of Kallakuruchi district. All these issues were highlighted in 2014 when the demand for Kallakuruchi district was raised with the chief minister J Jayalalithaa.

Meanwhile, residents of Attur, which is part of Salem district, have renewed their demand for a separate district.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by Express News Service / January 08th, 2019