Category Archives: Records, All

Amrita students bag prizes for developing mobile apps

Three mobile applications (apps) and technology solutions provided by B.Tech. students of Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham won prizes at the Smart India Hackathon 2018, which the Central Government had organised to engage technical students to provide solutions to Central and State government departments to build digital solutions to improve efficiency and plug revenue loss. A release from the institution said three teams of six students each won awards and three others featured in the top 10 teams in India for various ministries.

Android app ‘Niryatak’ was in response to a challenge posed by Ministry of Commerce and Industry. It helped calculate the post-production cost of products being exported and suggested what the selling price should be to get optimum profit.

The second team, Cyber Sena, developed a secure system for the Ministry of Defence to enable easy transfer of data from one network to another through white-listing of pen drives.

The third team developed an app for the Ministry of AYUSH for conversion of Ayurveda unit, the release added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Staff Reporter / Coimbatore – April 25th, 2018

From a railway platform to hallowed IAS, his is a tale of grit and perseverance

Chennai :

In 2004, M Sivaguru Prabakaran gave up his dream of pursuing an engineering degree as his family couldn’t afford the money to help him attend counselling session in Chennai.

Prabakaran secured 101st rank among the 990 candidates selected iby the UPSC n CSE 2017.
Prabakaran secured 101st rank among the 990 candidates selected iby the UPSC n CSE 2017.

What followed was an extraordinary tale of grit and determination that took the son of an alcoholic from Melaottankadu village in Pattukottai in Thanjavur district to the platforms of the St Thomas Mount Railway Station and the hallways of IIT Madras. In the near future, as an IAS officer, he could possibly move to the hallowed precincts of Fort St George.

On Friday, Prabakaran secured 101st rank among 9.90 candidates selected by the UPSC in the civil services examination 2017. V Keerthi Vasan (29), L Madhubalan (71) and S Balachander (129) were among the other candidates from Tamil Nadu who made the cut.

When TOI contacted Prabakaran on the phone, he was in the middle of getting congratulatory hugs from roommates at the house they shared in Thirumangalam. “I couldn’t continue my education after Class XII because of my family’s financial situation,” said Prabakaran.

An alcoholic father meant that much of the earning burden fell on his mother and sister, who made ends meet weaving coconut fronds. When he couldn’t pursue engineering, he decided to work to support the family. “I worked as a sawmill operator for two years and did a bit of farming. Whatever money I could muster, I spent some towards my family and saved some for my education. I wasn’t prepared to let go of my dreams,” he said.

‘Tamil Nadu govt’s health department secretary inspired me’

In 2008, after having funded his younger brother’s engineering dreams and his elder sister’s wedding, Prabakaran enrolled in the civil engineering stream at the Thanthai Periyar Government Institute of Technology in Vellore. “My English language skill was not good. I studied in Tamil medium,” Prabakaran said.

It was during this time, he reached Chennai in the hopes of cracking the IIT entrance examination. “A friend referred me to a tutor in St Thomas Mount who trained underprivileged students like me,” he said.

Studying under the tutor during the weekend, Prabakaran would take shelter in the platforms of the St Thomas Mount railway station. He would return to Vellore for the week to attend his college and made a small income working his off hours at a mobile recharge outlet.

He went on to crack the IIT-M entrance and finished his M.Tech programme as a top ranked student in 2014. “I had 9.0 GPA,” said Prabakaran. This was Prabakaran’s fourth attempt at clearing the UPSC exams. He identifies J Radhakrishnan, the Tamil Nadu government’s health department secretary, as an inspiration. “The desire to become an IAS officer was lit in me when I saw Radhakrishnan in 2004. He was the Thanjavur district collector at the time of Kumbakonam school fire tragedy. He was the first IAS officer I ever saw,” said Prabakaran.

Prabakaran hopes to inspire more people from his hometown to follow his lead.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Time of India / News> City News> Chennai News> Schools & Colleges / by Pradeep Kumar / TNN / April 28th, 2018

Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy, a rebel with a cause

Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy
Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy

Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy fought for women against many wrong things, including the devadasi system

World Dance Day brings the focus back on “The dancing girl of Mohenjo daro.” This 10.8 cm long bronze statue (see below)was found in 1926 from a broken down house on the ‘ninth lane’ in Mohenjo-daro. The ‘pert liveliness’ of the minute figure opened up a debate on the antiquity of arts in India. In a language of creative expression, archaeologists reshaped and extended the assumption about her being the dancing girl. She is in a Tribhangi they said and “beats time to the music with her legs and feet…”

dancing girl of Mohenjo daro
dancing girl of Mohenjo daro

But she is actually standing straight. Only one arm is adorned with bangles and she is holding something in her left hand. Naman Ahuja, the historian, says, “Look at the way she is standing. Look at her confidence. One arm on hip. Head thrown back. The way her hand is sculpted, there might have been a spear in her hand. Is she a warrior figure? Could she be a soldier rather than a dancing girl?”

Focus on the dancing girl

A recent discussion has brought focus on the dancing girl of Mohenjo daro and at the centre is the Devadasi, a system prevalent in the 1920s and abolished. This brings us to another dancing girl — Edgar Degas’s ground-breaking statuette of a young ballerina that caused a sensation at the 1881 impressionist exhibition. Degas was a keen observer and wry but sympathetic chronicler of the daily life of dancers, depicting their world off-stage, at rehearsal or in the wings. Degas’s Little Dancer showcases this world of gaslight and struggle. “It is the image of a sickly gawky adolescent, who is being made to do something she doesn’t totally want to do,” said the critic, Tim Marlow.

This thought brings us to Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy, who fought against the dedication of young girls as Devadasis and Rukmini Devi Arundale, who crusaded against exclusivity.

Muthulakshmi, daughter of a Devadasi Chandrammal married to Narayanaswamy, the principal of Maharaja’s College in Pudukkottai, became the first girl student of the college. Also, she was the first Indian girl student in the Department of Surgery at the Madras Medical College. When she was admitted to Maharaja’s High School, parents of boys threatened to withdraw their children from the school. Her father had been ostracised by his family for marrying a Devadasi and Muthulakshmi became closer to her maternal relatives and saw the situation first hand. After she became a doctor, among the first things Muthulakshmi began to fight against was the system of wet nursing, where women of the upper class got Dalit women to breast feed their babies. She fought to raise the age of marriage for girls, women’s right to property and for choice in the matter of education and career.

It was in 1893 that the Madras Hindu Reform Association sent appeals to put an end to the practice of dances performed at private and public functions in which the British officials also participated. In 1900, M. Ramachandran, secretary of Arya Mission, Kanchipuram, openly protested against the Devadasi system by publishing articles and distributing pamphlets. In 1913, a bill to prevent dedication of girls under 16 years of age was introduced but the bill just dropped out.

In 1927, V.R. Pantulu made a resolution in the Council of State to prohibit dedication of girls. In the same year, Muthulakshmi Reddy was nominated to the Madras Presidency Council and was chosen as the first woman deputy president. She organised several seminars and meetings all over the Madras presidency and interviewed several hundred Devadasis. The Isai Vellalar Sangam in Thanjavur and Mayavaram met in support of the bill. Cochin Devadasis took out a procession in support of the bill. But the George Town Devadasis lead by Duraikannu Ammal and Bengaluru Nagarathnamma opposed the bill.

The bill was dormant after Muthulakshmi Reddy resigned from the Council in 1930 protesting Mahatma Gandhi’s arrest after the Salt March. Then the World War intervened. It was only in December 1947 that the Madras Devadasi (Prevention of Dedication) bill was passed in the Madras Legislative Assembly.

While all the debate was going on, two young girls approached Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy and asked her what alternative she had for them. They were running away from being dedicated as Devadasis. She took them into her house, tried putting them in hostels and schools but no one would take them. She decided to start Avvai Home hostel and school and offered them anonymity and choice in the matter.

Coincidentally, in 1936, when Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy started Avvai Home, in the Theosophical Society, yet another disciple of Annie Besant, Rukmini Devi Arundale, began to learn a dance she had a chance to encounter and opened it up for all of us to savour.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Entertainment> Dance / by V.R. Devika / April 26th, 2018

Velavan Senthilkumar wins maiden PSA World Tour title

Velavan Senthilkumar. (Twitter Photo)
Velavan Senthilkumar. (Twitter Photo)

Chennai :

Just a week ago, Chennai’s Velavan Senthilkumar was feeling low. The 20-year-old had exited in the very first round of the Rochester Open qualifiers in what was his first tournament in nearly a year.

Much to his credit, he has turned things around dramatically in a week’s time and can now reflect with unbridled joy on capturing his first ever Professional Squash Association (PSA) title.

Velavan, who is pursuing a course in statistics at Columbia University in New York, defeated fourth seed Tristan Eyesele of South Africa 7-11, 13-11, 12-10, 11-4 in the final of the Madison Open on Sunday after coming through the qualifying rounds.

Asked about the contrasting results in the two tournaments, the former British Junior Open champion put it down to a case of nerves getting the better of him. In turn, it fuelled a strong desire in Velavan to put things right in Madison.

“I was playing my first tournament in a year last week in Rochester. After playing a couple of PSA events in South Africa last April, I was just training and focusing on my academics. I was extremely nervous playing after so long in Rochester and was very upset with the result. But it motivated me to do well in Madison and things have turned out according to plan,” he said on Monday.

While Velavan might not have had a lot of playing time of late, he hasn’t stopped putting in the hard yards in training. He is currently being coached by England’s Alister Walker, a former world No. 12, aside from his coaches in Columbia.

“He is coaching me full time now,” Velavan continued, “I can see a lot of improvement in my game since the time I have started working with him. He is pushing me towards my goals and keeps in touch constantly to find out how I’m doing.”

Walker’s endeavour to play the role of a big brother is timely for Velavan, who was not just finding his feet on the court but off it as well. “It is not easy living alone. I do get homesick sometimes, but my schedule is so hectic that time flies. That really helps,” said the world No. 255.

What also helps the youngster is the fact that he makes a visit back to Chennai at every possible opportunity. He has also not lost touch with senior Indian stars like Joshna Chinappa and Dipika Pallikal.

“I stay in touch with the likes of Dipika and Joshna as well as Cyrus (Poncha) sir. I was really pleased for them after their rich haul of medals in the Commonwealth Games. I know that they have worked extremely hard for it, and their achievements are only going to help the sport grow.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> Sports News> Others / by Vivek Krishnan / TNN / April 23rd, 2018

Chronicles of the fall of Thanjavur, Madurai

Thanjavur Maratha Palace The Darbar Hall of the Thanjavur Maratha Palace
Thanjavur Maratha Palace The Darbar Hall of the Thanjavur Maratha Palace

The Vijayanagar Empire was decisively defeated by the Deccan Sultanates in the Battle of Talikota, in 1565 C.E. The empire soon unravelled when many provincial governors, called Nayakas, declared independence one by one. Even before the last emperor died the Nayakas were at each other’s throats, making opportunistic alliances, and seeking the support of Europeans and even the Sultanates. Thanjavur and Madurai, once key constituents of the empire, engaged in a protracted and destructive conflict which eventually doomed both ruling dynasties.

The reasons behind the rivalry were many. Thanjavur Nayakas hailed from a noble house which strongly supported Vijayanagar even during the empire’s terminal decline. The Madurai Nayakas were of humbler origins and had changed colours right after Talikota. In 1614 CE, Madurai sided with a usurper who murdered the Vijayanagar emperor and his family. By 1659 Madurai’s expansionist activities led to the Sultanates annexing any remaining Vijayanagar crownlands: this reduced the last emperor to a refugee. Such actions also led to the Thanjavur kingdom losing lands to the Sultanates. Madurai’s alliance with the Sultans enabled roving Deccani Muslim warlords to quickly gain power in Tamil lands. Legends also say that a Madurai Nayaka murdered his bride, a Thanjavur princess (who was offered as a token of peace), in a moment of rage. The feud grew over the years — interspersed with very brief alliances of convenience — and reached a climax in 1673 CE.

Thanjavur was then ruled by the ageing Vijaya Raghava Nayaka. He was a patron of the arts and had written numerous poems and dramatic works. However, he believed in hoary notions of tradition, valour and honour — he even refused to modernise his army with firearms. The ruler of Madurai was the young Chokkanatha Nayaka. He had actually attempted to check the growing power of the Sultanates and the warlords but failed. In 1673 Chokkanatha requested the Thanjavur princess’s hand in marriage. The Thanjavur king contemptuously refused; the enraged Chokkanatha ordered his generals to capture the princess. Madurai’s army consisting of Deccani cavalry, musketeers, cannons and European mercenaries simply outclassed Thanjavur’s army. The Thanjavur fort was breached after heavy fighting; despite multiple offers of lenient terms, Vijaya Raghava resolved to “die with honour”. The royal palace was rigged with gunpowder and incendiaries and the royal womenfolk were herded into it. As the defenders sallied out and fought to the death, they blew up the palace, killing everyone inside.

Chokkanatha installed his brother Alagiri as a viceroy. However, Chengamaladas, a minor son of the fallen Thanjavur king, had escaped the carnage.

Chengamaladas later surfaced in Bijapur and requested the Sultan’s aid. In 1675 CE, the Sultan sent his general Venkoji, half-brother of Chhatrapati Shivaji, to reclaim Thanjavur for Chengamaladas (Ironically, Venkoji and his Maratha troops served Bijapur while Shivaji was invading it in the north). It was an opportune moment as Alagiri and Chokkanatha were now at war with each other. Thanjavur was conquered by the Marathas in a short campaign.

However, heeding to a prophetic dream (and perhaps sensing the Bijapur Sultanate’s impending end) Venkoji crowned himself King of Thanjavur in 1676. With Chengamaladas fleeing into obscurity the rule of the Thanjavur Nayakas ended.

Meanwhile in Madurai, rebellions and Chokkanatha’s plummeting popularity weakened the kingdom. The expansionist Thanjavur Marathas now began to prey on Madurai. Chokkanatha was deposed by the Madurai nobles and another brother was enthroned. In 1680, a powerful Deccani warlord named Rustam Khan captured power, chasing away the new Nayaka and installing Chokkanatha as a puppet ruler. Rustam Khan’s power grew alarmingly and he apparently began to forcibly claim women from the royal families. In 1682 Chokkanatha Nayaka’s heart finally gave out when Madurai was repeatedly invaded by her neighbours, and subsequently betrayed by her feudatories.

The Madurai kingdom was totally devastated at this point. Chokkanatha’s teenaged son Rangakrishna managed to reclaim some glory but he died of smallpox just seven years into his reign. Queen Mother Mangammal became the Regent for the next fifteen years as Rangakrishna’s heir was an infant. Mangammal’s brilliant leadership bought Madurai back from the brink. Using diplomacy, stratagems and military might, she eliminated threats and rebuilt Madurai’s power. However, after her death in 1705 the kingdom went into decline again. Madurai was slowly worn down by civil strife, and the campaigns of Thanjavur, Mysore and the Nawab of Arcot. In 1736, Arcot forces under Chanda Sahib ended centuries of Nayaka rule.

Madurai was subsequently tossed between various belligerents till the British became her overlord in 1764. The Marathas of Thanjavur fared slightly better. In 1855, Thanjavur lapsed into British rule when the last Maratha king died without a natural heir.

The author, an IIM Ahmedabad graduate working in the energy sector, has a keen interest in history, politics, and strategic affairs

source: http://www.dnaindia.com / DNA / Home> Analysis / by Ananth Karthikeyan / April 08th, 2018

Breaking down the barriers of bigotry

Well-deserved: Chinnammal, middle, being honoured at the Born2Win Trans* Achiever Awards held in the city on Tuesday.
Well-deserved: Chinnammal, middle, being honoured at the Born2Win Trans* Achiever Awards held in the city on Tuesday.

Born2Win Trans* Achievers Awards recognises role models from the community

The Sixth Annual Born2Win Trans* Achiever Awards recognised not only members from the community who have accomplished their goals in their own right but also their mothers who were immensely supportive of their gender nonconforming children and others who supported LGBT rights. The event was held at Rani Seethai Hall on Tuesday.

“I don’t know how to explain my feelings, but I am really happy to see you all and wish you well,” said 82-year-old Chinnammal, mother of Jeeva Rangaraj from TRA, an NGO which works for transgender rights.

This year, 19 individuals were chosen for various categories of awards. Among them was a medical student, a physiotherapist, a model and a social activist.

Grateful voices

“I am so honoured to be chosen for this award. It only shows that I am on the right path,” said Solu S., a Madurai based physiotherapist, who now works with children with special needs. “The day I had to leave home after I came out to my family, I didn’t know what life held for me. But thanks to the people I met in my journey I was able to discover my passion and work towards it,” she said.

Neelamma, an activist, who was awarded the Lifetime achievement award, recalled the difficult times when transgenders were ill-treated and subjected to constant threats and abuse. “Decades ago, transgenders couldn’t even walk freely on the streets, without being hit by stones or cursed. But now we have all come a long way. I am so proud to see you all achieve your dreams and passion, I will always be there to support you,” she said with tears.

Divya Priya and her husband Sasikumar received the Trans* Couple of the year award. The two received the award with Divya Priya’s mother and got a standing ovation from the audience.

The Trans* Ally award recipients were Member of Parliament Tiruchi Siva and Arun Prabhu, director of the Tamil movie Aruvi.

Aditi Balan, who played the titular character in Aruvi, also participated in the event. “I had a completely different opinion about transgenders before I interacted with one in my movie. I am very excited to be a part of this event,” she said.

Advocate Sudha Ramalingam was also present.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News>Cities> Chennai / by Staff Reporter / Chennai – April 18th, 2018

The Serbian connection

Tafe01CF16apr2018

The news that TAFE, India’s second largest tractor manufacturer, has bought the Serbian company Industrija Masina i Traktora (IMT) is the culmination of a 55-year-old relationship that has gone through different phases. It is a story that began with TAFE establishing its offices on January 1, 1961 on Kothari Road after it had been decided that TAFE would thereafter manufacture Massey Ferguson (MF) tractors in India. The TAFE factory opened in Sembiam and the first tractor assembled with components from Coventry was driven out by S Anantharamakrishnan in 1961, watched by his son A Sivasailam who was in charge of TAFE, now one of the most successful flag-bearers of the Amalgamations Group.

But it wasn’t all wine and roses in those early days. The first challenge was posed by IMT who had a 10-year agreement with MF to manufacture tractors in what was then Yugoslavia. India, in those Rupee-payment days, was able to import these IMT-MF tractors, while TAFE was struggling to get foreign exchange to import its CKD components from the UK. Sivasailam’s answer was to go to Yugoslavia. With him went one of his sales representatives in North India, V P Ahuja – who was to make Yugoslavia his home – and they successfully negotiated for IMT-MF components to be regularly supplied to TAFE, meeting Rupee-payment requirements. Slowly business picked up.

The initial imports from IMT were not without their headaches. Yugoslavia used the metric system, India the imperial. TAFE’s technical staff had to devise ways and means to adapt IMT components to TAFE’s requirements. Ahuja (made Chief Liaison Officer, TAFE, in Yugoslavia in 1962) also remembers that while the IMT parts were very good, the factory’s documentation was “terrible”. TAFE would get crates-ful of components but would not know what was packed in what; Ahuja was the problem-solver.

Profits, however, were yet slow in coming. Then came windfall. A World Bank tender called for 3000 tractors to be sold to farmers in the Punjab, where the Green Revolution was taking place, under a financing scheme of the Bank. The Punjab Agro Industries Corporation was to distribute the tractors to farmers who could prove they owned land in the Punjab and nowhere else. TAFE won the tender. Later, even as the deadline for the closure of the scheme neared, TAFE still had 600 tractors on its hands. Sivasailam persuaded the Punjab Government to let the firm sell them to Punjab farmers who owned land in Haryana. And TAFE was on its way.

With the business relationship in Yugoslavia well-settled, Ahuja, who is now Offshore Director, established an agency business for TAFE in Belgrade helping the firm’s export business by representing several Indian auto-product firms in the region. Gradually he also began introducing TAFE tractors, which before long were outselling IMT tractors, even though being more costly but being superior in quality. But, adds Ahuja, we remained “passive sellers throughout because of the Chairman’s regard for IMT.”

Tafe02CF16apr2018

With the break-up of Yugoslavia in the early 1980s, IMT slowly started slipping till it finally closed in 2015. At an auction, Mallika Srinivasan, Sivasailam’s daughter, closed the over 50-year-old circle. IMT tractors will be in the East European market again in a year or so, she promises.

______________________________

Madras’ first American Church

Zion Church I’ve long known as one of Chintadripet’s three landmarks, the other two being the Sathianathan memorial and the Goschen Library. As an architectural precinct it was quite a striking one, inevitably drawing attention to it. What I didn’t know then was that this was the first and only church built by American missionaries in Madras.

The legendary Dr John Scudder, who founded the American Madras Mission after arriving from Jaffna, and the Rev Miron Winslow, his colleague in Jaffna where he started work on the dictionary that is part of Tamil literary history, built a small church in 1847 in the weavers’ settlement after buying the land from a G V Naidu. They named it the Zion Church and it is now in its 170th year, a Church of South India church since independence.

ZionChurchCF16apr2018

In April 1865, the American Mission, then concentrating on the Arcots and Madurai, sold the Church for ₹10,000 to the Church Mission Society, London. Some years later, in 1878, the Church was gifted its bell by the Christian Missionary Society; it is said to be the second oldest church bell in Madras. Another piece of antiquity is the pipe organ which was made in England in 1895. The church was completely renovated in 1995.

Noteworthy has been the long pastoral connection of the Sathianathans/Clarkes with this church. I’ve written about this in the past (Miscellany January 28, 2002) but it deserves retelling. The Rev W T Sathianathan became, in 1862, the Church’s second pastor and its first Indian one. There followed five generations of the family who have preached in the Church. Rev W T, after 30 years of pastoral care there, was followed by his son-in-law W D Clarke. The Rev Clarke was followed after 28 years by his son Samuel S Clarke, who served for about 20 years. He was followed by his son Sundar Clarke, who served a few years and went on to become Bishop of Madras.

In 1995 the Clarke family gathered at the Church to celebrate their connection with it and the service was conducted by Sathianathan Clarke, the great-great-grandson of the Rev W.T. The fifth generation Clarke was visiting after completing a Doctor of Divinity degree at Harvard after a Master’s at Yale.

________________________________

Congratulations to a contributor

The Indian National Science Academy (Delhi) has awarded the prestigious Vulmiri Ramalingaswami Chair for 2018 to my regular contributor on Madras medical history, Dr. Anantanarayanan Raman of Charles Sturt University, New South Wales.

Ramalingaswami was a distinguished medical doctor and Director General of the Indian Council for Medical Research.

At the same time Dr M S Swaminathan was Director General of the Indian Council for Agricultural Research.

Dr Raman will spend July in India, headquartered at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, but travelling around to deliver lectures and conduct workshops. Congratulations, Dr Raman; it couldn’t have been awarded to a more dedicated researcher.

The chronicler of Madras that is Chennai tells stories of people, places, and events from the years gone by, and sometimes, from today.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Society> History & Culture> Madras Miscellany / by S. Muthiah / April 16th, 2018

Commonwealth Games 2018 squash: Dipika Pallikal-Joshna Chinappa get silver

Dipika Pallikal and Joshna Chinappa settle for silver in women’s doubles squash final at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

Dipika Pallikal and Joshna Chinappa lost 9-11, 8-11 in the final of women’s doubles squash at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.(Twitter)
Dipika Pallikal and Joshna Chinappa lost 9-11, 8-11 in the final of women’s doubles squash at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.(Twitter)

Defending Champions Dipika Pallikal and Joshna Chinappa settle for silver after losing their women’s doubles final match to the New Zealand pair of Joelle King and Amanda Landers-Murphy at the Commonwealth Games 2018 on Sunday.

Pallikal and Chinappa lost the final in straight games 9-11, 8-11 in just over 20 minutes.

Coming into the final the Indian pair had lost just three games in their six matches but lost both of their games in the final to win silver.

Dipika was understandably unhappy with the contentious calls.

“There were some shocking calls as usual, those calls changed the match. They need to be looked at. If they don’t, then the game doesn’t grow,” she said.

“It’s sad to see, the players and game are growing, but the officials they’re not growing at all. It’s harsh for us players,” the player from Chennai added.

Joshna too was disappointed with not winning the gold but found some consolation in the silver.

“It’s great that we could be in the finals, we had a great chance to win. The New Zealanders played really well, we had a few bad calls. It’s disappointing, but it happens, that’s sport. We still managed to get a silver four years later,” she added.

This is India’s and Dipika Pallikal’s second medal in squash at the Games after winning the silver in mixed doubles on Saturday.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Sports> Other Sports / by HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times, Gold Coast / April 15th, 2018

IIT-M students build prototypes

The students along with the prototypes they built for participating in international competitions. | Photo Credit: HANDOUT_E_MAIL
The students along with the prototypes they built for participating in international competitions. | Photo Credit: HANDOUT_E_MAIL

A group of students from the Indian Institute of Technology – Madras have built a Formula race car. And, Team Raftar is the only Indian team to qualify for the Formula Student Germany 2018 competition in July.

The single-seater race car, built from scratch with the support of a senior alumnus, cost ₹15 lakh. The students’ team was supported by BOSCH and MRF.

Another group of students, Team Anveshak, has developed a Mars Rover, which has qualified for the finals of the University Rover Challenge to be held in the Utah desert.

The all-terrain rover, with minor modifications to the design could be used in defence operations and terrain exploration purposes.

The third group of students, Team Abhiyaan, one of the two teams that has qualified for the international robotics event to be held in Oakland University, Michigan, US, has built a robot – an autonomous ground vehicle that can navigate using GPS.

The team’s mission is to create efficient and safe transportation solutions.

The students have developed their products at the Centre for Innovation (CFI), a result of funding by three batches of IIT-M alumni.

Institute director Bhaskar Ramamurthi said the CFI had emerged as the model in the country for fostering hands-on innovation among students. Though the institute offered them support when they participated in international competitions the students had to find their own sponsors, he added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Special Correspondent / Chennai – April 14th, 2018

R Madhavan’s Son Vedaant Wins Swimming Bronze Medal For India

“Proud Moment For Sarita (His Wife) And I, As Vedaant Wins His First Medal For India In An International Swim Meet In Thailand Today
VedaantCF13apr2018

Bollywood actor R Madhavan’s son, Vedaant won a bronze medal for India in the 1500m freestyle at the Thailand Age Group Swimming Championship yesterday.

“Proud moment for Sarita (his wife) and I, as Vedaant wins his first medal for India in an international swim meet in Thailand today. Thank you for all your blessings,” wrote Madhavan on Instagram along with a photograph of his son holding the medal (right) and certificate with the backdrop of a stadium.

Meanwhile, R Madhavan can be seen in the latest web-series Breathe along with Amit Sadh. R Madhavan made his Bollywood debut in the 2001 hit Rehnaa Hai Terre Dil Mein.

source: http://www.mid-day.com / mid-day.com / Home> Sports News> Other Sports News / by mid-day online desk / April 10th, 2018