Two from TN selected for NBA Academy

Sixteen-year-olds Arvind Kumar and Shanmugam, who have been selected for the NBA Academy from hundreds of hoopsters after two rounds of trials in Chennai and Delhi, are excited to train at the academy expected to be launched in April at the Delhi National Capital Region (NCR).

Shanmugam, a native of Tirunelveli, is now studying at the Sports Hostel in Salem, training under the watchful eyes of S. Bhaskar, a SAI coach.

“It was because of Bhaskar sir that I was able to improve on my skill and make subtle changes in my jumps,” said Shanmugam, whose father, R. Murugan, is a fruit vendor while his mother, Bakkiyam, works at Amma ‘Unavagam’.

The forward, who can do the job of a point guard should the need arise, said he was disappointed at not being able to participate in the National junior after injuring his ankle. “I was upset then. Now I am keen to take part in the next edition in April,” he said.

Chennai-based Arvind said it is an honour to qualify. “The trials were tough. We had dribbles and matches. I know I need to perform well,” he said. Coached by C.V. Sunny in his first two years and later by Dereck Hutson, Arvind said he learnt the basics from the former India captain. “Sunny sir taught us a lot of things. We also went to lot of tournaments,” said Arvind, who plays as a forward for his school Santhome HSS.

He captained the Tamil Nadu youth (u-16) team in the Nationals championship late last year.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sport> Other Sports / by Special Correspondent / Chennai – February 23rd, 2017

13-year-old chosen for an edu trip to Germany

Sivakami
Sivakami

Chennai :

It’s 1:30 pm. There is a flurry of activity at the Corporation Girls’ Higher Secondary School, Saidapet. As we enter the administrative cabin, head master Lyla greets us and enthusiastically says, ‘Let me call her!’ She sends news of our arrival to Sivakami, the Class 8 student who has been selected the second time for an educational trip — this time to Germany. She looks like any teenager would, but as we chat, we discover that the little girl’s ambitions and goals are deeper than what meets the eye.

This is the second time 13-year-old Sivakami has emerged the winner in the Elocution competition, ‘Wings to Fly’, organised by Rotary Club of Madras East. Reminiscing her first international educational trip to Kuala Lampur, Malaysia, Sivakami says it was a life-changing experience. “I was surprised when I won last year. I was in awe of their culture, especially the respect they give to every language. I like how they don’t mix languages. For instance, Tamil and Malay aren’t mixed with English, unlike our ‘Tanglish’ here… I wish we could learn to speak that way too! Also, the place is extremely clean; why can’t we maintain our place like that?” she says.

This year, the final competition, conducted by the club along with Goethe Institut and Greater Chennai Corporation, was themed ‘Embrace Our Rivers’. Sivakami said she felt a strong urge to protect and preserve the water bodies. “It was my father who wrote the draft of the speech for me…but the topic was extremely relatable. and I was able to add several anecdotes,” she shares.
Excited and curious about her trip to Germany in July, she says, “I have heard that the water bodies there are maintained with utmost care. I want to see how they do it. I also want to observe and analyse the public contribution towards conservation and preservation.” To her, this will be the biggest take away from the trip. “Once I am back, I will lend a hand to preserve our rivers!” she smiles.
Crediting her parents, teachers, and friends for her success, she says that she has been lucky to have their constant support. “Even if I miss classes for competitions, my teachers don’t discourage me. They say that this is the time for me to achieve. My parents also push me to give my best. My friends have been extremely patient when I rehearse my speech with them a number of times. They don’t get bored, but keep giving suggestions,” she beams.

Apart from elocution, music, writing and storytelling are Sivakami’s other interests. “I enjoy singing and I love storytelling. I come up with my own stories and improvise according to the expectations of my audience,” says the NCC junior leader. A n all-rounder, the 13-year-old wants to serve the society and lead it to a ‘better future’.
So, how does she aim to do that? “I want to become the Chief Minister! That’s my ambition. I’ve always wanted to lead people and bring about a change. I believe that success comes when you observe and listen to things around you. This way, you understand a lot and direct your followers in the right path. As CM, my focus will be on providing quality education and improving the sanitary standards in villages. I would also arrange for counselling and make people realise these are important causes,” she says.
Talking more about her other goals, she says that if not CM, she would become a doctor. “I want to serve the society. I want to spread awareness about diseases through proper counselling so that the people don’t panic,” she smiles.
As she leaves for her class, she adds, “I think dreaming of serving the place where I was born isn’t a big thing. In fact, I feel it is our duty to do so.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Roshne B / Express News Service / February 20th, 2017

Porter’s son Natarajan: From tennis ball star to IPL big bucks

Thangarasu Natarajan (File Photo)
Thangarasu Natarajan (File Photo)

New Delhi :

His eyes transfixed on the TV screen, left-arm seamer Thangarasu Natarajan was finding it surreal when the bids against his name zoomed up at a breakneck pace during the IPL auction. The little-known 25-year-old’s life changed in a matter of few minutes as Rs 10 lakh base price saw a quantum 30-time jump reaching Rs 3 crore with Virender Sehwag vigorously raising the pedal for Kings XI Punjab.

Perhaps he remembered the days of hardships when his mother ran a street side stall and father worked as a porter at the railway station. And the then 20-year-old, one of the five children, was plying his trade at tennis ball games in his native Salem. He eventually moved to Chennai where he played for the popular Jolly Rovers, a club which has fielded big names like R Ashwin and Murali Vijay.

His big breakthrough came last year when he enjoyed a successful stint for Dindigul Dragons in the inaugural TNPL, attracting the attention of the IPL scouts. “It seems unreal. I never thought I would play in the Tamil Nadu Premier League, let alone the IPL. Very thankful that it has happened,” Natarajan’s elation was palpable as he spoke to PTI today. Natarajan recalls how TNPL gave him the much-needed exposure.

“There was a lot of pressure when I was picked to play in TNPL. But I am thankful to people like Ashwin, Vijay and L Balaji (TN bowling coach) who instilled the belief in me that I was good enough at the Ranji Trophy level. It was my dream to Ranji Trophy which has been fulfilled and now I look forward to meeting people in the IPL and learning from them,” he said.

Consistent performances for two years in Chennai club circles earned him a call-up to the Ranji Trophy 2015-2016. For his variation and the ability to land yorkers at will, he is now famously called ‘Mustafizur Rahman’ of Tamil Nadu. He will have Vijay for the company in the Kings XI Punjab dressing room but is a tad sad about Mitchell Johnson not being with the franchise anymore.

“Johnson is my role model and it will be great if I can meet him during the IPL,” he said of the Australian, who has been picked by Mumbai Indians for the upcoming season. Besides rising through a humble background, a big on the field challenge Natarajan had to deal with was when he was reported for a suspected action, which had to be modified under the guidance of former Tamil Nadu spinner Sunil Subramaniam.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Sport> Cricket / by PTI / February 20th, 2017

Jains celebrate life of Tirthankara through ‘Pancha Kalyana’ fest

TirthankaraCF20feb2017

Chennai :

Karanthai, a remote village in Tiruvannamalai district, on Sunday celebrated the attainment of absolute knowledge by Kunthunath, the 17th Tirthankara of Jainism.

It was the fourth day of ‘Pancha Kalyana’, a traditional Jain ritual in which five stages in the life of a Tirthankara are celebrated across five days.

The events include conception, birth, renunciation, enlightenment and liberation. The five-day event is a celebration of the basic principles of Jainism. “We are living in a mechanized world. People are becoming selfish due to lack of interaction and knowledge. The five-day event shows how one should follow the basic principles of life in a simple way. Each day’s celebration is aimed at creating awareness about the fragility of the materialistic world that we all live in,” said K Ajithadoss, a Jain scholar.

While Adinatha (first Tirthankara) and Mahavira (the 24th and last Tirthankara) are the main deities in most of the Jain temples in Tamil Nadu, only a couple of temples have Kunthunath as the main deity.

The fifth and final day will have a big event. “In the last day the event, Tirthankara gets liberation. And it’s considered as one of the most important stage of one’s life,” Ajithadoss said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Chennai News / by TNN / Februry 20th, 2017

Coal-powered steam engines to be put up for public viewing

The last coal-fired X class engine of the Nilgiris Mountain train came to Coonoor Railway Station from Mettupalayam on Friday. | Photo Credit: M_Sathyamoorthy;M_Sathyamoorthy -
The last coal-fired X class engine of the Nilgiris Mountain train came to Coonoor Railway Station from Mettupalayam on Friday. | Photo Credit: M_Sathyamoorthy;M_Sathyamoorthy –

‘The engines are almost a century old and part of the tradition of NMR railway’

The last of the coal-powered steam engines operational along the Nilgiri Mountain Railway (NMR) route have been retired and are to be exhibited to the public at the Udhagamandalam and Coimbatore railway stations.

Speaking to The Hindu, Divisional Railway Manager of Salem Division, Hari Shankar Verma, said that the coal-powered steam engines had far outlived their technological relevance, and that the remaining two engines still in operation will be exhibited to the public at the two stations. “We had two options, either to sell the engines for scrap or to preserve them as a memento of the NMR’s long history. We are gifting one engine to the people of Ooty,” said Mr. Verma to reporters.

Engine number 37384, which is the older of the two engines, is to be exhibited at Udhagamandalam. K Natarajan, a heritage railway enthusiast and founder of the Heritage Steam Chariot Trust, said that the “X” Class locomotives, built at the Swiss Locomotives and Machine Works factory in Switzerland, was introduced sometime between 1917 and 1925.

“The coal-powered engines are almost a century old and are part of the tradition of the NMR railway. All the newer engines are oil-powered locomotives. The railways should have preserved this important part of the NMR history, as the engine to be retired in Udhagamandalam was still operational,” he said.

He said that railway enthusiasts across the world were prepared to pay good money to enjoy the experience of the old coal-powered locomotives, and that with the retirement of the engines, an important remnant of the NMR history will be lost forever. However, railways officials said that operating the oil-powered locomotives was the only viable solution to pull coaches up the steep hills as the quality of the coal used to power the older locomotives has gradually decreased over the years. It is also said that the older locomotives increased the chances of forest fires.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Rohan Premkumar / Udhagamandalam – February 18th, 2017

Book on genetically modified crops released

Coimbatore :

Former director of Centre for Plant Molecular Biology at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University S Sadasivam on Wednesday released a book – “Genetically Modified Crops: A Scientist’s Perspective.”

The book aims at creating awareness about the advantages of GM crops among people and farmers.

President of Association Of Biotechnology Led Enterprises- Agriculture Focus Group (ABLE-AG), P Murali released the book, and the chairman of Rasi Seeds, M Ramasami, received the first copy.

Speaking about his book, Sadasivam said, “I was in academia and research from 1964 to 2011. Teaching was my passion and research was my interest. However, popularisation of science was the third dimension in my career.”

He further said, “Since 1964, I have participated in radio programmes discussing science and technology. I have authored six books so far. This one too is an attempt to make people aware about the benefits of genetically modified crops.”

The book is short and has four chapters. The book is written in Tamil so that it can reach out to the local farmers. The book talks about gene, theories of evolution and the introduction of genetically modified crops. “It is not a textbook material. It is written as a conversation between a scientist and a common man,” said Sadasivam.

Vouching for genetically modified crops, Sadasivam said that a group of 107 Nobel Laureates have recently passed a resolution that GM crops are safe. “There are regulatory bodies and the central and state governments have deeply accessed the advantages and consequences of GM crops. We need more research in the area of GM crops to address the growing needs of food and grain shortage,” said Sadasivam.

ABLE-AG has published Sadasivam’s book. Executive director of ABLE-AG Shivendra Bajaj said, “About two-three states have stalled research on GM crops. While others have not banned it, they are either positive about it or are evaluating the pro and cons.”

Ramasami said that Bangladesh has been cultivating Bt Brinjal for more than three years now. “Bangladesh has acquired all the data from India’s research and has begun cultivating it,” said Ramasami. The only GM crop cultivated in India is Bt Cotton .

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Coimbatore News / by Adarsh Jain / February 15th, 2017

From farmer to CM pick — the rise of a Jaya loyalist

File photo of Edappadi K. Palanisamy and AIADMK cadres participating in a yagam at a temple in Salem for the speedy recovery of Jayalalithaa.   | Photo Credit: E. Lakshmi Narayanan
File photo of Edappadi K. Palanisamy and AIADMK cadres participating in a yagam at a temple in Salem for the speedy recovery of Jayalalithaa. | Photo Credit: E. Lakshmi Narayanan

The AIADMK’s new Legislature Party leader Edappadi K. Palaniswami, who is the Minister for Public Works, State Highways and Minor Ports, has been a staunch loyalist of All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) supremo Jayalalithaa since the time she entered active politics in the 1980s.

He was part of her four-member kitchen cabinet from 2011-16 along with Chief Minister O. Panneerselvam and former ministers Natham R. Viswanathan and R. Vaithilingam. Presently, he is ranked number three in the Cabinet.

Hailing from the rural Nedungulam village in Edappadi taluk, 62-year-old Mr. Palaniswami joined AIADMK in the 1980s. He threw his weight behind Jayalalithaa when the party suffered a split after the demise of founder M.G. Ramachandran in 1987.

Jayalalithaa instantly rewarded Mr. Palaniswami, hailing from Kongu Vellala Gounder community — a dominant community of the western region of the State — by nominating him as the AIADMK (Jayalalithaa) candidate in the rural Edappadi constituency in the 1989 elections. He tasted success in his maiden attempt and retained the seat in the 1991 elections.

Mr. Palaniswami, a farmer by occupation, who remained on the sidelines for almost a decade, was in the fray from Edappadi once again in the 2006 elections. However, he lost to the Pattali Makkal Katchi’s (PMK) V. Kavery.

But he wrested the seat for the third time in 2011, defeating M. Karthe of the PMK. He was inducted into the Cabinet as State Highways and Minor Ports Minister. He soon became a close confidante of Jayalalithaa.

Cabinet constant

Though Jayalalithaa reshuffled her Cabinet umpteen times, dropping even senior Ministers during her 2011-16 term, Mr. Palaniswami remained a prominent member of her team for the entire five years.

In the May 2016 elections, Mr. Palaniswami was fielded again in Edappadi and he romped home with a whopping margin of 42,022 votes over his nearest PMK rival N. Annadurai in a 15-cornered contest. While Mr. Palaniswami secured 98,703 votes, Mr. Annadurai polled 56,681 votes. The DMK candidate P. A. Murugesan was pushed to the third position with a vote tally of 55,149 votes.

Mr. Palaniswami not only won his seat comfortably, he also steered the AIADMK to a near clean sweep in Salem district, winning 10 of the 11 Assembly constituencies — many with decent victory margins. In recognition of this striking show, Jayalalithaa not only retained him in the new Cabinet with the same portfolio, but also rewarded him with the powerful PWD.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Tamil Nadu / by Syed Muthahar Saqaf / Salem – February 14th, 2017

Beekeeping is a misunderstood art, says Chennai’s own ‘Honey Mani’

VishnuManiCF15feb2017

Chennai :

Chennai-based Manikandan calls bees his best friend! Fondly known among the apiarists (beekeepers) as Honey Mani, this apiarist maintains almost 25 modern beehives (artificial beehives) in and around the city and says that he does it for.

Until 2008, Mani, like most people, was terrified of bees, because of all the reported fatalities. It was Swami Nathan, another beekeeper from the city who changed his attitude towards apiculture, he narrates, “In 2008, I visited Swami’s house. He worked at the airport and I was also recruited there to work in duty-free shops.”

“I saw several weird looking boxes and when I went to take a look, a bee flew out!” After a week of observing his mentor interacting with and behaving around the bees, Mani decided to learn the art.

“He was kind enough to teach me and also lent me a box with six frames in it (to house the bees). The hive is built over these frames with a strip of wax in between. I was intrigued and after a point, I wasn’t even scared. Now I can manage them even if they are aggressive!” he beams.

After completing basic school education, he says he quit academics to support his family. “Later, I got the job at the airport, but I found my true happiness in beekeeping,” he grins.

“When I deliver the beehive boxes to clients…the happiness I feel is indescribable. Especially after a few months, when I go for extraction, I have no words. I extracted almost two kilos of honey for a customer and he was so happy!”

Talking about the dangers involved, he points out, “When you let your hand in to extract the honey, make sure you don’t disrupt the queen bee. If you are stung, don’t make any sudden movements or pull your hand out fast.”

So, does he want to be a full-time beekeeper someday? “Someday… maybe. I am not doing this for money and you can’t expect to earn much from this. I am looking for a fulltime job. Beekeeping is mostly misunderstood and my aim is to educate people more,” he adds.

To contact ‘Honey Mani’ call: 9750145565

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Roshne B / Express News Service / February 15th, 2017

Tales of Cooum and its 113 temples

At the book lauch in Madras Literary SocietyRomani Agarwal
At the book lauch in Madras Literary SocietyRomani Agarwal

 

Chennai :

The Cooum River has for long been a talking point in Chennai — albeit for all the wrong reasons. Environmentalists decry the pollution and neglect the river has been subjected to, turning it into a nauseous cesspool, as opposed to its rather cleaner upstream that starts from the source.

It was as an attempt to restore a cultural significance to both the river and the historical temples on its banks that the book The Gods of the Holy Koovam, by heritage enthusiast Priya Baskaran, was launched
recently at the Madras Literary Society.

Inspired to take up the project while she was part of the Cooum Cultural Mapping Group — a group of heritage lovers aiming to regenerate interest in the river through cultural cartography — Priya said that her aim was to map the various temples of importance along the course of the river that have been obscured from history.

“This book is not the first of its kind to try and retrace history — but it definitely is the first to retrace the history of Cooum,” said Priya. “Most of the information for temples in the Cooum region was not available in the public domain and was elusive. Books that detailed historical inscriptions (such as The Topographical Inscriptions of Madras Presidency (1915) by V Ranchacharya) went out of print decades ago.”
Initially organised as a trip to the source of the river in a village by the group, Priya wanted to detail more about the holy shrines along the river. “I found that the Cooum, a relatively short river of 72 km had its own Koova Puranam (which is a part of the Skanda Puranam). That is where we started from, and through further research, we found that the Cooum had 24 cheris and 18 kotams annexed to it — that was its importance! It clearly was a treasure hunt for us!” she said. She has mapped nearly 113 temples starting from the source of the river right up to the heart of Chennai.
She also found that many temples had inscriptions that could be of great historical value. “However, the sad part is that in most temples these inscriptions are no longer available as they have been modernised and subsequent work has left them bereft of heritage value,” she rued.

She also lamented the fact that several temples in the region have not been getting any patronage and are in an advanced stage of disrepair, often with certain buildings being taken up by surrounding encroachments. “The temple tanks of several temples require repair and if revived they can help replenish surrounding water bodies and villages too,” she added.
The book was released by K Sridharan, retired deputy superintendent of archaeology, state archaeology department. Priya also runs a blog called ‘Aalayam Kanden’, where she writes about lesser known heritage sites, has been featured among the top Indian travel and spiritual blogs for the last six years. A part of the proceeds from the sale of the book will be used to set up a Tamil section at the Madras Literary Society.
To order a copy, call 9790918056 or write to aalayamkanden@gmail.com

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Gokul M. Nair / Express News Service / February 13th, 2017

The long road home

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Chatura Rao’s novel is a portrait of lost love and new-found identity caught in the sweep of a nation’s history

A Blueprint for Love traverses present to past, happy childhood to anguished adolescence and serene village to chaotic city, with the ease of memory. After all, Chatura Rao’s second novel for adults is semi-autobiographical, its opening pages and beautiful prose drawn from the years she grew up in a large house in Madras, where her cousins filled her days, and rowing flooded her hours.

In the early 1990s, Rao trained with an all-women’s crew that went on to represent India at the Asiad. Schooled at Church Park, Stella Maris and Sophia College, Rao worked as a features journalist in her adopted city, Mumbai, and switched to writing fiction while expecting her first child. The Case of Disappearing Colour was followed by books Nabiya and Growing Up In Pandupur, co-authored with her sister, Adithi.

Her first novel for adults, Meanwhile, Upriver, is the story of two disparate people who inhabit the spirituality-soaked streets of Benares. A Blueprint for Love travels across India — Pune to the Himalayan foothills, Mumbai to Gandhinagar and Baroda to Delhi, and demands of its reader attention to its lyrical lines and riveting plot. The novel moves fluidly to settle in a place, the core of which symbolises an India waiting to implode from the personal and political tragedies of our time.

“It has its beginnings in Childhood Dust, an unpublished short story of mine. My editors at Bloomsbury, who found the style quiet and intimate, were keen that I expand it,” says Rao, speaking over telephone from Mumbai.

“I was reluctant, because the story was too personal for me, based on the loss of a dear cousin. But, as I wrote, it was the other track in the story that became more immersive. I had recently conducted workshops near Corbett National Park and the place is so beautiful, I decided that the hero, Suveer, should belong here.”

A Blueprint for Love celebrates a brave and sympathetic couple, Suveer and Reva, held together by the memory of Aboli, a girl they both loved. Suveer and Aboli’s romance plays out in a badminton court in the innocence of the 1990s, with Reva playing a willing Cupid. Aboli is determined to wed Suveer despite familial opposition, but dies soon after in a road accident.

The house where the cousins grew up, with its cosy corners and shadows cast by the dusty, lancet-shaped leaves of the mango tree, is sold, and the family scattered across India. Aboli, the love affair and the good times close like a heavy door on Reva’s life, although it seeps in like dust through the open window of her memory, casting a pall on her marriage to Tarun. Every year, Suveer, now a journalist, and Reva meet platonically on Aboli’s birthday to remember her, until Suveer travels to Gandhinagar to do an election special on the ‘dishousing’ of a Muslim businessman in a Hindu-dominated neighbourhood.

Suveer’s bid to save Mahnoor, a young Muslim woman, earns him broken bones and the love of Reva, who thinks nothing of leaving her husband and rushing to be at his side. There on, the lives of Suveer and Reva, Mahnoor and her husband Zahyan spiral downward, caught in narratives of hatred unleashed by zealots from both sides. All through this runs the thread of finding ‘home’, no longer just a physical space, but a metaphor for where one can be true to oneself despite the odds.

“Even those of us who have homes are looking to be rooted somewhere,” says Rao. “Zahyan and Mahnoor want the security of a home, while Reva has one but can’t settle down because of her own demons. This paradox was important to me.”

The book moves from Aboli and Suveer’s summer-filled romance to the bloodlust of sectarian violence, with alarming speed. “Aboli was warm and loved, Reva is confused and brooding. But, Aboli’s story was explored less because she dies young. It was a conscious choice to leave her behind.”

The novel also examines how hard it can be simply to survive. A fact that asserts itself in the book’s cover of a blue window filled with fractured glass.

Rao, who curated the Chandigarh Children’s Literature Festival last year, says, “Writing for children and adults occupies completely different spaces.” Her recent Gone Grandmother (Tulika) for children is introspective, without the layers adult literature demands.

A Blueprint for Love more than paints a tableaux of young people caught in a time of chaos. It portrays the slow death of the idea of a nation and is a love song to a lost Indian childhood.

(Published by Bloomsbury, the book, priced at Rs. 199, is available online and at stores.)

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Books> Authors / by Deepa Alexander / February 13th, 2017