Category Archives: Leaders

Oracle picks Bengaluru boy Thomas Kurian for top job

Boy from Bengaluru, Thomas Kurian, 48, has been elevated as president of Oracle responsible for software development.
Boy from Bengaluru, Thomas Kurian, 48, has been elevated as president of Oracle responsible for software development.

Bengaluru :

Boy from Bengaluru, Thomas Kurian, 48, has been elevated as president of Oracle responsible for software development, making him perhaps the single most senior executive in the company after co-CEOs Safra Catz and Mark Hurd. Kurian, who joined the $38-billion US company in 1996, was executive VP (product development).

Indians are now at top levels in many IT firms – the notable being Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, and Sundar Pichai, head of most major Google products. A recent entrant is Bhaskar Ghosh, management committee member and group chief executive of technology delivery at Accenture.

Kurian is an alumnus of Bengaluru’s St Joseph’s Boys High School. He holds a BA in electrical engineering from Princeton University, where he graduated summa cum laude (highest distinction). He has an MBA from Stanford University where he was an Arjay Miller scholar. He has served as an advisory member on the boards of several international venture funds and software companies. In Oracle, he has held various product management and development positions.

An Oracle India spokesperson confirmed Kurian’s elevation, but did not respond to a question whether any other executive had been similarly promoted. On Oracle’s website, the highest designation among executives below the CEOs is executive vice-president. If no other executive has been promoted, then Kurian becomes the only president in the company.

Oracle chairman Larry Ellison wrote an email to employees to announce Kurian’s elevation. “I’m pleased to announce that Thomas Kurian has been promoted to president of Oracle, responsible for software development. He has a long track record of developing suites of software products that go to achieve pre-eminent success in the marketplace. His first major engineering effort was developing the Oracle suite of Fusion Middleware,” he wrote. Oracle Fusion Middleware is a business innovation platform for the enterprise and the cloud that enables enterprise to create and run applications maximizing IT efficiency.

Ellison, in his email to employees on Thursday, said Kurian was focusing on engineering products required to transition software technology to the Oracle Cloud. “The transition is going well with the Oracle cloud sales starting to take off…The world can get a glimpse of how well Thomas and his team are doing their job,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Tech> Tech News / TNN / January 09th, 2015

Tribute : Remembering Dr. R.M. Varma of NIMHANS

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He gave to society an asset that will be cherished for all times to come

by Krishna Vattam, Senior Journalist

Dr. Raja Martanda Varma, Founder-Director of NIMHANS (the Bangalore-based National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences), who passed away on March 10 at the age of 94, was a Karma Yogi and truly symbolised the noble concept of ‘Vaidyo Narayana,’ a patient who sees Narayana, God, in a doctor, the reliever of pain and suffering.

He lived upto the Hippocratic oath he had taken at the time of his graduation that requires a new Physician to swear upon a number of healing Gods, to uphold specific ethical standards. “If I faithfully observe this oath (so goes the other important aspect of the Oath), may I thrive and prosper in my fortune and profession in the estimation of posterity, or on breach thereof, may the reverse be of my fate.”

In his long life and profession, it was the first aspect of the oath, faith, that governed his conduct, and fortune, here in Dr. Varma’s view had been ‘fortune’ to have been blessed not with materialistic wealth, ‘fortune’ to have been blessed with an opportunity to serve the society.

Dr. Varma did not visualise science and spirituality as different streams in the approach to life but he saw the convergence of these two streams and as the Founder-Director of NIMHANS, he pioneered the now globally accepted holistic approach for mental and neurological disorders. It is no exaggeration to say, and it is true, that if NIMHANS enjoys as a pre-eminent position as Asia’s best and one among the leading mental health and neurological sciences teaching hospitals in the world over, it was because of the total dedication of Dr. Varma in the functioning of the Institute.

How conscientious and devoted to his duties Dr. Varma had been can be appreciated from an incident as narrated to me by a close friend of Dr. Varma. It appears that after a long time Dr. Varma wanted to take his wife Dr. Malathi Varma for an outing and was driving in Bengaluru. On the way, he noticed a pedestrian being knocked down by a vehicle and the injured was rushed to NIMHANS. Dr. Varma drove back to the Institute telling his wife he will just find out the condition of the patient and asked her to stay in the car itself. Once he was there, he found that the patient needed immediate surgery. After operation, it appears, he came out and asked one of his assistants to find out who was in the car, unaware of the fact for a moment that he had brought his wife in the car.

In the early years of the Institute, which was known as ‘Hucchara Aspatre’ during those days, when the facilities available there were meagre, a patient urgently needed blood transfusion. The doctors went in a car to Avenue Road, brought the donors and saved the patient’s life. The market economy driving the forces and corporate sectors ruling the roost, with greed being the sole aim and deep erosion of values, how many such persons with such concerns can one find in the society at large.

Dr. Varma, hailing from Travancore Royal Family, was a prolific speaker and while I was the President of the Mysore District Journalists’ Association in 1970s, an independent entity and was not affiliated to Karnataka Union of Working Journalists’ Association then, I wrote to him to deliver the Venkatakrishnaiah Memorial Lecture that was instituted by another great freedom fighter and Editor of Sadhvi with an endowment. (I do not know why our Journalists’ Association has lost sight of the endowment and not continued the lecture).

It was a memorable evening and it was here on the occasion the philosopher in him found an expression to expatiate on the limitation of science to perceive certain aspects beyond our comprehension and dwelt on meta-physics and forged a grand convergence of science and spirituality.

Journalist K. Balakrishnan, who profiled Dr. Varma for The Hindu in 2003, summed up the persona of this legendary doctor thus: “Multi-faceted would prove to be an inadequate definition to describe Dr. Varma. A gifted surgeon, relentless researcher, teacher par excellence, exceptional organiser, able and proven administrator, a practical visionary, adventurer, courageous, willing to venture into hitherto untrodden realms, philosopher, artist, a giant among men and above all, self-effacing genuinely caring human being. Dr. Varma is all this and more. He best symbolises the concept of the ideal man who always aspires to better the lot of others without consideration to self.”

I wonder ‘kahan gaye vo log’ (where they have all gone).

[email: krishnavattam@gmail.com]

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles / March 22nd, 2015

Arun Pudur: From Bengaluru to billions

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Recently, Wealth-X listed Indian businessman Arun Pudur as the world’s 10th richest individual under 40; top on the list was Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook.
Arun Pudur, whose net worth is estimated at over four billion dollars, is the CEO of Celframe, which makes world’s second most popular word processor after Microsoft, among other things. Based in Kuala Lumpur, Arun Pudur has diversified into several sectors including mining and real estate.

In an exclusive interaction with Tarannum Khan of Deccan Herald, the reclusive billionaire, who says he does not give interviews as they intrude into his personal space, opens up.

He talks about his humble beginnings in Bengaluru, the milestones in his sensational success, the city which made him, his parents and the qualities that propelled him to the top.

A shorter version the interview appeared in the Panorama section of the Deccan Herald.

You were born in Chennai, when did you shift to Bengaluru?

When I was in my sixth standard, my family decided to move to Bengaluru as my father spent nearly seven to eight months in a year there. When we came to Bangalore, we stayed in Rajajinagar and then moved to Basaveshwarnagar before buying a place in HBR Layout. I stayed there till 2003, when I shifted overseas.

When I lived there, there was nothing in HBR Layout. Now I am told it’s a central part of the city.

When you were born, your family felt, you had a great destiny to fulfil…

My father always used to talk about us being Tirupathi Iyengars, one of the three families, who were the high priests at Tirumala. Though we never managed the temple, we always knew greatness was within us.

My mother always used to say that I was the lucky one in the family. After I was born, my father’s career skyrocketed. He passed away just three months ago. My mother always instilled in me that I was born for greatness.

Your parents wielded a considerable influence on your growth…

My father Sri Ranga, was a cinematographer, who was known for his work in the 16 mm movies, which typically tend to be artsy and low-budget movies. He had built quite a reputation in Kannada and Tulu industries and thanks to him I knew everyone in the industry – be it Vishnu uncle, Ambareesh uncle, even Dr Rajkumar and his sons.
I remember when Shivrajkumar stopped his car on a road and touched the feet of my father. I was shocked that my father, who was just a normal guy at home, commanded that kind of respect in the industry.

He did produce a few movies and television serials. But I asked him to retire early as the movie industry is a really tough business and every Friday fortunes are made and lost. I didn’t want him to be stressed out.

My mom was a housewife, who was my teacher as well. She was a disciplinarian, who made sure that we did our chores ourselves, including washing clothes and utensils.
But she was there 24×7 for me and now, I understand, the value she brought to my life. She taught me the way I should grow.
Now I have chefs, cleaners and a dozen people helping me run the house. But my mom used to do everything on her own.

I have a brother as well, who runs his own consulting business.

While stuyding in Bengaluru, you seemed to have stayed away from well-known schools…

When we moved to Bengalurufor my sixth standard, it was already August. So my father had to scramble to find a school.

Though I was supposed to go to National School in Rajajinagar, the cut off date to transfer had passed. So I joined St Anns Matriculation School. I had never been in a co-ed before, so it was a shock when I saw girls sitting in the classroom.

I had to learn Kannada as well. I think in my entire life it was the only time I failed in a subject.  I am very proud to say that in a matter of six to seven months, before the end of annual exams, I had mastered Kannada, and scored my usual, between 80 to 95 per cent.

The choice of college was also unconventional…
In SSLC, my results were fantastic, so I could have picked any course or college. Typically for Bangalore, everybody was pushing me to take science. But the entrepreneur bug had already bitten me and I wanted to do commerce instead of science.

While I was looking at St Joseph’s and other colleges, my mother wanted me to come home for lunch everyday as we were not allowed to eat outside.

So, I joined the Nijalingappa College in Rajajinagar, which was nearby. Though everyone said it was notorious, the year I joined, a new principal took over and he turned my college years into the strictest time of my life.

Literally, we were not allowed to do anything at all; only in the last year, that is when I was in the third year of B com, we could have a college day.

I was pretty studious and attendance was very important for me. I would sit right on the front bench everyday. College days are the best memories one has in a life and my longest-lasting friends are from this college.
You have been away from Bengaluru for a long time; what are your memories of the city…

It brings joy whenever I think of my days in Bangalore. The City was extremely cold until early 2000. Coming from Madras in the ’80s, where it was scorching hot, I took to wearing sweaters in Bangalore.

Whenever I travel overseas, and whenever I wear a sweater, the first thing that comes into my mind is Bangalore. If anyone asks me where I am from, my immediate answer is not Malaysia, not Chennai, but it’s Bangalore, India.

I remember the time with my friends when we used to ride in our kinetic Honda and drive down to Bannerghatta or the Tumkur road.

And of course, the one-by-two coffee or tea… Though I was not allowed to have tea or coffee at home, when I was out with my friends, we used to have by-two tea, and I think that’s a very Bengaluruthing to have.

There were some bad experiences as well; when we were staying at Rajajinagar, the Cauvery riots happened. We saw how the National School was looted.

I have not visited Bengalurufor a very long time. My parents went back to Chennai as that was where they were born and brought up. But I am in touch with few of my closest friends through Whats App and Viber.

What turned you into an entrepreneur?

I think curiosity, the zeal to solve problems and take on challenges. If you ask any of my school or college mates, they will tell you that I used to look forward to examinations, which may sound very funny, but that’s true.

I never wanted to work for anybody. In my entire life I have spent just one year working for a company in Jayanager. It was a training company. When I had joined the company they had a turnover of five to six lakhs a year. When I left after nine months, I had brought up the turnover to one crore a year.

I was working to open franchises for this training centre. That guy had promised to pay me for every few centres set up, but he did not keep his word.

I have seen top CEOs of multinational companies, who retired with very little to their name. They were running 120 and 130 billion dollar companies and now may have a personal fortune of 30 to 40 million dollars. And that was what I didn’t want to be.

You began your career at the age of 13 in a garage, fixing kinetic Hondas…

We opened the garage for a guy who was working for a shop near our house; he became a friend of us. He was from Tamil Nadu and could not speak Kannada. As we could speak Tamil, though we are Telugus, he became close to us.

He told me there was good money in garage. So we coaxed our mother and borrowed a few thousands to fund the garage at Rajajinagar, just a stone’s throw away from National school. But he disappeared after five or six months and we were stuck with the garage.

When I began my career in the garage, we had no training.  There was no Google at that time or any no manual. I had just had observed how this guy used to fix bikes and picked up from there.

But whenever a bike or a scooter used to come with a problem, I was on my own.

We used to solve problems on the fly and became good at that. I really loved it. I could open and fix back the engine, almost the entire vehicle, in about one hour and fifteen minutes, without any specialised tools.
Sai scooter garage became famous and even scientists from ISRO started coming to us. That is where I think I got the taste of business. That is where I learnt sales, marketing, customer handling, problem solving, managing human resources and financial management.

Running the garage was not a financial necessity to our upper middle class family. But I still ran it till my first year or second year PUC.

I would come back from school, finish homework and then open the garage. On Saturday and Sunday we were open full. It helped me not to get into wrong company, wasting my time, or you can say, chasing girls.

My priority was to show much business I could generate, how much money I could give my mother. My mother, who managed the finances of the house, would keep all the money. We would consider ourselves lucky to even get 10 rupees from her. But I loved the business. That’s why I went into it.
But we decided to close the garage because of my studies; my father wanted me to perform very well in college.

But you started breeding dogs after that…

From my aunt in Chennai, I found out about breeding dogs, and she gave me a Boxer to kick start my business. I started breeding boxers and Rottweilers. I have delivered hundreds of puppies, cut their umbilical cord and taken care of them. Though there was no formal training, I learnt how to manage them. Any dog lover would tell you that a dog will not allow anyone near the puppies unless she trusts you with her life.

Then I used my marketing skills to sell the puppies for up to Rs   20,000, which was good money in the mid ’90s. I was in this business till the end of my final degree.

You started Celframe after graduating; how difficult were the early days…

We opened the first office of Celframe at Lalbagh road. Prior to it, I had done one venture with my brother, which had failed.

Funding is a problem when you are not a big brand or don’t have a big family name behind you. Because of my age, I worked with wrong people, who took advantage of my naivety. I lost quite a bit of money – my own money and also the money of some of my initial backers. But I bounced back and it made me understand people better.
What were the major turning points in your career?

Everything was a turning point – opening the garage, breeding dogs, starting a technology company. But the biggest jump or spike in my revenue happened – if you consider money to be metric of success – when we released our first product called Celframe office.

It is now considered to be the Number 2 office suite in the world by way of sales. Not many people know that Microsoft office makes more than 60 billion dollars annually. When I launched my office suite, companies like Sun had failed in this product category. Even IBM’s Lotus notes had not made a big impact. Coral is still there but its sales are very small.

It is said you were one of the few people the Redmond giant could not smother…

It was more of a David and Goliath kind of situation. Being a monopoly Microsoft used every tool in its arsenal to bring us down. They made sure that no Original Equipment Manufacturer like Dell, HP or IBM would ever buy our products and pre-load them on their PCs.

I will not use the word bully but that is the word everybody uses when it comes to dealing with American tech firms. They use patent, money and media to bring down any small company that may look like a threat.

How did you survive that?

In this industry, partners and distributors get one or two per cent on every deal they make. I decided to give away 40 percent of my revenue and make them partners in success. We treat customers with respect and customise the way they want.

I focused my business more on the public sector as private companies cannot bully the government.  We managed to implement our product in several governments in Asian and African regions.

We made it a policy to promise a 50 per cent reduction in the tech cost of customers using our products. That is, if they are paying 100 million dollars to a competitor, we would deploy our software for just 50 million. We would increase the price over three to four years and by this time they would have realised that we were a fantastic company to work with. We also supported them very well.

That was the biggest hurdle I crossed in business. But now with the mobile ending the old monopolies, things are moving forward amazingly.
You have also made you mark as an investor…
I have diversified into gold mining, coal business, oil and gas, real estate, venturing with top companies. I am looking to build a casino and start an airlines in South Africa.

It’s said that my fortune is four billion dollars but with my diversification it has grown nearly five to six times in the last two to three years.

I am a very cautious investor. You want me in, you need to show me why should I invest money. I would like to know the entire story and the people before I do business. I turn away from a deal if the pressure is too much for me to invest money into it.

I invest only if I can get a majority control on that company. I don’t like to be a minority partner as I am very passionate about what I do. I get involved in minute details from the start to the end. The running of the company is done by CEOs whom I trust. But I get involved in major decisions. If a problem needs solving, I am there in the front. I don’t like to sit back and let my people take the hit.

You say your upbringing taught you the value of money

There was a time when I used to buy jets like buying candies. I had eight private jets of my own. I once tried to sell one of my jets and found that I had lost about 40 percent of what I had actually paid. Then I realised that these toys, homes or yachts, do not add much value to you.

I took the hit, got rid of jets and houses, and reinvested them back into my businesses. I also turned whatever jets and yachts I was left with, into a rental business.

This lesson, appreciating the value of money, was taught by my parents. The strongest reason for my success was the foundation I had when I was young.

What are your future plans?

I am excited about several ventures we are pursuing. We started a technology company called Browsify corporation a few months ago. We are setting up one of the largest mines in South Africa.
I am looking for partners to bring Celframe products to India. It’s ironical that most of the governments use my product, but the Indian government does not. India is still reliant on the investments coming from the US. China did a phenomenal job supporting local companies such as Alibaba.
Though I am known globally for my technology company, very few people know that I have a group company called Pudur group. We are going to make the information public sometime later this year.
You left Bengalurufor Kuala Lumpur, when the whole tech world was coming here…   
I was brought here in 2002 or 2003 by someone I knew in Bangalore. Though the business with him didn’t work out, and I lost quite a bit of money, I loved the way the government was moving over here.

The quality of people, though more expensive than India at the time, was very good. The access to banking was much better; if I needed money, I could always rely on my bank without having my father to co-sign as age was not a barrier.

As I grew, I was given tax exemptions. I have not paid tax in the past eight to nine years. I do pay income tax, though a small amount.
Government is straightforward; if you need an approval, it gets done on time. Malaysia compared to Singapore is a bit slow, corruption does exist here as well.

The support from the government is phenomenal. As it is a small country, they act pretty fast. They can change rules very fast in the interest of the nation.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Panorama / by Tarannum Khan, Bengaluru / DHNS / March 07th, 2015

Dr. S.L. Bhyrappa is ‘Sahitya Academy Fellow’

Mysuru :

City-based Kannada novelist and National Research Scholar Dr. S.L. Bhyrappa was on Monday elected as a ‘Fellow’ by the Kendra Sahitya Academy.

Along with Dr. Bhyrappa, distinguished Telugu poet C. Narayana Reddy too was elected ‘Fellow.’

The ‘Fellow’ is the highest honour presented by the Kendra Sahitya Academy, with previous recipient being late Dr. U.R. Ananthamurthy.

The other renowned Kannada littérateurs who have won this honour include Kuvempu, Masti Venkatesh Iyengar, Da.Ra. Bendra, K.S. Narasimhaswamy and Shivarama Karanth.

Dr. Bhyrappa was conferred with the prestigious Saraswati Samman in 2010.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / March 11th, 2015

Wipro hires ex-TCS executive as COO

Global software major Wipro Ltd on Monday appointed former TCS honcho Abid Ali Neemuchwala as its group president and chief operating officer from April 1.

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“Abid will head service lines of global infrastructure, business application, business process and advanced technology solutions,” the company said in a statement here.

Abid headed the business process services (back office operations) of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and held leadership positions during his 23-year career in the IT bellwether.

“Abid brings invaluable experience with his track record of building and scaling businesses. I am confident his understanding of technology and expertise in IT & BPS will help power our businesses to greater heights,” Wipro chief executive T.K. Kurien said.

A chess buff, Abid is an electronics & communication engineer from NIT, Raipur in Chhattisgarh and has masters in industrial management from IIT, Mumbai.

“I am honoured to join Wipro, a company with a rich heritage of technology innovation and unflinching commitment to values. I look forward to contributing towards the company’s next phase of growth,” he said from Dallas in US’ Texas state, where he lives with family.

Abid will also head business operations, geographies comprising continental Europe, Africa, Latin America, strategic engagements, advisor relationships and marketing function.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Business / IANS / Bengaluru – March 16th, 2015

VV Shenoy is no more

Belagavi :

Former journalist and enthusiast of rare plants Vasudev V Shenoy, 76, died at KLE Hospital here on Monday. He was suffering from multiple health complications.

The funeral will be held at Sadashiv Nagar graveyard at 10 am on Tuesday. He is survived by his wife Aruna and children Chetan, Anu and Rashmi.

He was popular for the ‘Panchavati Garden’ that he developed in the 750sqft area on the terrace of his house at Basav Colony. He had planted over 300 rare plants there. The garden was visited by several eminent personalities like Shivaram Karant, U R Ananthmurthy and former Union minister Balram Jakhar.

Hailing from Karkala in Udupi district, Shenoy settled in Belagavi.

He held many posts, including vice-president of Goa Konkani Parishad and member of Konkani Textbook Committee, founder-director of Chandaragi Sports School, director of Belagavi District Horticulture Association, secretary to Belagavi Press Club and secretary to Belagavi District Kannada Sahitya Parishad. He ran a Student Information Employment Bureau at Shanivar Khoot and worked as a journalist with several Kannada dailies.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Hubballi / TNN / March 10th, 2015

CM unveils Sangolli Rayanna statue at K.R. Nagar

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K.R. Nagar, Mysuru :

“Sangolli Rayanna, a revolutionary that he was, is symbol of sacrifice, patriotism and bravery,” opined Chief Minister Siddharamaiah.

Speaking after unveiling the statue of revolutionary freedom fighter, Sangolli Rayanna at Kanaka Gurupeetha premises on Cheernalli Road in the town yesterday, Siddharamaiah said Rayanna belonged to Kuruba Community and it does not assume much significance, considering the enormous sacrifice he made for the country’s independence.

Pointing out it was most disgusting to note that Sangolli Rayanna was deceived by his own, which led to his capture by the British and his subsequent hanging at Nandgad in Belagavi, the Chief Minister said that he has announced Sangolli Rayanna Authority at Nandgad in this year’s budget.

Stating that he felt happy to unveil the statue of the great revolutionary Sangolli Rayanna, the CM said Sangolli Rayanna is a model to the current generation in terms of bravery, sacrifice, loyalty and patriotism. Referring to local issues, Siddharamaiah said that tenders have been invited for naming Sri Rama Sugar Factory at Chunchanakatte for a period of 35 years. The CM also recalled the services of former MLA late Manchanahalli Mahadev to K.R. Nagar Constituency.

Former MP A.H. Vishwanath in his address, welcomed the government’s decision to set up Sangolli Rayanna Authority at Nandgad, as such a move will give a boost to developmental activities in the region.

Vishwanath appealed the government to release funds for various infrastructure works in town and for the construction of Pathrakarthara Bhavan in the town.

Energy Minister D.K. Shivakumar, in his address, said Sangolli Rayanna is an asset of the entire country.

Kaginele Shakha Mutt Seer Shivanandapuri Swamiji and Siddaramanandapuri Swamiji graced the occasion. MP C.S. Puttaraju, MLA S.R. Mahesh, MLC R. Dharmasena, ZP President Dr. Pushpa Amarnath, DC C. Shikha, MUDA Chairman K.R. Mohan Kumar, Taluk Kuruba Sangha President Mallegowda and other Congress leaders were present.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / Tuesday – March 16th, 2015

Jacintha Alfred is new mayor of Mangaluru

Mangaluru :

Jacintha Vijay Alfred of Congress is the new mayor of Mangaluru. The 45-year-old former de-addiction counsellor-turned-business woman succeeds Mahabala Marla, whose term ended on March 11.

Jacintha represents Falnir ward. Purushottam Chitrapur, 44, representing Baikampady ward, also of Congress, is the new deputy mayor.

In the elections to the posts held on Thursday, Jacintha defeated Roopa D Bangera of BJP by 38-20 margin with five members including two from JD(S), one each from CPM, SDPI and the lone independent remaining neutral. The post of mayor was reserved for a general (woman) candidate. Purushottam defeated K Rajesh, also of BJP by a 37-20 margin with the five members again remaining neutral. The post of deputy mayor was reserved for a general candidate.

A fourth time corporator, Jacintha — formerly a counsellor with Link Trada De-Addiction Centre and St Joseph’s Prashanth Nivas Society — was the chairperson of the standing committee on taxation, finance and appeals in the council headed by Marla. She pipped Prathibha Kulai and Kavitha Sanil as the choice of party leaders to head the city corporation for a one-year tenure till March 11, 2016.

Likewise, Purushottam, who served as a nominated corporator in the past, was the chairman of the standing committee on accounts under Marla’s stewardship.

Jacintha, an alumnus of School of Social Work, Roshni Nilaya, where she obtained her BSW degree, did not forget to pay tribute to her mentor and former minister late Blasius M D’Souza who spotted her as a counsellor and brought her in to politics. Jacintha with her husband Vijay Alfred run their business and have Vijitha Mariola, a high school student as their only child. She entered in to politics alongside Marla and former mayor M Shashidhar Hegde.

Purushottam and Jacintha thanked the party leaders headed by district in-charge minister B Ramanath Rai for reposing faith in them and for giving them the opportunity to serve people. The deputy mayor recalled his hard upbringing where he had to work during the day and study at Besant Evening College to earn his BA degree. “The party has given various assurances to the electorate in the manifesto. We will strive to fulfill the same,” he said.

Mayor speak:

“I will pay attention to ensure proper amenities to citizens. The focus will be on mobilization of finances to take forward the development agenda. Footpaths, a well-knit underground drainage, new three-package solid waste management system and drinking water supply to all areas will be the top priorities,” said Jacintha Vijay Alfred.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India /Home> City> Mangaluru / TNN / March 13th, 2015

Yvonne Lomax known as Mother Teresa of Belagavi is no more

Belagavi :

Yvonne Lomax (65) known as Mother Teresa of Belagavi was died at the private hospital here on Tuesday. She was running ashram ‘Jesus Cares’ , a home for homeless and destitute at Ganeshpur here.

State government respected considering her outstanding social work just on Sunday at Bengaluru, on the eve of International Women’s Day. Because of she was admitted in hospital, her aides had received the award. She breathed her last due to severe asthmatic attack at noon.

Yvonne who completed her SSLC from ST Joseph Convent here in 1966 worked as an airhostess for some time. She had got married to an Australian who was an army officer and settled at Goa.

After death of her husband, Yvonne shifted back to Belagavi and started an ashram about 30 years ago. She had given shelter for about 5000 destitute, nursed the patients and even buried the dead inmates. She used to spend almost all the money for the ashram which she used to get from the pension of the late husband.

At present about 50 inmates are taking shelter at her two ashrams at Ganeshpur and Saraswati Nagar on Ganeshpur road. Yvonne is survived by a daughter and brother.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Hubballi / by Ravindra Uppar, TNN / March 10th, 2015

His Story Larger Than Silver Screen

Tumakuru :
Noted Kannada film director Siddalingaiah’s life story could well have been a movie considering the twists and turns it had.

Born to a humble farmer couple Linganna-Gangamma at Taruru village of Kallambella hobli in Sira taluk, Siddalingaiah wanted to achieve something big in life. He left behind the  parched land and ran away from home. His parents too had no clue of his whereabouts and presumed him to be dead.

It was after he gave a phenomenal hit Bangarada Manushya (starring Raj Kumar and Bharathi) that the people of the village realised that the successful director was none other their Siddalingaiah. By then, his father too had died. He visited the village and interestingly, got a huge open well dug for his younger brother Basavaraju in his barren land and wished him to become a bangarada manushya (man with a golden heart). Indeed, his brother grew coconut and plantain and settled down there.

Siddalaingaiah had his primary education at the village’s 100-year-old school. The village wanted Siddalaingaiah to grace the school’s centenary celebrations a couple of years ago. But he  couldn’t oblige them as he was unwell at the time.

Today, the entire village sat glued to the TV after hearing the news of Siddalingaiah’s demise.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com  / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Karnataka /by Devaraj B. Hirehalli / March 13th, 2015