Monthly Archives: September 2014

‘Princes of Mysore’ to mesmerise the audience in USA

Mysore :

City’s amazingly gifted brothers — Nagaraj and Dr. Manjunath — are scheduled to perform violin concerts starting from the 20th of this month in different parts of the United States of America. They will be accompanied by veteran Srimushnam Raja Rao on mridanga and young Giridhar Udupa on ghata. They will be giving about 22 concerts. Dr. Manjunath, who is now acclaimed as the cultural ambassador by The Mysore University, will be representing India in many reputed venues across USA and Canada during the one-and-a-half month’s tour.

The brothers, who have created an unrivalled record as star violinists in prestigious organisations across the country and abroad, visit the United States on concert tours usually twice a year. They have toured extensively across the concert halls of United States .They are known to have performed at Royal Albert Hall, Sydney Opera House, at the Common Thread Music Festival in USA, The Federation Square in Melbourne, at the Music Festival in Chicago, Esplanade Theatre in Singapore and Santa festival in New Mexico. Talking about Manjunath, The Los Angeles Times wrote, ‘he has crossed over many boundaries to create ‘Music wonder.’

Nagaraj and Dr. Manjunath, who are the pride of Mysore, will be performing at the Prestigious South Asia Program at Cornell University in US on Sept. 20 followed by a series of concerts including the ones at the University of North Texas, Charlotte Arts Council, prestigious MIT – Boston, Arizona State University, Santa Clara Convention Center Theater, IFAA in Texas, and Power theatre.

Dr. Manjunath, who performed recently at Raye Freedman Arts Center in New Zealand, will present a paper at the International Seminar on ‘World Music’ in New York during this visit.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / September 10th,  2014

City lad Sagar officiates in US Open championships

Mysore lad Sagar G. Kashyap seen at the Arthur Ashe tennis stadium, Flushing Meadows, USA, the venue of US Open Tennis Championship
Mysore lad Sagar G. Kashyap seen at the Arthur Ashe tennis stadium, Flushing Meadows, USA, the venue of US Open Tennis Championship

Mysore :

Mysore based Sagar G. Kashyap officiated in the US Open Grand Slam Tennis Championships 2014 held at New York recently.

Sagar officiated from the qualifying rounds to the quarter-finals of the championships. This is his first year of officiating in the US Open and this is his third Grand Slam of the year. Earlier, he officiated in the Australian Open and Wimbledon Championships held this year. Sagar will be heading to Seoul to officiate in the Asian Games to be held Korea shortly.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports News  / September 09th,  2014

Grace and Glory of pure friendship

Last month I received two copies of a book titled “The Vanished Raj” from Prism Books Pvt. Ltd., Bangalore, with a request to review it in our newspapers. It is the English translation of “Kelavu Nenapugalu” (Some Reminiscences) in Kannada written by Navaratna Rama Rao, who was an official in the government of the Maharaja of Mysore Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV during the first decade of the last century — 1904 to 1909. The original Kannada book was translated into English by the author’s grand children Navaratna Rajaram and Rajeshwari Rao.

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I went through some pages and found both the language and the narration rather heavy for easy reading. For all his academic brilliance and post-graduate degrees, Navaratna Rama Rao could start his career in the Palace from a Junior official’s level — Amildar. Of course, he tells us how he lost a higher position at the entry point. He mentions of that illustrious Kannada litterateur, author of “Chikkaveera Rajendra” Masti Venkatesh Iyengar, who was his colleague and M.A. Srinivasan who too has written a book in English about his days in the service of the Maharaja’s government as a Minister. I had read this book many years ago. It was very readable, both language-wise and content-wise.

Having failed to proceed further with the book which indeed might interest and even benefit Revenue Officers, beginning from the Village Accountants and Gram Panchayat Members, I must credit this book for its singular article by no less a person than C. Rajagoplachari, the freedom fighter and the last Governor General of India, on his life-long friend Navaratna Rama Rao, taken from the magazine ‘Swarajya,’ December 17, 1960. It was a tribute C. Rajagopalachari paid to his friend. It is an ode to friendship of a kind I have never read or heard in my life. It set me thinking about the sense, meaning and purpose of real friendship. It indeed defines who is a real friend.

Immediately after I finished reading the article, “Rajaji on Rama Rao (1877-1960),” I reached out to the Reader’s Digest Dictionary for the meaning of the word friend. It said: A person with whom one has a bond of mutual affection, typically one exclusive of sexual or family relations.

This at individual, person-to-person level.

May be for this very reason the American Novelist John O’ Hara famously said, “You cannot buy friendship from a supermarket.” And, I am sure, as in my case so also in the case of many young persons’ case, friends are of great help in seeking out independent life, in looking out for greener pastures, promotions in jobs or venturing into enterprises. The role played by their friends would be significant and defining. This kind of role of a friend may be extended even to a person deciding to marry or finding a wife.

However, I must say with passing years friendship will wane, because of long years of separation (out of sight is out of mind) or because of the stark difference in the stature of friends; both may be distancing themselves intentionally unable to relate to each other because of the differences in wealth or position. This is understandable. But the worse is when a friend turns a foe or a fiend. A fraud. And there are friends for whom all these above mentioned differences do not matter. Rajagopalachari is one such friend of Navaratna Rama Rao.

Before I reproduce Rajaji’s article which is an ultimate tribute a friend, who was just a minion in Mysore Maharaja’s government, whom the Governor General of India Rajaji did not forget all his life, let me recall a similar friendship that lasted a lifetime between the American Oil tycoon Rockfeller and a school teacher.

Rockfeller had a friend from his school days who became a school teacher. Rockfeller became an oiler and a billionaire. But his friendship continued despite the difference in wealth and social status.

Here is how others try to encash on such friendships. Once the teacher-friend asked Rockfeller to take him to the Stock Exchange where shares of big companies are traded, as he had not visited the Stock Exchange at all in his life. Rockfeller readily agreed and took him to the Stock Exchange and showed him around.

Next day morning to the teacher’s shock and surprise, he could see dozens of people at his door wanting to see him. Can you make a guess why ?

Now the article by C. Rajagopalchari by way of a tribute to his friend Navaratna Rama Rao:

Navaratna Rama Rao and I met in 1892 when we were both in our early teens in the Central College, Bangalore. I sought him out and left a letter in his room on the top of an eating house, asking for his friendship. Eating houses were of a wretched quality in those days and students who had no home in the city hired wretched rooms to sleep in and ate poor meals in what were called hotels which were as far from the hotels we know now as a twelve anna rush mat is from a Persian Carpet. My letter must have been a very boyish document. But in the romance of adolescence it was a serious adventure. I was attracted by his brains, his brightness, his lovable exterior, and by his being better read than all the rest of us in the college and as fond of great English literature as myself. Rama Rao accepted and we were friends from then on until death parted us on 27 November 1960 after sixty-eight years of unbroken attachment. We read a lot together — Byron, Shakespeare, Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson, Thackeray, Dickens and many other classic authors’ books. He was the greater connoisseur of the two of us and his taste was superb and guided me like a mesmerist. We laughed and enjoyed humour and talked metaphysics and educated each other continuously. Our friendship was an astonishment and mystery to our college mates but they tolerated it and gathered round both of us in admiration.

My boyish instinct was right and I am thankful for it. Our mutual affection made us nobler and better and stronger and happier than either of us would have been without it. We were each the external life of the other as Valmiki puts it in respect of Lakshmana for Sri Rama. All life is a mystery and I realise it more and more everyday and as one after another of my friends and colleagues pass out and I am left with increasing loneliness. Life is a mystery but love is the greatest mystery of all. Dear young men and women who read this, do as we two did, Rama Rao and I. We swore to ourselves each in his own mind that we should be friends for all life. And so we were all these nearly seventy years, one soul in two bodies and two lives in each body. This kind of friendship will keep you from sin, from all kinds of meanness. It will protect you like a guardian angel, against all evil, all unhappiness, all stepping down from the ideals of romantic youth.

Rama Rao’s life and mine ran on different tracks. What if ? We were ever together, though others did not see it. Whatever each of us was doing and wherever we were, we were together in spirit. Pothen Joseph wrote last week “I know he is in deep mourning for a friend in Bangalore who had become a part of his own being.” That put it as briefly and truly as any English words can do it. Those who have not experienced true and full friendship must think it all nonsense. God bless them.

I saw my friend under Death’s black shadow on the ninth of November. The poison had gone to his head. He smiled in recognition but he was above the region of pain and away from normal expression. He was in delirium, uttering high things about the affairs of the world, about truth, and about many other things all incoherently. It was heart-rending to watch his best and most admirable intellect involved in incoherence. I asked a daughter-in-law of his who sat by his bed to sing a Purandaradasa Kirtana. She did it beautifully. My friend’s eyes glistened. He stopped speaking and weakly struggled to bring his palms together in prayer. He looked grateful and sank into worship and silence. Never did I feel so happy.

The doctors gave up all hope and it was only a matter of a couple of days according to them. But he appeared to revive and astonished the medical men for a few days. Exactly a fortnight after I left him on the thirteenth of November to go to Gujarat, Maharashtra and Karnataka, I got a message when I was in Belgaum, that all was over. I made an all-night car journey from Belgaum to Bangalore and reached at dawn. But before that, the previous evening, my friend’s body had been according to ancient custom reduced to ashes and I could only walk round that cruel heap and make three perambulations for a last physical act of love. As the Isa Upanishad rishi sings “the breath has left to join the universal air and the body has turned into Bhasma,” “O mind,” as the rishi continues, “remember that only the works remain, only the works remain.”

Om Krato smara Krtam smara

Krato smara Krtam smara.

And I returned from the cremation ground praying as the rishi did

Agne naya supathaa raaye asmaan

Visvaani, deva, vayunaani vidvaan

O, Fire, thou who knowest all the paths, lead us in the right path, cleanse us and save us from sin, we entreat you over and over.

— By C. Rajagopalachari (1878-1972), in Swarajya, December 17, 1960.

Can you imagine Rajagopalachari himself so old, cutting short his journey at Belgaum, a far away place from Bangalore and travelling all through the night on those bad roads, to Bangalore to see his friend’s body. And what did he see for his efforts ? His friend’s mortal remains — ash.

True friendship indeed transcends all barriers — it is till death do them part. As in the case of friendship between the Governor General of India C. Rajagopalachari and an officer in the government of Mysore Maharaja. What can be nobler than this, nay more divine ?

I am sure by now, you my readers may have made the guess as to why so many people gathered at the door of that teacher-friend of Rockfeller. In case you need confirmation here is the answer: They wanted to know from the teacher which company’s shares Rockfeller bought !

e-mail: kbg@starofmysore.com

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Abracadabra…Abracadabra / by K. B. Ganapathy  / September 14th,  2014

Women power to man this Dasara !

In these days of gender-equality, achieved after defying the much loathed gender-discrimination, our city seems to pioneer a new trend beginning this Dasara with an All-Women Team, except for some space for men too, well geared to conduct this year’s Dasara and the District administration as well. Here is how and why.—Ed

Women power will be at the helm of affairs this Dasara as they will share the responsibility of organising and monitoring the Dasara events that begins in city from Sept.25.

The officers in-charge are Deputy Commissioner C. Shikha, who is also the Dasara Special Officer, Mysore In-charge Secretary and Principal Secretary to Government, Department of Women and Child Development and Empowerment of Differently-Abled and Senior Citizens Dr. Amita Prasad, Regional Commissioner Rashmi V. Mahesh, Additional Deputy Commissioner M.S. Archana, Assistant Commissioner Syeda Ayesha, ACP (K.R. Sub-Division) B.T. Kavitha. This apart, ZP President Dr. B. Pushpa Amarnath and Mayor N.M. Rajeshwari Somu will also be an integral part of the Dasara celebrations.

DC Shikha, who has the experience of organising Dasara 2013, is expected to conduct this year’s festival with ease. Shikha was also lauded by the general public for successful conduct of 2013 Assembly Elections and 2014 General Elections in Mysore. She previously worked as Managing Director of CESC in Mysore.

Deputy Commissioner Shikha being the Special Officer for the Dasara celebrations will have the responsibility of co-ordinating with various committees and Ministers while planning this year’s festivities.

It is not only her; Shikha will have the guidance of senior IAS officer Dr. Amita Prasad, who is currently the Mysore In-charge Secretary. Having held the post for five years, Amita Prasad has been lending her valuable suggestions to the officials on conducting Dasara activities. Another officer who would be a part of Dasara festivities is Regional Commissioner Rashmi V. Mahesh. A 1996 batch IAS officer, Rashmi passed her IAS examination at the age of 22 years. She has the previous experience of working as Assistant Commissioner in Hassan, Mysore ZP CEO, Bangalore Urban Deputy Commissioner, Joint Commissioner of Excise Department, Secretary, Department of Rural Development and Panchayat Raj and also in Department of Medical Education. She has now replaced M.V. Jayanthi as the Regional Commissioner of Mysore Division.

This apart, Deputy Commissioner C. Shikha will be supported by Additional Deputy Commissioner M.S. Archana and Assistant Commissioner Syeda Ayesha, both native of Mysore. While, the officers take charge of the overall activities, ACP (K.R. Sub-Division) B.T. Kavitha, will be in-charge of monitoring the security while the Dasara events take place at various venues.

Adding to the list of women who will be at the helm of affairs this Dasara will be Mysore Zilla Panchayat President Dr. B. Pushpa Amarnath, who has been given the charge of organising Raitha Dasara and Grameena Dasara. This apart, she will also be leading the green campaign during Dasara festivities. Chief Minister Siddharamaiah considering her suggestion has banned the use of flowers and bouquets to welcome the guests during the 10-day festival. Instead, the guests would be greeted with saplings.

Mayor N.M. Rajeshwari Somu will also play a vital role in Dasara, being a member of the Dasara Reception Sub-Committee. Dasara being the festival that revolves around Goddess Chamundeshwari and women being entrusted the job of organising the 10-day extravaganza, this year’s Dasara is all set to celebrate the women in power.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / September 09th,  2014

SJCE student discovers asteroid

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Mysore :

In what is considered as a rare feat, Ronaldo Laishram, 1st year student (Computer Science) of SJCE, Mysore, has discovered an Main Belt Asteroid ‘MAUR 397’ as part of All India Asteroid Search Campaign (AIASC) 2014. The discovery was made along with his team members of Team Salonivia Conquerors.

Provisional discoveries of the asteroids have been confirmed with further observations. Ronaldo used exclusive data to look at specific parts of the sky and by using a complex procedure called ‘Astrometrica’ they tracked objects by looking at the images of the sky provided by telescope-based in the US to see which of the objects moving over time could be a possible asteroid.

The discoveries were made as part of AIASC conducted between April and August this year jointly by Science Popularisation Association of Communicators and Educators (SPACE) and the International Astronomical Search Collaboration (IASC).

SCJE Principal Dr. Syed Shakeeb Ur Rahman and SPACE CEO Amit Verma have congratulated the team for achieving the rare feat.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / September 09th,  2014

Pledges to make Mysore a Cleft-Free City

To donate Rs.400 for every 4s, 6s hit and wickets taken by the team to Deutsche Cleft Kinderhilfe Foundation

This campaign encourages cricket fans to share smiling selfies of themselves on the Facebook page of Mysore Warriors (https://www.facebook.com/MysoreWarriors). For each photo received, Cycle Pure Agarbathies and Mysore Warriors will donate generously towards the cause.

Bangalore / Mysore :

Strengthening Cycle Pure Agarbathies’ commitment towards the holistic empowerment of the underprivileged, Mysore Warriors, the KPL team owned by Mysore-based Cycle Pure Agarbathies recently annou- nced their association with Deutsche Cleft Kinderhilfe Foundation.

Deutsche Cleft Kinderhilfe is an international Non-Government Organisation that provides comprehensive treatment to children with cleft lip and palate across the world. Cleft lip is one of the most neglected body conditions. According to researchers every tenth cleft child in India dies before his or her first birthday calling for immediate attention.

Mysore Warriors will donate Rs. 400 for every 4s, 6s scored and wickets taken by the team through the KPL matches. Further, Mysore Warriors has initiated a campaign to create awareness on the condition and need for active participation.

The campaign encourages cricket fans to share smiling selfies of themselves on the Facebook page of Mysore Warriors (https://www.facebook.com/MysoreWarriors). For each photo received, Cycle Pure Agarbathies and Mysore Warriors will donate generously towards the cause.

Speaking about the initiative, Arjun Ranga, Managing Director, Cycle Pure Agarbathies said, “We at Cycle Pure Agarbathies have always had a legacy of working towards the upliftment of the society.

In fact, a significant part of the gains have been spent generously on socially relevant causes. Through this association, we are further extending our commitment towards bringing smile on the faces of people who are suffering from cleft and donating them a new lease of life.”

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / September 08th,  2014

Bangalorean gets Naad Bhed Yuva Puraskar

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Eighteen-year-old Bangalorean, violinist Apoorva Krishna has bagged the Naad Bhed Yuva Puraskar (Carnatic music-Instrumental) at the Naad Bhed National Music Competitions conducted by Spic-Macay and Doordarshan. Currently being aired on DD-National every weekend, Apoorva is excited that she made it despite the tough rounds at the district, regional, zonal levels to reach the nationals, while the four-month long competition had 36 finalists only in the Carnatic stream.

“Looking back I feel it is a dream,” says Ms. Krishna, a student of business administration.

Recently she also got the Kalavanta Award in the National Youth Festival held at Bangalore,, and for Naad-Bhed’s Sheik Chinna Moulana Yuva Puraskar Award, her deft hands were at their creative best.

“The reward was more in the accolades I received from judges as music stalwarts Hariprasad Chourasia, Parveen Sultana, Shivkumar Sharma, T.N. Krishnan, R. Vedavalli, Prabha Atre and R.K. Srikantan were the evaluators,” she says.

Trained in the renowned Lalgudi school by violinists Anuradha Sridhar (in the U.S.) and Srimati Brahmanandam, Ms. Krishna sounding precocious, yet well-groomed, says the Lalgudi schooling is “complete” as one is wedded to the song and the lyrics, helping one aesthetically express the inherent emotion in the kriti. “With every sangati framed so well to ascertain its growth, my lessons are sung and perfected initially and then transferred onto the violin to “sing” perfectly on the strings.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bangalore / by Ranjani Govind / Bangalore – September 11th, 2014

Condolence

Mysore :

Mysore District Journalists Association (MDJA) has condoled the death of Rangaswamy (52), Nanjangud reporter of Praja Vani and Deccan Herald who passed away at Nanjangud on Sept. 6 , according to a press release issued by MDJA President K. Deepak.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Brief / September 07th,  2014

Achievers feted on Press Day

Sitting from left: Siddaraju, P. Shilpa, Jeevan (late Rangaswamy’s son), N. Guruswamy, Nanjundaswamy, M. Lakshiminarayan Yadav, H.S. Sachith and Ravi Pandavapura, who were felicitated during Press Day celebrations in city this morning, are seen MDJA VP Ravi Kumar, President K. Deepak, Journalist Sugata Srinivasaraju, Mysore University VC Prof. K.S. Rangappa, Film Director T.S. Nagabharana and MDJA office-bearers K.G. Lokesh Babu, Gajendra and Madhusudan.
Sitting from left: Siddaraju, P. Shilpa, Jeevan (late Rangaswamy’s son), N. Guruswamy, Nanjundaswamy, M. Lakshiminarayan Yadav, H.S. Sachith and Ravi Pandavapura, who were felicitated during Press Day celebrations in city this morning, are seen MDJA VP Ravi Kumar, President K. Deepak, Journalist Sugata Srinivasaraju, Mysore University VC Prof. K.S. Rangappa, Film Director T.S. Nagabharana and MDJA office-bearers K.G. Lokesh Babu, Gajendra and Madhusudan.

Mysore :

Marking the Press Day, the Mysore District Journalists’ Association (MDJA) had organised a function at Rani Bahadur auditorium in Manasagangori here today where achievers in the field of journalism were felicitated.

The function was inaugurated by Journalist Sujata Srinivasaraju. Mysore University Vice-Chancellor Prof. K.S. Rangappa and film director T.S. Naghabarana were the chief guests. MDJA President K. Deepak presided. General Secretary K.J. Lokesh Babu was present.

Journalists N. Guruswamy and Nanjundaswamy were felicitated on the occasion. Another journalist Rangaswamy, who had been selected for the felicitation passed away yesterday. On his behalf, his son Jeevan received the presentation.

The annual awards were presented to H.S. Sachith (Kannda reporting), P. Shilpa (English reporting), M. Lakshiminarayan Yadav (Photography), Ravi Pandavapura (Electronic Media reporter) and Siddaraju (Photography).

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General  News  / September 07th,  2014

HMT loses race against time, to be shut soon

Set up in 1961 in collaboration with Citizen Watch; 4 units; HMT Chinar has 2. Posting losses since 2000; net loss in FY13 Rs 242.47 cr. Had 1,105 staff on 31.3.13; sales worth Rs 11.06 cr in FY 13.
Set up in 1961 in collaboration with Citizen Watch; 4 units; HMT Chinar has 2. Posting losses since 2000; net loss in FY13 Rs 242.47 cr. Had 1,105 staff on 31.3.13; sales worth Rs 11.06 cr in FY 13.

HMT Watches, the iconic brand that evokes nostalgia in most Indians, will be shutting shop soon. The government has decided to wind up the company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of HMT Ltd, which has been incurring losses since 2000 and has been unable to generate adequate resources to pay salaries to its employees.

Set up in 1961 in collaboration with Japan’s Citizen Watch, the company’s net loss rose to Rs 242.47 crore in 2012-13 from Rs 224.04 crore in 2011-12. At the end of March 2012, it also had government loan, including budgetary support for salary and statutory dues, amounting to Rs 694.52 crore.

“The government has decided to shut down HMT Watches and HMT Chinar Watches Ltd. The Board for Reconstruction of Public Sector Enterprises (BRPSE) has already recommended it and the board of directors has also given the go-ahead,” a senior official told The Indian Express.

The official said the process of winding up will be set in motion soon.

As on March 31, 2013, the company had 1,105 employees.

In 2000, HMT Watch Business group was restructured as HMT Watches Ltd. However, the company started making losses soon after, following which a revival plan was mooted and approved by the BRPSE in 2006. With the Finance Ministry and Planning Commission not supporting the proposal, the government had asked the company to get the plan vetted by a consultant.

The company appointed ICRA Management Consultancy Services Ltd and prepared a revised proposal based on its report. Later, another consultant was roped in to study the HMT group of companies, including HMT Watches Ltd, following which another plan was mooted envisaging cash infusion of Rs 252.70 crore and non-cash assistance of Rs 1,247 crore.

According to the Directors’ Report of HMT Ltd, as on March 31, 2013, the watch company could not show significant improvement in performance in 2012-13 due to factors like paucity of working capital, erosion of trade channel and high cost of borrowings. It had sales worth Rs 11.06 crore and production of Rs 14.03 crore during the year.

As regards HMT Chinar Watches, the report said it could not be sustained at optimum levels due to working capital constraints and the situation prevailing in Jammu and Kashmir. Most of the employees have been given VRS, leaving about 54 employees at the Srinagar and Jammu units. It had negligible sale of Rs 0.36 crore in 2012-13 with zero production, taking net losses to Rs 51.16 crore compared to Rs 44.04 crore in 2011-12.

HMT Watches has four units, including those in Bangalore and Tumkur in Karnataka, and Ranibagh in Uttarakhand, while HMT Chinar Watches has two units at Jammu and Srinagar.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> India> India-Other /  by Shruti Srivastav, New Delhi /  September 11th, 2014