Category Archives: Records, All

Lucknow guava thriving in Arunanchal Pradesh

The local guava that starts fruiting here in two years has started yielding fruit in Arunachal Pradesh in only nine months, much to the amazement of the local administration, district horticulture officer and others.

“Commercial guava cultivation is new to this state and it is not a common crop for cultivation.” (HT Photo)

Believe it or not, the local guava that starts fruiting here in two years has started yielding fruit in Arunachal Pradesh in only nine months, much to the amazement of the local administration, district horticulture officer and others.

More than one lakh guava grafts of ICAR-CISH developed varieties reached Yachuli, 80 km away from Arunachal capital Itanagar, during the rainy season this year. Flowers and fruit could be seen on these plants this month, claimed Shailendra Rajan, director, Central Institute for Subtropical Horticulture.

Rajan credited this to the efforts made by progressive farmer Likha Maj by supporting tribal organizations Agro Gramin Limited (AGUN) and Green Gold, Naharlagun (Arunanchal Pradesh) in collaboration with ICAR-CISH, Lucknow for establishing guava industry in the north-eastern region for the benefit of farming communities comprising mostly of tribals.

Likha Maj took the initiative to transport grafts from Lucknow during the rainy season, when it was difficult to reach there by truck due to landslides and damaged slippery roads, he said.

A team of 10 youngsters took to planting and rearing these grafts in more than 100 hectares and made all efforts for their survival under highly difficult conditions.

“Commercial guava cultivation is new to this state and it is not a common crop for cultivation,” said Rajan.

After seeing such a huge plantation, about one hundred farmers were interested and started planting guava varieties transported from Lucknow.

“Maj has not only planted guava grafts but also motivated several farmers for starting its cultivation so that a sizable production takes place and the produce can be utilized for processing as a food park is in the process of approval,” director CISH said.

ICAR-Lalit, a variety developed from Lucknow, can play an important role in this area when the processing unit is ready, as it is a prime variety being used for making pink pulp from guava further used for different products as well as export.

Thousands of hectares under Lalit have come up in AP, Maharashtra and Karnataka and other states but for the first time this effort was made in the extreme North-East conditions.

The farmers regularly exchange views with scientists using plant photos taken in the field. Smartphone has played an important role in establishing linkage between the scientists from CISH-Lucknow and tribals in a remote area of Arunachal Pradesh.

CISH Lucknow has not only provided grafts but is also helping in establishment of a modern guava nursery in Arunanchal so that problems faced in graft transportation are eliminated and the good quality grafted material is available at a reasonable cost to be distributed to different parts of the north-eastern region.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Lucknow / by HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times,Lucknow / December 28th, 2017

Stoke Row’s Maharajah’s Well undergoes £25K revamp

Stoke Row’s Maharajah’s Well undergoes £25K revamp / ALAN MURRAY-RUST

A Victorian well that was funded by an Indian maharajah has undergone £25,000 refurbishment works.

Maharajah’s Well was gifted to the residents of Stoke Row, Henley on Thames, Oxfordshire, by the Maharajah of Benares in the mid-1800s.

He was moved by stories of water shortage in the area told to him by local landowner Edward Reade who worked in India for many years sinking wells.

Revamp work has included refurbishing the well’s gilded elephant statue.

The restoration of the 368ft-deep (112m) well – which began in April – also involved repainting the well and its canopy using Victorian methods, the Maharajah’s Well Trust charity, which has funded the work, said.

Chair of the trust, Catherine Hale, described it as a “unique structure”.

“It’s also an amazing story of this connection between a landowner in the Chilterns and a maharaja.”

Maharajah’s Well was officially opened on 24 May 1864 and cost £353.

source: http://www.bbc.om / BBC News / Home> News> England> Oxford / December 16th, 2017

Armenian X’mas link

This Christmas, let’s rewind to the times when the cross and the crescent met in the Capital

Christmas is much the same everywhere but the medieval Armenian one was different. Even the Cross (that proclaims Christ’s crucifixion) had its own peculiar shape, hardly seen in Catholic and Protestant churches, except in old cemeteries, like the one in Agra which was once a Mughal orchard gifted to an Armenian lady by Akbar in the 17th Century. In Armenian celebrations, cakes were there, of course, but the emphasis was on animal sacrifices. The cakes and sweet breads were embellished with raisins (kishmish). No wonder non-Christians started calling Christmas “Kishmish”.

The visit of the former Armenian President, Levon Der Petrossian during Indira Gandhi’s time was a reminder of the age-old ties between India and Armenia, two countries where the Aryan influence predominated. The visit of Vice-President Hamid Ansari earlier this year was a follow-up to the one by Mrs Gandhi’s to Yeravan.

Armenia is an ancient country which has been regarded as “the doorway between East and West.” Mount Ararat, where Noah’s Ark rested after the Deluge, was in the present Turkish part of Armenia and it was there that those who were saved from the great flood along with the patriarch settled down to create a new world. It was, therefore, natural for Christianity to take root there in its initial days. It is worth mentioning, however, that the old beliefs of the Armenians were incorporated into the Church for quite a long time. Animals were sacrificed in the church porch before the celebration of the Eucharest, especially at X’mas and Easter. The Armenians had started coming to the Mughal Empire some years before the invasion of their country by Turkey. They found the hospitality that they needed and built churches in Delhi, which, however, do not exist now.

At Agra also they built a chapel and the son of a nobleman, Mirza Zulquarnain, was brought up by Akbar. He was later to become the head of the salt works at Sambar. The Mirza is known as the Father of Christianity in North India because it was during his time that the cross and the crescent met in the Mughal Capital.

Mirza Zulquarnain’s palace occupied the land where the British later built the Agra Central Prison, which in recent times has made way for the ambitious shopping project known as Sanjay Place. It was on this piece of land that a cathedral was erected by the Capuchins 200 years later. The Armenians planted olive trees, one of which still survives near Akbar’s church. The mystical cross was used as an emblem on even residential buildings. It is said that during Akbar’s time after Christmas Mass the sick members of the congregation drank of the water in which earlier a crucifix had been bathed. It was supposed to cure patients, or so the belief went. In the Martyrs’ Cemetry at Agra are the graves of many Armenians which look like Muslim graves with Persian inscriptions. One of the graves, that of the saintly Armenian merchant, Khwaja Mortiniphas is still venerated, along with that of Fr. Santus. Some say he was related to the Bishop of Tabriz and became a hermit in later life after giving all his wealth to the poor.

In Delhi, the most famous Armenian tomb is that of Sarmad Shaheed at the foot of the Jama Masjid. Kishanganj, between old Delhi and Sarai Rohila stations, also has some Armenian graves, besides those of Dutch nationals some connected to the Mughal Court like Bibi Juliana. Incidentally, the Chief Justice in Akbar’s reign was Abdul Hayee, an Armenian Christian.

Destroyed by Nadir Shah

There were two Armenian churches in Delhi, one near the slaughter house, beyond the old Sabzi Mandi, another in Sarai Rohilla; though accounts of their exact location differ. According to Sir Edward Maclagan, there were 120 catholics in Delhi during Shah Jahan’s reign in 1650. Their number went upto 300 by 1686, when Aurangzeb was on the throne. Two priests looked after them. A Catholic cemetery was also in existence from 1656. Father Desideri, who came to the city from Tibet, found the churches in ruins in 1732 (Mohd Shah’s reign). He stayed on for three years and built a new Armenian church dedicated to the Virgin Mary and blessed on All Souls’ Day, Nov 2, 1723. In 1739, this church and another Armenian one were destroyed by the Persian invader, Nadir Shah during the massacre of Delhi. One of the churches was rebuilt in 1746, and blessed on Christmas Eve. Later another Armenian church came up, but both seem to have been razed in the early 19th century.

When the Armenians held X’mas celebrations, boys and girls dressed as angels greeted Akbar and later Jahangir at their church in Agra which still exists. After that the two emperors watched the Christmas play and later sent the ladies of the harem to see the crib depicting Christ’s truth in a manger. Armenian X’mas is now a nostalgic memory but when the church bells peal for midnight Mass at Christmas in the Cathedral near Akbar’s church, the Armenian spirit is revived as the local Padritolians pull the ropes of the five huge bells imported from Belgium by the Italian Capuchin fathers. This tradition dates back to Armenian times, when one of the bells broke and could be lifted with great difficulty by two elephants, who deposited it in the Mughal Kotwali till Jahangir had it repaired and restored to the old church.

Probably the most famous Armenian in Indian history was Shah Nazar Khan who cast the Zamzamah gun for the Third Battle of Panipat (1761) on the orders of Ahmed Shah Abdali and about which Kipling wrote: “Who hold Zam-Zamah, that fire-breathing dragon, hold the Punjab”. The giant on wheels, gun is now parked in front of the Lahore Museum, while Nazar Khan rests in Agra where father discovered the nearly-obliterated Persian inscription on his tomb in December 1935, almost two years before one was born. Merry Christmas!

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Miscellaenous> Othes / by R.V. Smith / December 26th, 2017

Diagnosing early-stage cervical cancer using artificial intelligence

New approach: “The change in tissue morphology as the disease progresses can be picked up by light scattering,” say Prof. Prasanta K. Panigrahi (right) and Sabyasachi Mukhopadhyay

The AI identifies precancerous tissue, and also the stage of progression in minutes

The morphology of healthy and precancerous cervical tissue sites are quite different, and light that gets scattered from these tissues varies accordingly. Yet, it is difficult to discern with naked eyes the subtle differences in the scattered light characteristics of normal and precancerous tissue. Now, an artificial intelligence-based algorithm developed by a team of researchers from Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Kolkata and Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur makes this possible.

The algorithm developed by the team not only differentiates normal and precancerous tissue but also makes it possible to tell different stages of progression of the disease within a few minutes and with accuracy exceeding 95%. This becomes possible as the refractive index of the tissue is different in the case of healthy and precancerous cells, and this keeps varying as the disease progresses.

“The microstructure of normal tissue is uniform but as disease progresses the tissue microstructure becomes complex and different. Based on this correlation, we created a novel light scattering-based method to identify these unique microstructures for detecting cancer progression,” says Sabyasachi Mukhopadhyay from IISER Kolkata and first author of a paper published in the Journal of Biomedical Optics.

Elaborating on this further, Prof. Prasanta K. Panigrahi from IISER Kolkata and corresponding author of the paper says: “The collagen network is more ordered in normal tissues but breaks down progressively as cancer progresses. This kind of change in tissue morphology can be picked up by light scattering.” White light spectroscopy (340-800nm) was used for the study.

Statistical biomarker

The change in scattered light as disease progresses is marked by a change in tissue refractive index. The team has quantified the changes in tissue refractive index using a statistical biomarker — multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis (MFDFA). The statistical biomarker has two parameters (Hurst exponent and width of singularity spectrum) that help in quantifying the spectroscopy dataset.

While MFDFA provides quantification of light scattered from the tissues, artificial intelligence-based algorithms such as hidden Markov model (HMM) and support vector machine (SVM) help in discriminating the data and classifying healthy and different grades of cancer tissues.

“The classification of healthy and precancerous cells becomes robust by converting the information obtained from the scattered light into characteristic tissue-specific signature. The signature captures the variations in tissue morphology,” says Prof. Panigrahi.

“The MFDFA-HMM integrated algorithm performed better than the MFDFA-SVM algorithm for detection of early-stage cancer,” says Mukhopadhyay. “The algorithms were tested on in vitro cancer samples.”

In vivo samples

The team is expanding the investigations to study in vivo samples for precancer detection. While the accuracy achieved using in vitro samples was over 95%, based on a study of a few in vivo samples the accuracy is over 90%.

“In the case of in vitro samples we were able to discriminate between grade 1 and grade 2 cancer,” says Prof. Nirmalya Ghosh from IISER Kolkata and one of the authors of the paper. “More testing is needed using in vivo samples.”

“Superficial cancers such as oral and cervical cancers can be studied using this technique. And by integrating it with an endoscopic probe that uses optical fibre to deliver white light and surrounding fibres to collect the scattered light we can study cancers inside the body,” says Prof. Ghosh.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sci-Tech> Science / by R. Prasad / December 23rd, 2017

State to put fossil park on international map

Lucknow :

The Uttar Pradesh government is working on a plan to get international recognition for the fossil park at Sonbhadra, considered to be the oldest fossil finds in the world. This work will be carried out along with the development of Kapilavastu, Kushinagar and Sharavasti, areas closely connected with Lord Buddha.

Speaking in the Vidhan Parishad on Thursday, tourism minister Rita Bahuguna Joshi said a research team has been formed and a roadmap would be chalked out to promote the fossil park internationally. Members of Samajwadi Party had demanded that the government get UNESCO recognition for the site, as it had recently done for Varanasi.

“The fossil park at Sonebhadra is older than even the Yellowstone National Park in the US. Earlier, I could not have taken action as the area came under the environment department. However, recently an MoU has been signed between the departments of environment and tourism for the development of eco-tourism. We will take up the fossil park under this MoU and soon have a plan in place to ensure international recognition for the area as a heritage zone,” she said. The roughly 25 acre-fossil park in Salkhan is believed to be more than 1,400 million years old and is located 12 km from Robertsganj, the district headquarters of Sonbhadra.

The fossils were reportedly first discovered in the 1930s but the area was designated a fossil park only in 2002. Fossils of algae and stromatolites have been discovered in the area, adjacent to the Kaimur Wildlife Sanctuary. A similar fossil park was discovered a few years later close to the one in Salkhan, in Badagaon village under Chopan Vikas Khand. This year, said Joshi, Rs 89.60 lakh has been sanctioned for various development work to be carried in and around the fossil park. She said the Centre had sanctioned Rs 99 crore for a project to develope tourism in areas closely linked with the rise of Buddhism, namely Kapilavastu, Kushinagar and Shravasti.

Outlining works that were already going on, Joshi said the area would be developed as acircuit that would promote tourism in the entire region.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News> Civic News / TNN / December 22nd, 2017

Lucknow to get its first smart bus shelter

Lucknow :

The first smart bus shelter in the city is coming up on Ashok Marg. It’s nearing completion and will be opened for public on Saturday. It has been done under the smart city project. It will also be the first smart bus shelter in the country to have an e-toilet with water recycle plant.

The smart shelter will have a host of features and facilities for commuters including display of real-time information about arrival of buses, route details, availability of seats, e-toilets, ATM, water vending unit and mobile chargers.

Equipped with GPS and intelligent traffic management system, the bus shelter will have boards that will display the bus route, digital map and weather forecast along with basic information about arrival of buses.

The bus shelter also has a 24-hour power back up.

Naveen Agarwal, managing director of the firm that will construct these shelters said that 200 smart bus shelters, each costing around Rs 39.84 lakh, will come up in the city.

Smart city project general manager SK Jain told TOI, “The Ashok Marg bus shelter will be opened for public use from Saturday. While all other facilities will start with the inauguration, the electronic information system will be made functional after all the transport is made GPS-enabled. In the first phase, 100 such shelters will be built in the next year.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / by Vidita Chandra, TNN / December 19th, 2017

I give full credit to Lucknow for my win in Mr India

Lucknow boy Jitesh Singh Deo, who won the title of Peter England Mr India World 2017, in Mumbai on Thursday, says he always had the confidence to make it to the top but could hardly believe it when his name was announced as the winner.

The 22-year defeated 15 other contestants in the final round to win the coveted title. Having worked hard for two years to clinch the title Jitesh is “super happy” and is now looking forward to coming back home to Lucknow and celebrating his success with his friends and family. Also on the top of his to-do list, when in Lucknow, is tucking in his favourite Tundey kebabs.

Speaking to us from Mumbai, Jitesh says, “I froze on stage when they announced my name as the winner. And then when Kangana Ranaut put that sash around me, it was the most incredible feeling. I knew I had it in me but frankly, the win was unexpected. But as they say, and now I firmly believe it too, that hard work definitely pays.”

And Jitesh would know that as the engineering graduate also tried his luck in the contest two-years ago but couldn’t make it to the finals. He then groomed and trained himself for this year’s contest and succeeded, and how!

Jitesh Singh Deo, Peter England Mr India World, 2017, in a scene from the film A Disaster….June 16 in which he plays lead (BCCL)

The former City Montessori School student of Mahanagar, third branch, says he is now looking forward to sharing his happiness with his family and friends in Lucknow. “Bas ab Lucknow aa ke celebrate karna hai”Jitesh laughs and adds, “My grandmother and parents are eagerly waiting for me to be there at home.

My grandmother and mom had started crying when they got to know that I had won. My parents were so happy that they cut a cake and partied the whole night the day I won. My friends have been calling me up ki ‘bhai kab aa raha hai, party karni hai’. There’s so much excitement among all my relatives and even our neighbours. Ab bas sabse milna hai. Aur sabse zyada, Lucknow aa ke khoob saare Tundey kabab khaane hain. I am dying to have them. Mein thoda patla bhi ho gaya hoon toh Lucknow aane ke baad khoob sara khana khaunga.”

‘But what surprised Jitesh was a call from his school congratulating him for his win. “I got a call from my school and they said they want to felicitate me. It was a bit surprising kyunki mein aisa koi studies mein bahut achha nahi tha. And now they want to honour me. That’s what I call god’s blessings. It’s all feeling so nice.

My friends are calling me and saying ‘yeh ladka jo hamare saath padhta tha, khada hota tha, aaj TV pe hai aur Mr India bann gaya hai!’

Giving credit to his city of birth for his win, Jitesh says, “All credit goes to Lucknow for my success. Yahan ki tehzeeb, parvarish, grooming, yahi sab zimmedar hain meri kaamyabi ke. My basic personality has been shaped in this city. Yes, I got the exposure and the confidence to face the world in Mumbai, where I shifted six-months ago and also in college in Ghaziabad, but shuruaat toh Lucknow se hi hui hai.”

An aspiring actor, Jitesh has acted as lead in a film made last year on the 2013 Uttrakhand floods. He has also participated in fashion shows in the past and says that Bollywood will be a natural progression, but not just yet.

“As of now, I want to focus on the Mr World title. After Rohit Khandelwal winning the Mr World title and Manushi Chillar being crowned Miss World, I feel my responsibility has increased. I want to retain the Mr World title in India and win it for my country again. So abhi toh usi ki taiyyari karni hai,” says Jitesh, adding, “As a kid I always was interested in singing, dancing and acting but I had never imagined myself to be Mr India. I used to participate in cultural activities in school.

In fact, when I was in class 12th, the school annual function was to be held. And since we had our board exams, we weren’t allowed to participate in it. But I saw these juniors practicing for the group song and I also joined in. On the final day of the event when people saw me as the lead singer in the group, they were shocked ki yeh ladka kaise aa gaya annual function mein, so main aisi cheezen karta rehta hoon. But, eventually, I want to be an actor.”

— Itishree.Misra@timesgroup.com

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / December 18th, 2017

Duo give wings to their dreams

Flying Officers Shivangi Singh and Prathiba Poonia are all smiles at the Combined Graduation Parade at Air Force Academy, Dundigal, on Saturday.

Two more women fighter pilots inducted into IAF

Two more young women fighter pilots, who were inducted into Indian Air Force, were the cynosure of all eyes on Saturday.

The smiles turned to tears of joy and pride for Flying Officers Shivangi Singh and Prathiba, as soon as they came off from the parade ground at the Dundigal Air Force Academy, to meet their families and friends, with hugs, wishes and photo sessions taking over from there.

For them, it was their childhood dream to become a pilot, and their inspiration were Flying Officers Mohana Singh, Bhawana Kanth and Avani Chaturvedi, first women fighter pilots in IAF.

It was Shivangi Singh’s childhood dream to “fly like a free bird” that inspired her to join IAF. Shivangi, a native of Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh who completed her graduation in B.Sc (Physics). said convincing her parents and relatives was a big task for her.

“We stay in a joint family. When I declared that I want to join the forces and serve the nation, my parents and other family members were hesitant . Slowly, I started proving myself in sports and other activities and they finally agreed,” she said.

However, Prathiba said that her father inspired her to join the IAF.

Prathiba, who hails from Rajgarh in Rajasthan, is the daughter of an ex-Army officer Chhoturam Poonia. She did her B.Tech (Computer Science) and then joined the IAF.

The duo will now undergo further training on Hawks in Bidar.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Abhinay Deshpande / Hyderabad – December 16th, 2017

Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University to honour 7 eminent persons

Lucknow :

Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University will give awards to seven eminent people on its convocation on December 15. The Academic Council meeting held on Wednesday decided to award Vidhi Ratna to chairman, Central Administrative Tribunal, Justice Permod Kohli, and senior advocate HC Ganeshia.

While president, Indian National Science Academy (INSA) Ajay Sood and chairman, University Grants Commission, VS Chauhan will be given Vigyan Ratna; Guru Nanak Dev University vice-chancellor Jaspal S Sandhu will be given sportsmedicine award; and senior RSS leader Krishna Gopal and former chairman, Indian Council of Social Science Research, SK Thorat will be given social science award for their social service.

The convocation will be held in two parts. The first one will begin from 10.30 am which will see President Ram Nath Kovind’s participation. After giving away medals to four toppers and delivering the convocation address, the President will leave at 11.30am. Sharing the dais with chief guest Kovind would be UP chief minister Aditya Nath Yogi, governor Ram Naik, deputy chief minister Dinesh Sharma and medical and technical education minister Ashutosh Tandon.

In the second shift, the other gold medal awardees will accept it from the vicechancellor.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News> Schools & Colleges / TNN / December 14th, 2017

Youngest PhD girl gets pat from President Ramnath Kovind

Lucknow :

At 17, Sushma Verma is used to earning accolades for academic excellence. She is India’s youngest girl to enrol in a PhD programme, that too, at 15. She was also recognised by the Limca Book of Records as the youngest student to pass class X at the age of 7 years, 3 months and 28 days old, in 2007. Yet, being called ‘extraordinary’ by President Ramnath Kovind was an experience in itself.

So stunned was Sushma that she couldn’t focus on whatever else Kovind said about her. “This was so unexpected. I feel humbled and blessed to have him compliment me,” said Sushma.

TOI has been following her since 2005 when she was just five and had enrolled in class IX at the UP Board-affiliated St Meera’s Inter College. Post her graduation, she joined MSc in Microbiology at BBAU. Not only did she complete her course but was the topper and was given medal by PM Narendra Modi in 2016 at the university’s convocation.

Lauding Sushma and Neelu Sharma, who in April won the UGC’s Swami Vivekanand single girl child scholarship, Kovind said, “Babasaheb (Ambedkar) samaanta ke paksh me the, par betiyan aaj unke sapno se aaagey nikal rahi hai (Ambedkar called for gender equality but girls are surpassing his expectations).” Neelu said, “I felt so important when people from President’s secretariat inquired about my work.”

Neelu enrolled in BBAU’s PhD in mass communication in 2015.

She is also a recipient of ‘Films for Change’ fellowship by a London-based Television Environment.

Both Sushma and Neelu were chosen by the university to share their experiences with the President.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / by Isha Jain / TNN / December 16th, 2017