Category Archives: Records, All

UP Board Class 10 Result 2018: Allahabad’s Anjali Verma tops state with 96.33%

Allahabad’s Anjali Verma tops UP Board class 10 with 96.33% marks , ANI

Anjali Verma, a resident of Allahabad, topped the Class 10 UP Board exams with 96.33% marks. She secured 578 out of 600 marks in the exams. UP Board Class 10 and Class 12 results were announced by the Uttar Pradesh Madhyamik Shiksha Parishad (UPMSP)/Board of High School and Intermediate Education Uttar Pradesh (BHSIE UP) today.

The class 10th topper Anjali said, “I am very happy to top the exam, I was confident of scoring good marks. Our school teachers helped us to prepare well. I want to become an engineer. My father is farmer who has always supported me: Anjali Verma, Class 10th topper (UP Board).”

Yashasvi, a student of BMIC Fatehpur, has bagged the second position with 94.50% marks. There was a close fight between the second and third position. However, Vinay Kumar Verma from Sitapur and Sunny Verma from Gonda shared the third position on the chart. Both of them secured 94.17% marks.

Over 37 lakh students had appeared for class 10 examination. The board results can be accessed on UPMSP official website upmsp.edu.in and upresults.nic.in .

Uttar Pradesh CM Yogi Adityanath also congratulated the students and said “I am really happy that such a good result has come. I want to congratulate everyone who has passed in these examinations. This time all the exams were held without any complaints of cheating coming from anywhere.”

It was earlier announced that the UP 10th High School Result was to be declared at 1.30 pm, however, UP Class X Results were declared early. The UP 10th exam was conducted from February 6-February 22.

Here is how you can check UP Board 10th Result 2018:

1. Go to either of the official websites to access UP Board Results 2018 i.e. UP 10th Results 2018 & UP 12th Results 2018. The websites are upmsp.nic.in, upmsp.edu.in & upresults.nic.in

2. Click on UP Board High School (Class X) Results 2018 for UP 10th Result 208

3. UP Class 10th Students click on the UP 10th Result & UP class 12th students click on UP 12th Result link

4. Keep details like roll number and other details handy

5. Download the result and keep a print out ready for future reference

source: http://www.dnaindia.com / DNA / Home> India / by DNA Web Team / April 29th, 2018

11th-century bodies near Meerut give new archaeological twist to history

Excavation unearths 13 bodies that roughly date back to 11th century AD; discovery leads to calls for a deeper examination because people of the region in that period were known to cremate the dead.

An excavation by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) near Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, has unearthed 13 bodies that roughly date back to 11th century AD, according to people familiar with the developments. This has sparked interest among experts and led to calls for a deeper examination because people of the region in that period were known to cremate the dead.

Historians have defined the era between the 7th century AD and the 12th century AD as the Rajput Period, and archaeologists say that this is the first time that any excavation has revealed the burial of bodies from that period in north India.

“We have found extended burial of 13 persons which include a male, a female, children and a handicapped person,” said Sanjay Manjul, director at the Institute of Archaeology, who is overseeing ASI’s Barnawa excavations.

“While twelve bodies were placed in a particular direction, with the head facing the North, one body was found placed in the opposite direction,” Manjul said.

He said that burial pots were recovered with the bodies, suggesting that people of that era may have believed in life after death.

“Since this is the first discovery of burials which seem to be from the later Rajput period, we need to further examine it scientifically and arrive at an exact time period,” he said.

Manjul feels that the discovery is significant as it will throw light on death rituals and cultural aspect of people of that era living in this area.

“Since Muslim Turks, who used to follow burial practices, arrived in India after the 12th century, it would be interesting to determine who these people were and why were they not cremated,” Manjul said, adding that burials were practised in the Harappan and Later Harappan periods, and also among certain Hindu tribes before the Raput Period.

Other archaeologists and historians feel that these burials might unravel some mysteries of the cultural aspect of life of people.

Dr Buddha Rashmi Mani, Director General, National Museum, says that though he doesn’t have first-hand experience of the excavated materials, the recovery of burial pots suggests the body doesn’t belong to members of the Muslim community.

“The Veerashaiva community in southern India practice burying the dead, so there is a possibility of existence of a similar community at the excavation site in UP,” said Mani.

“However, it is also possible that these bodies were of people who died due to some dangerous disease or some calamity and buried at one place in a group. Both possibilities require through investigation.”

Noted archaeologist KK Muhammed, who is credited for discovering Mughal emperor Akbar’s Ibadat Khana (House of Worship), from where the Mughal king propounded the religion Din-i Ilahi, said that that during wars people would bury bodies due to lack of time and resources in the war field. It’s a notion that historian Kapil Kumar agreed with, but both said that it would be too early to determine the identity of these people and the reasons for such graves, and called for a thorough examination.

According to historian Makkhan Lal, “It’s a good thing that we are paying attention to the excavation of the Rajput Period sites which has not been done so far.”

HT had reported earlier this month that the excavations at Barnawa, which started last December, also tried to determine the existence of the Lakshagriha episode mentioned in the epic Mahabharata. Archaeologists had said that artefacts found there bore strong a cultural resemblance to those found at sites such as Hastinapur, Indraprastha, Kurukshetra and Mathura — places that find mention in the epic.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> India / by Jeevan Prakash Sharma, Hindustan Times,New Delhi / April 26th, 2018

Disabled in 26/11, ex-Navy commando Teotia finishes Ironman Triathlon Championship in S Africa

Meerut:

Former Marine commando Praveen Teotia, 34, finished one of the toughest races in the world — Ironman Triathlon Championship 2018 — held in South Africa, a few days ago.

This Shaurya Chakra winner took four bullets during the operation to neutralize terrorists at the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai in November 2008. Hit in the lung and in an ear, he became partially hearing impaired. After being given a non-active duty job by the Navy, Teotia set about trying to prove that he was still fit for service, and began participating in marathons.

“I wanted to prove myself and the Navy that I am still a commando not only in spirit but physically as well. No Navy man from India has ever finished the Triathlon so far,” said a beaming Teotia, who landed in Mumbai on Thursday. He hails from Bulandshahr.

Last year on September 9, despite a damaged lung, he participated in the grueling 72-km-long Khardung La marathon in Ladakh, finishing well within the stipulated time and earning a medal.

TOI had carried a story on his achievement in the September 14, 2017 issue. The consequent limelight helped Teotia receive help. He got a special bicycle and he began training for Ironman Triathlon in Goa.

Achieving this feat was not an easy task. The championship requires back to back three events to be finished in 16.45 hours that include 3.8-km of swimming in the sea followed by 180.2-km of cycling followed 42.2-km of run. Despite losing precious 35 minutes due to an accident on the bicycle, Teotia still managed to finish all three events within 14 hours 19 minutes and that too with an injured knee.

Teotia had taken voluntary retirement from the Navy a month before his Khardung La marathon achievement, and now wishes to run for Ultraman event to be held in Florida in the US in February next year.

“That’s the toughest championship on Earth and involves 10 km of swimming, 421 km of cycling followed by 84.4 km of running all in a span of three days,” says Teotia who will begin training soon.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> City News> Meerut News / by Sandeep Rai / TNN / April 20th, 2018

Meerut-based photojournalist nominated for Dadasaheb Phalke Film Foundation Award

Meerut:

A Meerut-based photojournalist has been nominated for Dadasaheb Phalke Film Foundation Award. Gyan Dixit, 74, a graduate from JJ School of Arts began his career as a photographer in 1975 in Mumbai itself and shot almost all cine stars of those times.

He worked for magazines like Kadambari and Mayapuri apart from others. He will receive this award on April 29 in Mumbai.

“It has been more than four decades in this profession, but I never thought that I will be considered for this prestigious award,” said an emotional Dixit, a recipient of a large number of awards including from the agencies like UNICEF. “When I am not clicking actors, then natural surroundings and scenery is something that keeps me busy.”

A resident of a rural area of Kaseru Buxar village, on the outskirts of Meerut, Dixit got the letter on Tuesday and his entire household jumped with joy. A father of two daughters, Dixit feels it’s the biggest gift of all times. “I had been associated with various film personalities including Prakash Mehra.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> City News> Meerut News / by Sandeep Rai / TNN / April 24th, 2018

A Kanpur cemetery is witness to history

The graves of 12,000 British subjects in the Lal Kurti cemetery in the northern Indian city offer a quiet testament to the passage of time

The headstone inscriptions on the graves at the Lal Kurti cemetery help to chart history / Image Credit : Rohit Ghosh

It is hard to locate Jai Prakash Yadav among the more than 15,000 graves in the Lal Kurti cemetery but he is there somewhere — maybe lazing under an old tree in the shade or tending to a plot.

In his sixties, Yadav is the caretaker here just as was his father and grandfather before him, a lineage that goes back more than 120 years in one of the oldest cemeteries in Kanpur, the second largest city in the state of Uttar Pradesh in India.

The caretaker of the cemetary, Jai Prakash Yadav / Images credit : Rohit Ghosh

“Kallu Yadav was my grandfather,” Yadav tells Weekend Review. “I do not know the exact year when he became the caretaker, but I guess he worked here for some 30 to 35 years. He died in 1920. My father, Babu Lal was appointed in his place.”

Babu Lal died in 2000 when he was 105 years old, and so Jai Prakash became the new caretaker.

It an area with a lot of history. Initially the British selected Kanpur [formerly Cawnpore] to establish a cantonment and, because of the soldiers and their families stationed there, trade and business flourished.

Administrative offices and courts also brought business, and both British and Indians alike saw opportunity and set up industries. Soon, Kanpur became the biggest city in north India by the last quarter of the 19th century.

Churches, hospitals, schools, clubs came to Kanpur — and so did cemeteries.

“The British set up four cemeteries in Kanpur,” explains Manoj Kapoor, a local historian. “One has been occupied by squatters, two have been declared protected monuments. Lal Kurti is the biggest and is still in use.”

Interestingly, since the British left in 1947, no new cemetery has been opened in the city.

Lal Kurti cemetery derives its name from its adjacent cantonment. Lal in English means red while kurti means tunic — a reference to the colour of the uniforms worn both by British and Indian troops, and so the region came to be known as Lal Kurti.

A photographic memory

“My father was dedicated to the cemetery,” explains Yadav. “He had a few workers under him and he would ensure that the cemetery was spick and span. You would not have found even a dry leaf. Above all, he had a photographic memory. You had to name a dead person and he would have taken you to his or her grave within minutes. The chances of his making a mistake were nil. And you must remember, there are 12,000 graves of British people in the cemetery.”

Today, Yadav still has to go through the old records of the cemetery if a person wishes to see the grave of his or her dead ancestor. “We have the records of all the people who were buried in the cemetery since 1924,” he says.
Babu Lal was also a gravedigger, and would dig a grave using a small trowel. It was a task that usually took him 15 days. Once one grave was ready, he would start digging a fresh one.

“It is very hard to say how many graves my father must have dug,” Yadav says. “He worked here for 80 years. He may have dug thousands. In fact, he was busy digging a grave on the day he died. He returned home from the cemetery in the evening and suddenly collapsed and died.” These days, Yadav hires four workers to dig a grave.

Historically, burials took place with much fanfare. The funeral cortege would come to a halt at the gate of the cemetery. The caretaker was in a livery, and followed by a band, he would lead the coffin and mourners to a grave. “The caretaker would keep sprinkling water in front of him as he marched up to the grave,” Yadav says.

The tales are all part of a treasure of anecdotes on the lives of common British people. “My father knew the British personally,” Yadav says. “They knew him. For example, he was very friendly with a locomotive driver whose wife is buried in the cemetery. The driver would spend his nights at his wife’s grave.”

Yadav says the British ranked the cemeteries according to their neatness, and it was because of the efforts of Babu Lal that Lal Kurti always had a high place in the rankings. Today, wild bushes have overrun the cemetery and it has a somewhat decrepit look even though it seems tombstones are immune to the passage of time and onslaught of rough weather. Their inscriptions are still legible just as they were on the day they were erected. They remain a rich source of information for anyone who is interested on the British then living in Kanpur, and it’s easy to spend hours reading the inscriptions.

Kapoor says the inscriptions help to chart history. “Supposing a tombstone reads: ‘Erected by his regiment in memory of W. J. Pearce, the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry, who died at Cawnpore on June 25th, 1924, aged 22 years.’ Without any doubt, it can be concluded that Kanpur was a cantonment town in 1924 and Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry was stationed here. We will get a clearer picture of old Kanpur if we study the older tombstones.”

Lal Kurti cemetery also contains the graves of 51 soldiers from Kanpur who fought and died in the two world wars. The tombstones also indicate that many British in Kanpur died at an early age. One tombstone reads: ‘Emily, the beloved wife of Henry Tall. Who died 16th May 1883, aged 35 years. Also, her two children Elizabeth Maude and Earnest Joshua who died the same month. Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord.’

Another one says: ‘Sacred to the memory of George E. Crawford, son of the late Major Arthur Crawford, who died of small pox at Kanpur April 6th, 1883, aged 26 years. The monument is erected as a mark of esteem by the members of the Kanpur Volunteer Rifle Corps of which he was a Liet and Adjutant. Rest in Peace.’

As Kapoor notes: “England is a cold place. India just the opposite — hot and tropical. The English could not bear the weather and there were diseases like malaria and cholera. Medical facilities at that time were not so advanced.”

India became independent in 1947 but some British families continued living in Kanpur for a few more years. Up to the 1950s, British families kept visiting Lal Kurti cemetery and Babu Lal would be happy as he received a generous tip from the visitors. As time passed, less British came and now even fewer come to visit.

“Now it is very rare,” Yadav explains. “Once in a while, an English man or a woman visits the cemetery — maybe once in five years or so.”

All Souls’ Day is observed every year on November 2, a day when Christians remember their dead relatives, light candles and place flowers on graves.

Lal Kurti cemetery teems with people on that day and Yadav is also busy with requests to whitewash or clean graves. And on that night each year, the far end of the cemetery containing the graves of Indians glows with the light of hundreds of candles and the air is heavy with the smell of fresh flowers and incense.

Even then, the graves of 12,000 British men, women and children who are eternally sleeping at Lal Kurti cemetery, far away from their home, remain unattended.

Rohit Ghosh is a writer based in Kanpur, India.

source: http://www.gulfnews.com / Gulf News / Home> Culture> People / by Rohit Ghosh – special to Weekend Review / March 28th, 2018

Photos: UP Sainik School in Lucknow becomes first to welcome girl cadets

The UP Sainik School in Lucknow lost its all-boys institution tag on Friday when it admitted 15 girl cadets for the first time in 57 years.

Principal Col.Amit Chatterjee said the girl cadets, who have ‘a dream to join the country’s armed forces, formally attended the first lesson.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Photo / pictures by Deepak Gupta/ HT Photo / April 21st, 2018

Lucknow University to honour Niti Aayog head, UP CS

Lucknow :

Lucknow University will felicitate some of its prominent alumni—including Niti Aayog vice-chairman Rajiv Kumar and UP chief secretary Rajive Kumar—at a ceremony on April 28 at Malviya hall, for their contribution in respective fields. Thirteen other former students would be honoured on Friday.

LU spokesperson NK Pandey said distinguished alumni award will be awarded to the following — Niti Aayog vice-chairman Rajiv Kumar, renowned artist Surendra Pal Joshi, Dr Salil Tandon, sportsperson Dharmendra Soti, recipient of Nari Shakti Puraskar highest civilian award for women — Gauri Maulekhi, NRI Ravi Sharma, former UP DGP Sulkhan Singh, Former IIT Kharagpur director SK Dube, UP chief secretary Rajiv Kumar and Justice Vikram Nath.

“The lifetime achievement award will be given to three former students for the contribution in the field of education.

They are UGC member DP Singh and founder-manager of City Montessori School Jagdish Gandhi in the field of education and Justice Khem Karan for his contribution to the field of law.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / April 21st, 2018

Commonwealth Games 2018: Two gold, two bronze and a silver in UP’s kitty

In all, 12 athletes from UP had participated in the Games out of whom shooter Jitu Rai and weightlifter Punam Yadav could win gold.

Meerut’s Ravi Kumar had a bronze medal in shooting at Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast.(HT Photo)

As India celebrates its third richest medal haul (66) at the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games, athletes from the country’s most populous state Uttar Pradesh could contribute only five medals – two gold, one silver and two bronze.

In all, 12 athletes from UP had participated in the Games out of whom shooter Jitu Rai and weightlifter Punam Yadav could win gold. Other medal winners included Seema Punia (silver in discus), Divya Kakran (bronze in wrestling) and Ravi Kumar (bronze in shooting).

Saraswati Raut (weightlifting), Vandana Kataria (women’s hockey), Ashish Kumar (gymnastics), Mohd Asab, Anuraj Singh and Seema Tomar (all shooting), and Lalit Upadhya (men’s hockey) returned home empty handed.

“The achievement for the state is remarkable in terms of medals. The number could have been higher had there been a professional setup for sports in the state. There is no dearth of talent but we need adequate facility and job security for sportspersons in UP,” former director, sports, Vijay Singh Chauhan said on Monday.

“There is no short cut for success in sports. We need to make sports compulsory in school curriculum. Promotion of sports should also be a priority for the state government if we really want more athletes win medals at events like Commonwealth Games, Asian Games and Olympics,” said Chauhan, who is also known as ‘Iron Man of Asia’ for setting up a record in athletics.

He said special talent hunt in rural areas of the state should be carried out. “Sports and sportspersons should be encouraged in rural areas. Most of the games are based on strength and power. Even a small ground in every gram panchayat is sufficient for the development of sports in villages,” he said.

Former deputy director, sports, Neeru Kapoor hailed the achievements of UP athletes at Gold Coast Games and said more athletes from the state should have participated in the event.

“Being the biggest state of the country, we have a big sea of talent in sports but to motivate them we need to have more encouragement,” he said.

“The overall performance of UP athletes is encouraging but in terms of population, our contribution of medals is quite small. We should find ways to raise the medals tally at Commonwealth Games after four years in 2022,” he said.

A total of Rs 1.80 crore will be distributed by the state government among all 11 athletes. Both Punam and Jitu will be given Rs 50 lakh each as per the government policy while Seema will be given Rs 30 lakh. The two bronze medallists will get Rs 15 lakh each while all seven other participants will receive Rs 5 lakh each as participation allowance.

Meerut’s Ravi Kumar, who had won bronze at the 2014 Asian Games in 10m air rifle before winning a bronze at the Gold Coast Games, said he would try to change the colour of his medal in the Asian Games.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Sports / by Sharad Deep, Hindustan Times,Lucknow / April 17th, 2018

Reviving the dying art of Kalai from Lucknow, a tinning process of utensils

Image credits: Copper.org

With the advancement of technology in India, a lot of things have changed its original place and turned towards modernism. From the number of things technological incursion is affecting, art forms are facing harshest consequences.

One such art is the art of Kalai. Old-timers still remember the kalaiwalas as those who skilfully coated brass and copper utensils. Earlier, copper and brass utensils were used in the kitchen but with the rapid intrusion of stainless steel and aluminium vessels, these vessels have become extinct from the modern day kitchen.

Storing water in copper vessels, Image Credits: Curio.com

A long time ago, people used to store water in such vessels and there is actually a reason behind using them. Interestingly, these metals or alloys attract and transmit Chaitanya (a divine consciousness).

Such spiritual benefits are not obtained from the use of prevalent utensils made of stainless steel or aluminium.

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THESE METALS LOSE ITS SHINE AND COLOUR?

The artisan who performs kalai on vessels is known as ‘kalaiwala’

When brass and copper kitchenware becomes old, they require tin-plating after six to eight months and the person who does this Re-tinning is known as ‘Kalaiwala’

Earlier these vessels ruled the kitchen, but now with the emergence of stainless steel and aluminium vessels, they have somewhat lost their utility in the society and are now struggling to revive its own identity

HOW DOES THE PROCESS TAKE PLACE?

Process of kalai- a lost art in India

The first step in the process of Kalai involves washing the copper utensil first with caustic soda to get rid it of any surface impurities such as dust

Then the utensil is washed with an acid that contains the gold purifying compound ‘Sufa’, a salt and another element

After this, it is immediately wiped clean otherwise it might bear a mark. The ‘kalaiwala’ or kalaigaar then dig a pit in the ground and prepared a temporary blast furnace, airing it with bellows, heating the utensil afterwards

Then he sprinkles a miraculous component called, ‘Nausadar’ powder (ammonium chloride) and then rubbed onto the utensil with a cotton cloth, which gives out deep white smoke and a peculiar ammoniac smell

Lastly, it is dipped in the bucket full of water. The sudden contact of the hot utensil with the water creates a harsh and sharp sound that dims with the utensil, finally recovering its normal temperature

HERE’S THE VIDEO OF THE ART OF KALAI. CHECK IT OUT:

India is famous for its culture and traditions and the world knows us by the deeply rooted culture within us. If this craftsmanship and the hard work of such artisans will be ignored, like the way it is going on right now, then such art forms will soon become extinct.

It’s time to bring back the lost art forms of India!

(Images by Shaad Midhat)

Kissa Aapka, an initiative by India Today Education is collecting visuals on lost art with the concept of Citizen Journalism. You can send your stories to educationtoday.cj@gmail.com

For more information about this, visit our official Facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/indiatodaygroupeducation

source: http://www.indiatoday.in / India Today / Home> News> Education Today> GK & Current Affairs> Art and Culture / by Nisha Singh / New Delhi – April 19th, 2018

Biomarker in blood can prevent amputation

Prof Ajai Singh

Lucknow :

In a study, King George’s Medical University’s (KGMU) paediatric orthopaedic department has found a biomarker (chemical) in blood which if tested within four hours of injury caused to a child, can help in early diagnosis of compartment syndrome and save the child from limb amputation.

Compartment syndrome is a condition after an injury in which internal bleeding or swelling builds up pressure that causes a dangerous condition which may lead to amputation as only treatment.

The syndrome under trauma usually develops in the forearm or leg.

In the research spanning over five years, head of peadiatric orthopaedic department, Prof Ajai Singh, found that if the biomarker — creatinine kinase — is tested to be six times higher or more in the blood after injury, compartment syndrome can be suspected.

“Compartment syndrome in trauma happens to both adults and children but in children, it is difficult to diagnose. Some of them are not able to explain the pain and others are not co-operative, which leads to loss of time, when the situation to amputate can be avoided,” said Prof Singh.

“We tested the findings of the study and progress of the results on 56 patients, and found that the biomarker was 10 times higher in these patients. So if within four hours of an injury, the test is run for the biomarker and it is found to be six times higher or more, treatment should be headed towards compartment syndrome,” he added.

Prof Singh said that test for biomarker is inexpensive and can be performed at any laboratory.

Prof Singh recently presented the study at the 20th Asia Pacific Orthopaedic Association Congress 2018, at Antalya in Turkey.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India/ News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / April 16th, 2018