Category Archives: World Opinion

Japanese envoy in city, takes stock of VCC project

Japanese ambassador Kenji Hiramatsu visited the VCC construction site at Varanasi Municipal Corporation

Varanasi :

Japanese ambassador to India Kenji Hiramatsu visited Varanasi Municipal Corporation on Thursday afternoon to take stock of the progress in work of Varanasi International Cooperation and Convention Centre (VCC).

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) is bringing this VCC with an investment of Rs 130 crores by removing VMCs Sadan, mayor office and Tilak Prekshagrih (auditorium). As per the protocol of Hiramatsu received by the district administration, his meeting with mayor Mridula Jaiswal was proposed with site inspection of VCC between 11.30 am and 12.30 pm.

However, his flight was delayed due to which his meeting with the mayor was cancelled but he visited VMC to take stock of progress in work of VCC. On debris of the demolished portion of VMC Sadan, mayor office and Tilak auditorium he questioned the VMC and JICA officials whether the area would be given for construction after removing debris in response of which the officials informed him the timeframe for removal of debris. After this he left for Banaras Hindu University.

On September 15, an agreement was signed with the government of India to provide grant aid of up to 2,240 million yen (approximately Rs 130 crores) for the project for construction of VCC. The VCC will be one of the prime examples of state-of-the-art facility nurturing the cultural and social exchanges. VCC will be a sophisticated convention centre comprising of a main hall with a full flying tower, having a capacity of 1,200, a gallery, meeting rooms, together with a parking facility of 120 cars.

The Japanese ambassador reached BHU to deliver a special lecture on ‘experience and contribution to India in environmental field’ organised by the institute of environment and sustainable development.

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

Varanasi: Central Institute of Tibetan Higher Studies all set to welcome Dalai Lama

Varanasi :

The Central Institute of Tibetan Higher Studies (CIHTS), Sarnath is all set to give a grand welcome to Tibetan spiritual leader His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso, who is arriving on Friday.

Talking to reporters on Thursday, the CIHTS vice-chancellor Prof. Geshe Ngawang Samten said that the Dalai Lama is arriving here to take part in the golden jubilee of the institute on January 1, 2018. “It is a matter of great happiness for us that we will celebrate the golden jubilee in presence of His Holiness,” he said adding that the Dalai Lama is arriving here after a gap of four year. Earlier, he had visited the institution in January 2013.

According to him, before the golden jubilee celebration the Dalai Lama will also take part in the two-day international conference on ‘concept of mind in science and philosophy’ on December 30 and 31. Eminent scholars from various universities and institutions of the country and abroad will take part in the conference to express their views. About 150 Indian delegates and over 70 foreign delegates from different countries will attend the conference. After four-day stay at the CITHS the Dalai Lama will leave for Bodh Gaya on January 2, 2018.

Established in 1967 the CIHTS is celebrating its golden jubilee in presence of the Dalai Lama, who is instrumental in establishing this institution. After the mass exodus of the Tibetan emigrants in 1959 they took political asylum in India. It was the joint efforts of the Dalai Lama and India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru that the CIHTS came into existence in Varanasi in 1967 to educate the youth of Tibet and the students on the Indian border who had lost the opportunity of living in Tibet for advanced studies and religious discourses in Buddhism. The institution was established with objectives like preservation of Tibetan culture and traditions, restoration of ancient learning and implementation of multi-dimensional Tibetan studies, and revival of traditional education under modern university system.

The Dalai Lama has been visiting CIHTS quite. In the beginning it was established in the premises of the Sanskrit University and later it moved to its own premises in Sarnath and was granted autonomy under the department of culture. In 1988, the institute got status of `deemed to be a university’ with financial support from the Union ministry of human resource development.

Meanwhile, the students and staff of CITHS were busy in giving final touch to the preparations. The entire campus was being decorated with flowers and floral patterns on the roads. Buddhist monks and followers from different places also started tronging Sarnath in large numbers. They will greet the Dalai Lama on his arrival on Friday.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Varanasi News / by Binay Singh / TNN / December 28th, 2017

With ancient flora, UP plans to revive Govardhan Parvat

Govardhan Parvat as it is today.

HIGHLIGHTS

Yogi government is planning to promote UP’s religious sites for tourism in a big way.

He had formed the Brij Tirath Vikas Parishad just two months after Rampur assuming office.

Lucknow :

The UP government is planning to rejuvenate the almostbarren Govardhan Parvat, which has huge mythological significance for Hindus, by reviving flora of Dwapar Yug along its 21-km perambulation path. Indian Agriculture Research Institute has been roped in for the project in Mathura.

The Yogi Aditya Nath government is planning to promote the state’s religious sites for tourism in a big way. Yogi had formed the Brij Tirath Vikas Parishad just two months after Rampur assuming office.

The CM, who is also the chairman of the parishad, has tasked it to find five varieties of trees: kadamb, karoli, tamal, pakkad and tilkan and develop the vegetation around Govardhan Parvat to resemble what has been described in the sacred texts.

Myhtology has it that Lord Krishna picked up Govardhan hill, and held it above his head with his little finger for seven days to protect villagers from incessant rain, a result of the wrath of Indra.

“In Hindu mythology, kadamb was the favourite tree of Lord Krishna, who used to play the flute and play with his friends under its shade. We’ve sent our research team to find this tree in Rajasthan’s Karoli Dham area. The entire Govardhan project is being monitored by the CM,” said Brij Tirath Vikas Parishad CEO Nagendra Pratap.

In a recent report to the CM, the parishad said the hill’s green cover had shrunk over the years and it was necessary to preserve its sanctity as it was intrinsic to Hindu culture and mythology.

The government has sanctioned Rs 226 crore as the first instalment for the project. Forest officials blame brackish water of the Yamuna in Mathura for poor vegetation on the hill. The parishad now plans to use water harvested from neighbouring Bharatpur district in Rajasthan for irrigation around Govardhan Parvat, said Pratap.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / by Rohan Dua, TNN / January 04th, 2018

200th Christmas for Faizabad church

A German music band celebrates Christmas with children

Faizabad

Built 200 years ago, Wesleyan Chapel, a fine specimen of British Architecture, for the British soldiers posted in Faizabad Cantonment, Church of North India is all decked up to celebrate Christmas.

Wesleyan Chapel, built in 1816, merged with Diocese of Lucknow in 1970 and then came to be known as Church of North India.

Talking to TOI, Rev Kaushalendra Solomon, pastor of the church said that special prayer service would be held at midnight on Christmas and then in the morning. Different religious activities will continue in the church till December 31and a special watch night service would be held on New Year eve.

The church committee led by secretary Chitij Charles has ensured special decoration with flowers and lighting as the Church has completed 200 years. Rev Solomon said that they get special cakes baked for Christmas celebrations at a local bakery.

“Ghulam Mohammad, a local scholar, said that Maulvi Ahmad Ullah Shah, who was leading the 1857 mutiny against Britishers from Faizabad, had instructed his soldiers not to damage the Wesleyan Chapel because it was a place of worship.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Neww> City News> Lucknow News / by Arshad Afzal Khan / TNN / December 25th, 2017

The story of the Englishman who stayed back as a judge in India (and what it tells us about Nehru)

Having come to India in the service of an imperial power, William Broome died an Indian.

Justice William Broome is not a well-known figure today. But he lived an exciting and inspiring life.

He came to India as an imperial official, but defied British prejudices by marrying an Indian woman and devoting his life to India. He received Indian citizenship with the assistance of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and heard the early stages of Raj Narain’s challenge to Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election victory. He was unusual even among those British officials who stayed on in India after Independence. But his life still contains important lessons about what it can mean to be Indian.

William Broome was born in 1910 in London. He was appointed to the Indian Civil Service in 1932. He served in what was then the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh). In 1937, he married Swaroop Kumari Gour, the daughter of the lawyer, politician and academic Sir Hari Singh Gour.

This marriage was remarkable. Even though Broome served in the Indian Civil Service during a period of Indianisation, British rule in India was still characterised by racial hierarchies and segregation. The maintenance of colonial control involved the preservation of racial divides, aloofness and detachment from the Indian populace. Even India’s Anglo-Indian population was stigmatised and excluded by the English-born.

In marrying Gour, Broome defied these prejudices. He raised his children as Hindus (Broome was an atheist), learned numerous Indian languages and developed a strong interest in Indian culture.

Being Indian
Broome was appointed as a district and sessions judge in 1941. His independence in that role was legendary. When the chief secretary of the United Provinces declared that too many detainees under the Defence of India Rules were receiving bail, Broome responded by threatening the chief secretary with contempt of court.

Unlike most British judges and civil servants, Broome stayed in India as a judge after Independence. By 1958, Nehru was able to write of Broome that “I have seldom known any Englishman who has so Indianized himself in various ways as he has”, and that “he is as much as Indian as anybody can be who is not born in India and indeed probably more so than many people born in India”.

In that year, with Nehru’s assistance, Broome renounced his British citizenship and became an Indian citizen. He was appointed to the Allahabad High Court, where he served until his retirement in 1972. His judgments in this role demonstrated a strong concern for civil liberties, even going further than the Supreme Court of that time.

One of Broome’s final cases as a judge was to hear the early stages of Raj Narain’s challenge to Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election from Rae Bareli – the challenge that ultimately led to the Emergency. Broome had known Nehru and had once enjoyed a friendly relationship with Indira – he and his wife were even invited to Rajiv and Sonia Gandhi’s wedding reception. But he nonetheless made important procedural rulings in Narain’s favour. (Although Broome’s friendship with Indira Gandhi seems to have ended after this case, it is striking that no effort was made to delegitimise his decisions by referring to his foreign birth.)

Broome died in Bengaluru in 1988. Having come to India in the service of an imperial power, he died an Indian.

A noteworthy life
Broome was unusual. Although thousands of British citizens remained in India after Independence, few British officials or judges did so. Of those officials, Broome was one of the few who devoted himself to India not just as an administrator, judge or scholar but as a citizen. The fact that he embraced India until his death, and was embraced in turn, must be weighed against the departure of so many other British citizens, whether at Independence or upon their retirement, and the alienation of many Anglo-Indians from the new independent nation. His life was not necessarily representative of how other people of British descent in India felt or acted after Independence.

But Broome’s life is still noteworthy.

He was retained as a judge by the independent Indian government partially through pragmatism: despite the long struggle for independence, free India kept many of the institutions and officials that had governed (even subjugated) colonial India. But his life also reflected important, idealistic aspects of the new Indian state.

Broome came to India as an official of an occupying colonial power. He served as an official and a judge in a regime that imposed various rigid classifications: between races, between religions, between governors and governed. Broome rejected these classifications. After achieving Independence, the government of India did so too.

In the current age of escalating intolerance and xenophobic nationalism, Jawaharlal Nehru’s idea of India remains a powerful alternative to those who would make the nation great again by slicing away undesired pieces of it. Nehru refused, as Ramachandra Guha puts it, to “reduce India or ‘Indianness’ to a dominant religious or linguistic ethos”. Nehru himself described Indian unity as encompassing “the widest tolerance of belief and custom…every variety acknowledged and even encouraged”. Nehru’s idea of India was, as he put it, a nation of “enduring capacity to absorb other people and their cultural accomplishments”, drawing upon and enriched by ideas and faiths and traditions from around the world. Even though this vision failed to attract or keep many, even most, of the British people who had lived and worked in India under the colonial regime, it did allow Broome to be accepted as an Indian.

The fact that Broome was seemingly one of a kind demonstrates that this vision has not been completely honoured in practice. Broome was married to the daughter of a very distinguished Indian, held important offices and was seen to have “Indianized himself”. He may have been easier to accept as an Indian than someone without these characteristics, thus demonstrating limits to Indian tolerance.

There is hence a gulf between Nehru’s vision of India and how that dream has been fulfilled. But the vision is still important and still inspiring today.

Douglas McDonald-Norman is a researcher in Indian law, politics and history and a contributor to Law and Other Things.

For more information on William Broome, see Douglas’s article for the Indian Historical Review, “Becoming Indian: William Broome and Colonial Continuity in Post-Independence India”.

source: http://www.scroll.in / Scroll.in / Home> Magazine> History Revisited / by Douglas McDonald-Norman / December 26th, 2017

Allahabad University team finds cure to skin ailment, gets patent

Allahabad :

In a major breakthrough that would help experts find a treatment for ‘Pityriasis versicolor’, popularly known as ‘sehua’, a team of researchers from Allahabad University have developed a liquid medium for harvesting Malassezia fungus, which causes the disease.

The team is led by faculty member of AU’s botany department Anupam Dikshit. The team has also got the method patented (Indian Patent No. 290771) by the Technology, Information, Forecasting and Assessment Council (TIFAC) of the department of science and technology (DST).

Dikshit said, “Sehua is a skin disease which causes hypopigmentation of the skin resulting in the loss of its natural texture. The condition is accompanied by the occurrence of small white spots on face and other parts of the body.

“The disease is caused by fungus. The foremost challenge in developing an antidote was to first grow the fungus in a lab.”

Dikshit said that his team’s objective was to develop a medium suitable for the Indian environment and skin. He added that the medium available in the market was too costly and had other limitations as well. “The medium developed by us will be very useful for diagnosis of diseases and in finding a cure for the disease. Besides, the modified medium would also be of great help for various researches,” he added.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Allahabad News / by Rajeev Mani / TNN / December 29th, 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

US college to collaborate with Saharanpur nursing school

Meerut:

The Nebraska Methodist College (NMC) of Nursing and Allied Health in Omaha, US, is all set for academic collaboration with Uttar Pradesh’s Saharanpur-based Hillary Clinton Nursing School. A four-member delegation of doctors and administrators from the US college visited Saharanpur on Thursday to explore the similarities and contrast in the teaching methods in India and in the US. The academic collaboration, which is most likely to be completed by 2018-end, is aimed at establishing mutual cooperation and professional coordination between the two institutes. The tie-up will also open up learning and employment opportunities for rural and underprivileged youths in Saharanpur area.

Dr Dennis A Joslin, consultant and former president of NMC, said, “We are planning a partnership with the Hillary Clinton Nursing School in Saharanpur soon. In this regard, a team of doctors from the US visited the campus on Thursday with the intention to find out the similarities and differences in health care provisions and teaching methods in India and the US. By this academic collaboration, we aim at providing best education to the professionals in both the countries so that the general public can get the best possible quality of life.”

Apart from Dr Joslin, the delegation of doctors included Dr Linda Hughes, dean of nursing at NMC; Dr Eric Kyle, faculty development, NMC; and Dr Harsha Sharma, professor, Arts and Sciences Division at NMC. These doctors are on a week-long trip to India to facilitate the process of academic collaboration and learning exchange programme with Hillary Clinton Nursing School (HCNS). They are also set to visit some government and private hospitals in Delhi and Saharanpur to get first-hand experience on the functioning of hospitals in India.

“The academic collaboration between the Nebraska Methodist College and the Hillary Clinton Nursing School is in the pipeline. NMC is a 125-year old college, and a delegation from the US visited the school here in Saharanpur to explore how students of this institute and that of the US can share and learn by means of student and faculty exchange,” said Raj Kamal Saxena, president, Ramrati Education Complex.

The Hillary Clinton Nursing School was established in 2012 and is affiliated to UP Medical Faculty and recognized by the Indian Nursing Council, New Delhi, and is situated on a 35-acre campus named Ramrati Education Complex (REC) — which also houses the Bill Clinton School, and Hillary Clinton Institute of Paramedical Sciences. REC is run by the Vinod Gupta Charitable Foundation. Gupta is said to be a close friend of the Clintons. Bill Clinton had even visited the place in 2001, much before it was named after him.

“We plan to call selected students and teachers to the US in July 2018 to complete the cycle of knowing each other’s homeland. Our visit is basically for the assessment stage, and it includes data collection. Once the students and teachers from Saharanpur visit us in July, we can prepare a master plan on how to go about with the academic collaboration,” said Dr Joslin.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Meerut News / by Ishita Bhatia / TNN / December 14th. 2017