Category Archives: Education

Girls top medal tally at APJ tech varsity

Lucknow :

Girls once again rule the roost in APJ Abdul Kalam Technical University’s medal tally. Close to 80% of the medals to be awarded on the convocation ceremony scheduled on December 24 are in girls’ kitty. A total of 48 medals will be awarded in the convocation. Of these, 38 will be awarded to girls.

For the first time, graduating students of AKTU will wear a cream-coloured angvastra over their traditional dress. Boys will wear white shirts and dark trousers. Girls will wear sarees. The angvastra to be worn by the students will showcase Lucknow’s heritage and famous historical monuments of UP. In addition, it will also have sermons of former president APJ Abdul Kalam. It is also decided that the dignitaries will wear a maroon-coloured angvastra and a cream-coloured pagadi.

In each group, like engineering, management, fashion designing, computer applications and pharmacy, three medals each – gold, silver and bronze – will be awarded. On the occasion, the university will also release an annual report that will highlight the notable developments during the year.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / December 01st, 2015

44 years later, LU honours Chemistry wiz

Lucknow :

At the age of 65 and after a long wait of 44 years, Anil Kumar Singh finally received his M Raman Gold medal for Inorganic Chemistry from the Lucknow University (LU) on Saturday.

Singh had secured highest marks in the subject and was eligible for the said gold medal since 1971. But, the university did not hold convocation that year and none of the medals were handed over. With Singh’s unprecedented win, gates for other medal holders and achievers from 1971 to claim their due are flung open.

Ironically, Singh completed his education, served as a teacher in chemistry department and retired as a professor in June 2012. He is also executive president of the Rashtriya Shikshak Mahasangh.

“Everytime I queried anyone at the university or voiced my concern, I was told it’s the university rule not to give medals or degrees, if convocation was not held for any reason in that year,” said Singh.

His mark sheet from the university said he stood first in order of merit and a certificate issued in 2007 also confirmed his eligibility to the coveted award. This had given some relief to Singh until on March 24, he filed an RTI in the case.

Quoting a clause in section 15.05 of the first statute of the university that said that if due to any reason the university fails to hold the convocation, the degree, diploma and academic distinctions maybe sent by registered posts, Singh shot an RTI asking if this was being followed.

“I didn’t get the reply to this question, but I also asked them if one puts an application to the effect, will the medal be given then?” informed Singh. It was to this question that he got an answer stating that if the Vice Chancellor (VC) consents to the application, the medal might be handed over.

The matter however didn’t even reach the VC. “The current controller of examinations, SK Shukla taking personal interest in the case, found the records, got my medal made and gave it to me today,” said Singh, who feels the fight was an in principle one.

Previously in 2004, Singh had fought a battle with the university over his daughter’s rightful claim over the most prestigious Chancellor’s Gold Medal at LU. It was after that win, that LU introduced the system of inviting applications to the coveted honour. Prior to that head of the departments nominated any student they wished to.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / November 29th, 2015

Lucknow University to confer Lifetime Achievement to Lord Hameed

Lucknow :

This foundation day, on November 25, Lucknow University alumnae society will confer `Lifetime Achievement Award’ to Lord (Dr) Khalid Hameed. Hameed is the chairman and CEO of London International Hospital and chairman of Alpha Hospital Group. Lord Hameed completed his MBBS from Lucknow University in 1967.

LU alumni society will felicitate eight other illustrious former students who have brought laurels to their alma mater by doing exceptionally well in their respective professions.

Among those who will be felicitated this year are Justice SS Chauhan of the Allahabad high court; IAS officer Lov Verma; director general, Archaeological Survey of India Rakesh Tewari; CEO Biotechnology Park Prof Pramod Tandon; senior journalist Rahul Dev; eminent theatre personality SM Kulshreshtha; chairman-cum-managing director, Mineral Exploration Corporation Ltd Gopal Dhawan and noted Awadh historian Yogesh Praveen.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / by Isha Jain, TNN / November 16th, 2015

Varsity holds workshop on export promotion

Allahabad :

A workshop on export promotion was organized at the Motilal Nehru Research Institute of Business Administration, Allahabad University, on Monday. The workshop was held jointly by the office of joint director general of foreign trade, Kanpur and the college, under the niryat bandhu scheme in collaboration with FIEO Kanpur Chapter on Monday.

Manavendra Singh, Joint DGFT, Kanpur, Professor JN Bhargava, Y.S.Garg, Head, FIEO, Kanpur Chapter and Amit Kumar, Dy. DGFT were among those who participated in the workshop along with the students of MONIRBA, Allahabad. Y.S.Garg was the coordinator of this work shop.

Professor Bhargava welcomed the DGFT representative and stressed upon the need for promotion of foreign trade. Manavendra Singh highlighted the importance of promotion of foreign trade and explained the objective of the niryat bandhu scheme.

The first presentation during the workshop was made by Amit Kumar, Dy. DGFT, on different aspects of international business. He emphasized that the office of DGFT is committed to promote foreign trade, with special emphasis on entrepreneurs. T.P.Mishra, Branch Manager, FOREX Branch, SBI, Allahabad, threw light upon the facilities provided his branch regarding foreign exchange remittances .

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Times of India / News Home> City> Allahabad /TNN / November 03rd, 2015

National Children’s Science Congress begins in Allahabad

Allahabad :

The 23rd National Children’s Science Congress, organized by Union department of science and technology got underway at Kendriya Vidyalaya, New Cantt on Wednesday. Around 300 students from 31 KVs of the state are participating in the two day intra-regional event.

The students would discuss various weather phenomenon and climatic changes like understanding weather scenario, impact of human activities on weather & climatic changes, eco-system, their co-relation with society and culture, agriculture and health and many more such issues.

In a short but glittering inaugural ceremony, chief guest Narendra Dev University of Agriculture & Technology, Faizabad, Vice Chancellor Akhtar Haseeb reflected upon the need to develop scientific attitude among students through interesting ways and means so that they could contribute towards human welfare in the most rational way.

KV New Cantt principal Shalini Dikshit accorded warm welcome to the distinguished guests. At the end of the inaugural ceremony, vice principal Rajeev Kumar Tiwari proposed vote of thanks.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Allahabad / TNN / October 15th, 2015

British ‘de-developed’ India, says Darwin descendant

Lucknow :

The British did not develop, rather “de-developed” India, said Felix Padel Darwin, a descendent of evolutionary biologist Charles Darwin. “India was developed long before and British conquered it because they were developed militarily,” said Darwin, an adjunct professor in Jawarlal Nehru University’s School of Social Sciences, visiting the city for a national seminar on ‘Social ecology and environmental movements in India’ at Lucknow University.

“India was far more developed than Britain in terms of multi-cultural ethos and in its manufacturing skills. After the British rule, the quality of manufacturing in many things like cloth declined radically and went in the ‘de-developing’ mode,” he said.

Tribal communities (adivasis) whose lands are taken over or invaded by a mining company or for a dam, undergo a precisely similar process, said the social scientist, adding that it’s a long process of developing a symbiosis as their natural environment is cut off and their quality of life drops drastically. Their indigenous process of development is disrupted and destroyed effectively, he elaborated.

Darwin is fascinated with the indigenous culture of the tribal communities. “They are egalitarian, have excellent environmental knowledge. Tribal societies are far more developed than the mainstream industrial society, especially if we look at living sustainably,” he said.

Terming the mainstream industrial society as uncivilised and primitive, the London-born sociologist-activist said adivasis have a strong sense of law which the entire country must learn from. Their legal process reconciles with contestants rather than one party right proving the other wrong. “Traditionally, both parties were usually fined, and the fines paid funded a feast of reconciliation. What can be more civilised than that,” said Darwin, and adds, there are thousands of thousands court cases pending.

The scenario is no different in developed countries like America. Darwin said, in India, corruption is very easily visible. “The corruption starts from my own country Britain. The top accountancy firms don’t even see the proper documents. They just see the mark of British approval. It is meaningless but is completely forced,” says Darwin

Human right is the index of development of the country. But today, thousands of police officers are raping with complete impunity. “In Shivaji’s regime, the person committing rape was immediately executed. I am not saying that capital punishment is right or wrong but it surely created a fear among others,” said Darwin.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / by Isha Jain, TNN / October 14th, 2015

Students get AIDS awareness lecture in Sanskrit

Meerut :

To spread awareness about AIDS among children, a lecture on the life-threatening disease was organized at Bilveshwar Sanskrit Mahavidyalaya in Sanskrit on Thursday.

The lecture was given by Dr Tungveer Singh Arya, nodal officer, Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART) centre, who is quite well-versed in the language. The function was inaugurated by Dr MS Fauzdar, district tuberculosis officer and was conducted in collaboration with Sunil Dutt, a social activist.

Giving details, Dutt, said, “A total of 100 students from Classes 8 to the graduation level participated in the event. Though Dr Arya conversed with the students in Sanskrit, he also spoke in Hindi as the gathering included other people as well.”

The students were informed how AIDS is transmitted through the route of shared needles and syringes or engaging in unprotected sex with multiple partners.

Addressing the students, Dr Arya, said, “AIDS awareness is just like Satya Narayan Katha; it will do good only if you tell it in front of others. All of you should spread the word so that the disease does not spread further.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Meerut / by Ishita Bhatia, TNN / September 11th, 2015

CM honours IIT crackers

Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav honoured seven more students who cracked IIT examination this year and said that achievement of these students in adverse circumstance is praise worthy.

“These students did not have resources, but had determination to achieve their targets. Adverse conditions and poverty did not deter them and cracked IIT examination which is dream of students,” Yadav said in a felication function held here on Wednesday.

These students were given a laptop and Rs 1 lakh during a function held at 5, Kalidas Marg, the official residence of Chief Minister.

“The state government is committed to support talented students. Government’s laptop distribution is a step in this direction. The poor students will now stay connected with the world. The Government is also providing free WiFi at some places. These students can avail this facility too,” he said.

Students who cracked IIT were: Vishnu Gupta (Sultanpur), Kapoor Saroj and Shubham Yadav (Pratapgarh), Muzammil Khan and Alok Maurya (Sonebhadra)Nilesh Yadav (Amethi) and Shashank Awasthi (Rae Bareli). Despite his fading eye sight Kapoor Saroj scored fifth position among SC students while Shashank Awasthi scored 97 per cent marks in ClassXII.

Talking to The Pioneer Shubham Yadav said that his only aim was to crack IIT. “I do not have any hobby. I only used to study or sleep. In between I did nothing,” he said.

He along with Kapoor Saroj want to study in IIT Kanpur. It is the best. “I want to go to Mechancial stream, I and Saroj have the ranking to get top position,” he said.

Saroj said he has not taken any coaching. “I cracked the exam on the basis of self study,” he said. Both of them though belong to UP have studied in Navodaya Vidyalaya in Pune.

source: http://www.dailypioneer.com / The Pioneer / Home> State edition> Lucknow / by PNN, Lucknow / Thursday – June 25th, 2015

Award-winning teachers get invite from PM on Teachers’ Day

Allahabad :

Award-winning teachers will be in for a special treat this Teachers’ Day (September 5) as they have been invited to have an interaction with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at Vigyan Bhavan, New Delhi on the September 4. The teachers, who have either been felicitated with National Award or the national incentive award by Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVS), would be invited by the government to interact with the PM.

A notice, mentioning an invite from the government, has been sent to the principals of all the KVS’ of the country by their respective regional office (RO). The Varanasi RO has sent the letter to all the principals of the KVS” in Allahabad for the information of the awarded teachers.

The letter, by KVS’ headquarter, dated August 11 and singed by assistant commissioner KVS’, D K Dwivedi, mentions that all the teachers who have been given the national award in the last five years and principals or teachers who have won KVS’ national incentive award during the last three years (2012-14) would be invited on September 4 to interact with the PM. The letter instructs the principal to furnish the information in a prescribed format.

The invite for interacting with the PM bears special significance for the city as there are two teachers and a principal who have been awarded with national incentive award in the last three years. Principal, KV New Cantt, Shalini Dikshit, was selected for the coveted national incentive award last year.

Remarkably, Dikshit’s name features along with three other principals of the country among 1,100 odd KVS’ in 29 regions. Likewise, Pallavi Sharma, principal KV number 3, Jhansi, who was awarded the national award in the year 2014 by President Pranab Mukerjee, would also be among the invitees.

“The award in itself was an honour and recognition of our work and now an invitation to interact with the PM gives us an added sense of responsibility that our efforts are not only being recognized but the PM too wants to share his idea of grooming the next generation of the country”, said Shalini Dikshit, principal KV New Cantt.

Along with Dikshit, two primary teachers, Purnima Pandey of KV Manauri and Archana Jaiswal of KV IIIT-A Jhalwa were also awarded with national incentive award. In all, there are around a dozen teachers who have been selected for the national incentive award and will be going to New Delhi to interact with the PM.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Allahabad / by Rajeev Mani, TNN / August 13th, 2015

A LORE collector’s recollections

Writer Neelum Saran Cour tells KUNAL RAY why she finds the 125-year-old Allahabad University so fascinating.

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Neelum Saran Gour prefers to be called a storyteller, even though she is a renowned author, translator, academic and chronicler of various facets of Allahabad city. Her fiction and academic writing appeared in several national and international anthologies. She has been Writer-in-Residence at the University of Kent and Stirling, and conducted creative writing workshops for Sahitya Akademi.

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Gour’s new book ‘Three Rivers and a Tree – The Story of Allahabad University’ (Rupa) recounts cherished moments from the 125-year-long existence of the much feted institution, where she works as Professor of English. Excerpts from an interview.

Do you think of yourself as a raconteur of Allahabad’s history?

I did not consciously set out to be a raconteur of Allahabad’s history. It was my readers, reviewers and critics who fixed that label on me. I wrote of people, relationships and perennial situations and my readership wasn’t confined to any particular interest group. And I’ve written on many cities that I’ve lived in and enjoyed – Kolkata, Lucknow, Canterbury. But Allahabad is my enduring world, the frame that now holds the canvas on which I ply my brush. Looking back, I realise that while my motley short stories travelled in content across many locations, my novels have been Allahabad-specific. It was after an NDTV Just Books interview with Sunil Sethi, after the publication of my fifth book, ‘Sikandar Chowk Park’, that I received a proposal from Marg Publications to guest-edit a pictorial volume on the history and culture of Allahabad and I accepted it. The volume, ‘Allahabad Where The Rivers Meet,’ turned out to be popular with Allahabadis scattered all over the world. I guess that was when this mantle of Allahabad historian was placed on me. I am no historian, just a lore collector. Recently, I compiled local stories, oral history and nostalgia narratives to a Facebook site about Allahabad. My next two books, a novel and a short-story collection, both due for release soon, are consciously Allahabad-intensive. So are the books I plan to write in the coming years.

We are shaped by cities we live in. How has Allahabad, a so-called small town, shaped you?

Writers have travelled to distant locations, seeking creative stimulus or spent lifetimes balancing culturally disparate homelands. But I have travelled vertically, not horizontally in space, delving into the visceral layers of my city’s life. This has made me experience its pulse-beat, its interlay of history, the rhythm of its languages and dialects, its interior anecdotage and shared chatter, its collective memories, even the idiom of its wrangling, things which have nourished and supported my writing.

Categories such as big-city and small-town mean nothing to me. In this so-called narrow compass – I believe it’s called Middle India now – I find all the ingredients of authentic inspiration – struggle, love, conflict, lust, compassion, betrayal, courage, death. If anything, the slower pace of life has given me more quality time for work and a larger measure of interpersonal connectivity with people. The core experiences and situational configurations of life remain much the same, the rest are variations on these essential themes. Yes, till a few years ago, a writer from Middle India lost out on general visibility, but the Internet has changed all that. I would say that while my cerebral positioning is place-neutral, my empirical placement has now become intensively local.

You are also a fiction writer. How do you separate the two when you are writing history?

I call myself a story teller, not a hard-core historian. Which means that my mental reflexes highlight the human drama, the play of personality, the serendipitous revelations and the excitement of seeing processes and patterns fall in place, and meanings emerge, however tentative. This is not what a rigorous historian does. I hear historians quip that all history is fiction, in the sense that it is filtered through human subjectivities and is necessarily conditioned by them. In my fiction, I deal with the possible as my intuition prompts, writing from emotional intelligence as it were; I deal with the proven or the probable as available data indicates, only allowing a certain controlled free-wheeling of imagination.

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Your new book is about the Allahabad University, where you work as Professor of English. How did you ensure objectivity while writing this book?

I have tried to maintain a careful balance, to take an impersonal view from the outside and also provide an engaged insider’s perspective. My university possesses a monumental and legendary presence even when it is long past its prime and has been reduced to a majestic, sagging edifice, resonating with stories. This book was specifically intended as a celebration, to commemorate 125 years of the Allahabad University a couple of years ago. A celebration it definitely is, an attempt to preserve an institution’s living narrative, its great moments, its faces and voices, even its echoes and ghosts. There is always the risk of falling into the trap of romancing the past but I have tried, to the best of my power, to guard against my own subjectivity and write with candour, and in places with brutal honesty, while including well-documented details in support. I have tried to capture the reverberations of historic events as they were felt in the university, to assemble its picture gallery of personalities, and to give the reader some taste of the vibrant campus, its pranks, student agitations, social life, humour, its striking memorabilia; and subsequently its complicated entanglement in the politics of the region and the transformation that overcame its character. No one can claim that the Allahabad University is anything like the iconic institution it was. But rather than categorically deride the compromised present I have tried to decode the process of its decline and trace its laboured and confused attempts at re-invention in altered times.

There are many written histories of metropolitan centres such as Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Kolkata. Have we been rather unfair towards mofussil centres/small towns vis-a-vis written documents of their past?

On the contrary, there are well-researched histories in the regional languages, written by insiders as well as travellers passing through. It would be worthwhile to retrieve and translate some of the local histories into English to facilitate better awareness.

Does Allahabad still possess a unique cultural character?

Allahabad now provokes extreme reactions – great affection in those addicted to it, and violent criticism from many who despise it, even while living in it. Yes, it has its own style, its rarefied and residual interblend of Indic, Islamic and British culture that still survives in shrinking pockets. Something of its famed literary temper, both folksy and purist – highbrow, continues in patches. The patois, the tall stories, the cussed argumentative character continue. Allahabad has witnessed the recession of the Colonial world and is now undergoing a seismic shift from a city defined by the classes to a city brought to revise its identity by the masses. But that is the direction taken by any democracy worth its name.

This book is an attempt to preserve an institution’s living narrative, its great moments, its faces and voices, even its echoes and ghosts.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Friday Review / by Kunal Ray / July 10th, 2015