Monthly Archives: January 2013

They succeed against all odds

‘The job came as a New Year gift and I want to make the best of it’

E. Srimannarayan was only 10 when he ran away from home at Kanigiri in Prakasam district. Angry for being beaten up by his father, he stepped out and hit the road. Pangs of hunger forced him to work as a cleaner in a hotel.

After a few months, he shifted to Karimnagar and worked as a daily-wage coolie at a construction site. But soon the young boy found himself inadequate to do the hard work and did the next best thing that came to his mind – he boarded a train to Vijayawada and landed at the local railway station. Living on the platforms of Vijayawada railway for the next one year, he kept himself afloat by begging and rag-picking.

One fine day, he found himself isolated after a tiff with his ‘friends’. He headed to the night shelter operated by a local NGO Navajeevan Bala Bhavan near the railway station because the volunteers there were familiar. He had seen them in the railway station, almost daily, motivating street kids like him to join the shelter.

“They promised me that they will send me to school and I agreed because I wanted to fulfil my dream of becoming an engineer,” says Srimannarayana.

BRIDGE SCHOOL

To make up for the lost time, he joined a bridge school before going to a mainstream institution. Now, 24, Srimannarayana has completed engineering and has bagged the post of an electrical engineer in L&T, Visakhapatnam.

“The job came as a New Year gift and I want to make the best of it. The way I was motivated worked wonders for my life and I want the same for others on street,” he says.

The tale of 22-year-old A. Vinod Kumar is more or less the same. The youngster can’t remember when or how he landed on streets. “I was just four and found myself working as a domestic help in some area of Tirupati. Too much work and no food made life miserable. I did menial works at many places before landing at Chennai railway station where I was picked by Don Bosco volunteers,” he recalls.

The boy could speak only Telugu and so he was referred to Navajeevan Bala Bhavan in Vijayawada. But, he did not like the strict regimen at Bala Bhavan and ran away many times only to be brought back every time by volunteers. He joined school and in 7 standard, and he emerged topper. That’s when he realised that better things were possible in life.

After a three-year diploma in polytechnic, he sat for ECET and directly joined the second year engineering course in a local college. Vinod Kumar has bagged a job of a loco-pilot in South Central Railway.

Both the boys have vowed to adopt two school-going street children each and sponsor their education.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Vijayawada / by P. Sujatha Varma / January 10th, 2013

Punjab da swaad in Hyderabad

Novotel Hyderabad Convention Centre (NHCC) is hosting the ‘Asli Punjab Da’ food festival at The Square till January 20.


The ongoing food fest has brought to the city the glorious flavors from the land of Punjab. The festival will also mark the celebrations of Lohri and Sankranti with specialty guest chef, Sweety Singh enticing the palates of Hyderabadi foodies with his culinary treats.

During the festival, NHCC will serve mouth-watering, aromatic and delicious Punjabi delicacies. Chef Singh will use authentic ingredients and techniques to dish out fare like murg tikka anari, ghost ka saag, makki di roti, sarson da saag, doodhi halwa and many more.

Commenting on this initiative, Shyam Sunder, manager F&B, Novotel Hyderabad Convention Centre, says, “The Asli Punjab Da festival aims to offer the quintessential taste of authentic Punjabi dishes to our customers. Our specialty chef has blended spices to give a moderntouch to the cuisine. The guests can treat their taste buds to some spicy flavors and indulge in mouth-watering fare this season at Novotel”

Upcoming events

Spoil yourself Silly: The Berry Berry Delicious Strawberry Fest is back. Till January 17 at Le Cafe

Republic Day Lunch: January 26, 12 pm onwards at The Square

Full Moon Dine: Dine with your loved ones under the magical aura every full moon (pournima) with a special thali. January 27, 7.30pm onwards, at La Cantina

Snack like a King: A delicious variety of snacks enjoyed best with your favorite beverages. Till January 31, 9 pm onwards, at La Cantina

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Home> Life & Style> Food> Food Festivals / TNN /  January 16th, 2013

Meet Nikhat Zareen, an uncelebrated world champion from India

Sania Mirza, and Saina Nehwal have competition. Andhra Pradesh has got a new world champion. Nikhat Zareen, a 15-year-old girl from the small town of Nizamabad has bagged the gold medal in the World junior boxing championships held recently in Antalya (Turkey).

Nikhat, who says her dream is to win a gold medal in the 2016 Olympics, took to the sport just two years ago. She developed an interest in boxing watching her uncle, a boxing coach, training his sons in the sport. Seeing her interest, her uncle, Shamshamuddin, started training her as well.

Gritty champ: Nikhat says she is determined to win a gold medal in the 2016 Olympics

Soon, she participated in junior and state level competitions. In the 2010 Junior Nationals held in Chennai, she not only won the gold medal but also got the coveted ‘Best Boxer’ award. Her consistent performances in the domestic circuit got her a ticket to the junior world championship in Turkey, where she took the gold.

Nikhat is the third among four daughters born to Jameel Ahmed and Parveen Sultana. She hails from an ordinary family. Her father works as a salesperson in the Gulf.

The world champ attributes her success to sheer hard work and the hours of practice she had put in for the last two years. “I needed to put in a lot of extra effort in order to focus on studies and boxing simultaneously,” says Nikhat, whose idols are boxing legend Mohammed Ali and his daughter Laila Ali.

Everyday this teen wonder gets up very early in the morning and reports to the training by 6 a.m. After about an hour and a half of intense boxing session, she gets back home to leave for school. She sweats out in the ring for another hour and a half in the evening after she returns from school. After dinner, she completes her homework and goes to sleep.

She realizes that things are going to get tougher from the next academic year onwards, when she will be in tenth standard. “I am confident of clearing board exams without disturbing my daily practice routine. Boxing and studies are both important to me. I carry my textbooks to coaching camps and tourneys and go through them whenever I find the time.”

Nikhat is glad that her hard work has borne fruit. “Seeing my struggle for the past two years, friends, classmates and even relatives used to wonder why I was ‘wasting’ my time and energy. Many had doubts whether this girl from small town will ever make it big. But that did not deter me a wee bit because I believed in my abilities. And once I started tasting success, the perception of all those around me changed. Now that I got a world champ tag, everybody is over the moon,” she says excitedly.

“We are not looking for any awards or rewards; Zareen’s sole aim is to bring more laurels for the country,” her uncle and coach Shamshamuddin said. However, some companies are already showing interest in sponsoring her training costs. Sources revealed that the State government, Sports Authority of A.P and State boxing federation are likely to bestow cash prizes on the new champion.

source: http://www.TheWeekender.com / Home> Success> Unsung Heroes / by Mahesh Avadhutha, Hyderabad / posted May 25th, 2011 , Vol 2, Issue. 20 /

Hyd literary fete to focus on Telugu

A three-day Hyderabad Literary Festival (HLF) is all set to begin on January 18 at Moulana Azad National Urdu University here.

The festival, organised by Muse India, a literary e-journal, will include literary discussions, cultural evenings and a new segment called “Language in Focus.”

“Since Telugu is the language of our state, we have chosen Telugu as this year’s language in focus, however other programmes include conversations with authors, readings, panel discussions, workshops, book launches, cultural programmes,” said professor T Vijay Kumar, member of organising committee. This year’s HLF will present France as the guest nation.

This segment will bring in six participants from France including French author Kenize Mourad and Vaiju Naravane, a senior journalist.  This  year of HLF will have a special discussions on endangered languages and cultural traditions. The Goethe-Zentrum as a part of the finale of the German year in India will present Theresa Hahl slam-poet from Germany, Mangala Bhat Kathak dancer and Pianist Daniel Gomez.

The dates of HLF 2013 and Jaipur Literary Festival 2013 will not clash and are perfectly placed.

“HLF 2013 concludes on January 20 and JLF 2013 begins on January 25, making it convenient for participants to attend this fest and then go on to Jaipur,” he said.

source: http://www.DeccanHerald.com / Home> National / Hyderabad,  DHNS / January 13th, 2013

The wizard weaver of Nalgonda

Chintakindi Mallesham with his invention.

Necessity is the mother of invention, but these days, it’s exactly the reverse: invention is the mother of necessity. But for Chintakindi Mallesham, the age old adage stands true. For, the plight of his mother and other Pochampalli weavers impelled him to innovate. He designs machine for weavers, who live at the far end of dirt roads in Sharjipet village, Nalgonda in Andhra Pradesh, as well as in other villages in India. His invention costs Rs 16,000. The idea germinated in his mind in 1992. Reason: his mother’s tired arms. “You can’t understand how difficult asu—the tying of threads and dyeing them in selected colours—is,” he says. It is this understanding of tedium and tired muscles that Mallesham brings to his work.

Despite lacking a formal education or technical training, Mallesham has made a machine that has mechanised the most tedious part of Pochampally weaving—the tying of threads and dyeing them in selected colours. He replaced the woman’s arm with a mechanical one, which winds the silk thread on the pins and offers a choice of settings. The result is that the thread needed for three or four sarees is now processed in a reduced timespan. He has named the machine, Laxmi Asu, as a tribute to his mother.

The journey wasn’t easy, Mallesham was burdened by the loans he took to develop the machine and had to leave it unfinished and work in Hyderabad as a daily wager. In the journey to his invention, once he got stuck, since he did not know which parts to use to provide for one particular movement in the asu process. He then worked in a machine shop where he spent time observing various machines, searching for that one elusive movement. “The owner used to shout at me,” recalls Mallesham, a school dropout. “Finally, one day I found it and rushed off, without my wages for the day. My machine was ready.”

His achievement has made Forbes magazine list him as one of the seven most outstanding rural entrepreneurs of India in 2010. “The Pochampally saree involves weaving patterns on the loom. The yarn has to be wound with hand using the ‘asu’ process, according to the design. This might involve even moving multiple pegs over 9000 to 10,000 times, for each saree. By doing this manually, many weavers suffer from joint pains and strain their eye,” explains Mallesham. The Lakshmi Asu, he explains, does the weaving in 90 minutes against 5 hours with the manual process and enables more innovative designs. Only 200 watts equivalent to the power consumption of an air cooler usage is consumed.

Initially, he was at the receiving end from family and villagers who saw his preoccupation with the machine as an excuse to escape earning a livelihood. So it took seven years to introduce the first prototype of Laxmi Asu.

“The first few customers gave feedback that there should be some technical modifications, and I worked on that too,” says Mallesham. I have sold about 600 machines but most weaver families cannot afford the money. Their lives can change if the government helps them buy the machine,” says Mallesham.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / Home> Magazine / by Swati Sharma / January 13th, 2013

Visakhapatnam children pay homage to Swami Vivekananda on 150 birth anniversary

Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh), Jan.12 (ANI):

Children here paid homage to Swami Vivekananda on Saturday on the occasion of his 150th birth anniversary.

The Ramakrishna Mission, founded by Swami Vivekananda, is planning a series of programmes to commemorate the occasion, including a number of cultural programmes and essay writing competitions for college students. They will make presentations on Swami Vivekananda’s message to the youth.

About 150 children donned saffron robes and turbans, imitating Swami Vivekananda’s attire and posed like him, below his statue in the coastal city of Visakhapatnam.

“I am very happy to speak to them about the life and teachings of Swami Vivekananda. In essence he taught us to become whole personalities, complete men and women and we should see that we are not afraid of anything in this world. He was a man of leonine courage, he faced all problems in life without grievance, without complaining,” said Swami Amritananda, a follower of the Ramakrishna Mission.

Swami Vivekananda was born as Narendra Nath Datta and was a key figure in the introduction of Indian philosophies of Vedanta and Yoga to the western world.

He was also credited with raising interfaith awareness, bringing Hinduism to the status of a major world religion in the late 19th century.

Vivekananda was born on January 12th, 1863, and this day is celebrated across India as National Youth Day, with an aim to show the right direction to the youth of the country. (ANI)

source: http://www.truthdive.com / Home> News / January 12th, 2013

Vijayawada book festival ends on a high note

APSRTC  Managing Director A.K. Khan and Vijayawada MP L. Rajagopal listening to a girl reciting a Telugu poem for which she won a prize at the valedictory of the book festival on Friday.  / Photo: V. Raju / The Hindu

Over one lakh people are estimated to have visited it this year

Over a lakh of people are estimated to have visited the 24 Vijayawada Book Festival which came to a close on Friday. Book Festival Society president D. Ashok Kumar said that last year the weather played truant affecting the number of visitors and proportionately the sale.

Fortunately for the book lovers, the weather was good this year. Not only there was no rain, the evenings were also cool, he said.

The festival began on a high note with Odiya writer Pratibha Ray, who was chosen to inaugurate the festival being selected for the prestigious Jnanpith Award.

The Vijayawada Book Festival inauguration was the first big programme Prof. Ray attended after the Jnanpith Trust announced her name for the award thus giving the book lover here the rare opportunity of being the first to felicitate a Jnanpith Award winner.

Interaction

The interaction between Telugu and Odiya writers facilitated by the Vijayawada Book Festival Society (VBFS) and the National Book Trust (NBT) turned out more successful than similar interactions conducted between writers from Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala owing to the close relationship to the people of Andhra Pradesh and Odisha.

Unique workshop

The two-day workshop on Creative Writing and Illustration Art conducted by NBT’s National Centre for Children’s Literature (NCCL) was also a unique event in this book festival.

The book festival society announced that it would, in association with the NBT, conduct such creative writing and illustration art workshops in several towns of Coastal Andhra in its silver jubilee year.

At the request of the city and district administrators, the book festival society has decided to patronise folk art forms of Andhra Pradesh on a regular basis.

The society has decided to invite various folk art troupes and artistes to give performances on the dais of the book festival to promote the art forms that were gradually disappearing.

Star performers

The Burrakatha troupe from Ramachandrapuram, Telugu Gazals by Mohammad Miya, Kurnool, folk magic by Miryala Prasanth Kumar and the staging of plays Kailasamlo Cortu and Saraswati Vaibhavam were very well received by the public that visited the book festival.

Vijayawada MP Lagadapati Rajagopal and APSRTC vice-chairman and managing director A.K. Khan participated in the valedictory function.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> Cities> Vijayawada / by Special Correspondent / January 12th, 2013

Anantapur lifts trophy

Host Anantapur emerged the winner of the quadrangular cricket tournament that concluded here on Saturday. RDT Academy and CVR Academy, Hyderabad took the second and third positions respectively. In the final match, CVR Academy defeated Bangalore’s Jain International Residential School by 101 runs.

The scores: CVR Academy (Hyderabad) 248 for three in 30 overs (Akshith 104 n.o, Christy Victor 93) bt Jain IRS (Bangalore) 147 for eight in 30 overs (Tanmay 34).

NTRUHS teams

The following players will represent Dr. NTR University of Health Sciences in men’s tennis in the South Zone inter-University championship to be conducted by Krishna University at the Andhra Loyola College tennis complex from Jan. 17 to 21.

The athletics squad to take apart in the South Zone inter-University meet at Kalyani University from Jan. 22 to 26 was also named.

The teams: Athletics: Men: P. Srinivasa Rao, P. Mahesh. V. Ashok Reddy, D. Ganga Pratap, K. Siva Ram Prasad, K. Mallikharjuna Naik, G. Dharanidhur. Women: K. Laxmi Vijetha, P. Sandhya, T. Hima Sowjanya.

Tennis: Men: Sai Teja, S. Thamman, B. Dhiran Showri, K. Daniel Ritish Paul, S. Vikas.

Chess tournament

A non-medallist district open chess tournament for school children will be held at the Chennupati Ramakotaiah indoor stadium on January 16. Rated players and medallist are not eligible. Special prizes will be awarded for age group segment (u-7, 9, 11, 13 and 15). For details call T. Naresh, mob: 9493501506.

Matches drawn

At Anantapur, the match between Anantapur and Guntakal and RDT and Gandlapenta ended in a draw in the Ananta Premier League tournament on Saturday.

The scores: Anantapur 134 (Raghavendra 35, Imran four for 23, Suryanarayana three for 21) and 89 for five (Munaf 53, Imran three for 42) drew with Guntakal 177 (Imran 40, Mohan 32, Dadakhalandar five for 42); RDT CA 297 (Bhaskar 90, Ibrahim 58, Mahaboob Peera 33, Mubarak three for 67) drew with Gandlapenta 261 for nine (D. Ashok Reddy 56 n.o., Shakeer 33, Jaheed 31, Adi Narayana 30, Bhaskar four for 64).

Hockey tournament

At Nellore, the Andhra Pradesh junior men’s (under-18) hockey tournament will be held at the A.C. Subba Reddy Stadium from Jan. 17 to 20, Hockey Andhra Pradesh secretary M. Niranjan Reddy said on Saturday.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> Sports / Vijayawada, January 13th, 2013

Freedom fighter passes away

Freedom fighter P. Jaganmohini

Freedom fighter, social worker and a senior lady advocate of 60 years standing at the bar P. Jaganmohini passed away here on Thursday. She was 84. Jaganmohini was ailing for some time and was being treated at a private hospital for the last few days.

Born to Dr. Rama Rao and Subhadramma in 1930 at Berhampur, Jaganmohini was a first generation advocate and said to be the first lady advocate of the city. She was known for providing legal help and educational assistance to the poor and downtrodden and remained a spinster to serve the people. Jaganmohini had the credit of solving many cases through the Lok Adalat and the District Legal Services Authority. She was actively involved in establishing and running many educational institutions and service organisations like Ba-Bapu Seva Kendram, All India Mahila Samakhya, Visakha Seva Sadan, Gayatri Vidya Parishad, MLB Trust, Bhagavatula Charitable Trust, etc.

Principle District Judge V. Venkata Prasad, several judges, former chairman of Bar Council of India and president of GVP D.V. Subba Rao, secretary P. Soma Raju, principals and faculty of GVP institutions, secretary of Gandhi Centre K.S. Sastry, president of Visakhapatnam Bar Association K. Adibabu, secretary of GVP MLBT School V. Srirama Murthy, and others paid rich tributes to Jaganmohini.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Visakhapatnam / by Special Correspondent / January 11th, 2013

Secunderabad Club AP Open Squash Championship 2013 from 8 to 11 January, 2013

Secunderabad January 07/2013 :

The 2nd AP Open Squash Championship 2013 (National level Championship) will be the first event in the SRFI 2013 calendar. Top Indian Junior and Senior Players have entered this event that is part of the SRFI circuit. The tournament will be played at the Secunderabad Club Squash Courts.

There will be a total of 9 events comprising Boys/Girls, Men and Veterans categories. The Championship will be held at Secunderabad Club from 8-11 January 2013.

A total of 140 players from all  overIndia participating in this Championship.

The total prize money for the event is Rs.1 lakh.

The Championship is hosted by the Squash Rackets Association of Hyderabad with association of the Squash Rackets Federation of India and Secunderabad Club. The AP Open will be conducting second time in AP. This is the 2 Star event, first time we are conducting the star event in Andhra Pradesh.

The Opening ceremony of the Championship to be held at Secunderabad Club Squash Courts on Tuesday, the 8th January 2013 at13.00 hrs. Mr. Raghuram Reddy, President of the Secunderabad Club will be Chief Guest and inaugurate the Championship. Mr. V. Srisailam, President, Squash Rackets Association of Hyderabad will preside the function.

Given below the schedule of matches:

08.01.2013 First Round
09.01.2013 Second round and Quarter Finals
10.01.2013 Semi Finals
11.01.2013 Finals

source: http://www.newswala.com / Home / Secunderabad, January 07th, 2013