Monthly Archives: February 2013

AAI to conduct four national ranking archery events in 2013

The Archery Association of India will this year conduct four national ranking tournaments through its member associations.
These tournaments would be followed by a final at the end of the year to crown the champion. Each of the event will also be the basis for selection of the Indian team for the following international competition.
This was stated by Anil Kamineni, Secretary General, Archery Association of India, at a press meet on the eve of the 1st National Ranking Archery Tournament here.
He said, Vijay Kumar Malhotra, President, AAI, has announced that a prize money of Rs 25 lakh would be given during the year for the NRAT’s (National Ranking Archery Tournaments) and the final.
The Andhra Pradesh Archery Association is hosting the year’s first national ranking tournament at the Sports Authority of Andhra Pradesh, Sports Complex, Gachibowli, on February 23 and 24.
The tournament carries a prize money of Rs 3 lakh and Rs 25 lakh prize money spread over various tournaments, including four national ranking events across the year, has been allocated.
Top archers of India, both in the recurve and compound section, would be participating in the tournament. The Indian team for the forthcoming competition in Bangkok will also be selected based on this tournament.
About 80 archers of the country will be seen in action. Some of the established names include Deepika Kumari, Jayanth Talukdar, Dola Banerjee and Tarundeep Rai.

source: http://www.Business-Standard.com / Home> PTI Stories> National> News / by Press Trust of India / Hyderabad, February 21st, 2013

LV Prasad Institute bags health award

L V Prasad Eye Institute (LVPEI), a city-based eye care institution has been awarded the Best Single Specialty Hospital – Opthalmology at the ICICI Lombard and CNBC TV18 India Healthcare Awards 2012.

A World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centre for Prevention of Blindness, the Institute offers comprehensive patient care, sight enhancement and rehabilitation services, offers professional ophthalmic training at all levels, conducts cutting-edge eye care research and high-impact rural eye health programs.

The India Healthcare Awards 2012 will be presided over by the Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission Montek Singh Ahluwalia and the award will be presented on March 9, 2013 in Delhi.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / Express News Service – Hyderabad / February 21st, 2013

Creative bazaar gets under way

A visitor having a look at the products on display at the Gandhi Shilp Bazaar Exhibition cum Sale of Handicrafts and Artistic Textiles at Viswapriya Function Hall in Visakhapatnam on Friday./ Photo: A.Manikanta Kumar / The Hindu

175 artisans across the country take part in the expo

A rich repertoire of handlooms and handicrafts representing our tradition and culture brought by 175 artisans across the country greets your eyes at Gandhi Shilp Bazaar.

The artisans have exhibited their creative skills in the form of eco-friendly home decors, accessories, jute bags and sandals from Kolkata, wood carvings from Mysore, cut-glass jewellery, paintings made of black coffee, multi-string beaded neckpieces, wooden bangles, terracotta idols and cloth bags from New Delhi, silver filigree wares from Odisha and cool cotton kurtis from Rajasthan, among others.

A good collection of table spreads, luncheon sets, frocks and pull-overs in crochet lace works are on the display. If you want to gift a set of floating candles to your friends, the venue displays floral patterns packed attractively. Weavers found their means to showcase a selection of cotton kurtis with kalamkari patch work, etikoppaka crafts, stone carvings, wood-inlay items and other wares. Inaugurating the bazaar, District Collector V. Seshadri said that one has to encourage craftsmanship as part of marketing support scheme.

“The expo provides an opportunity for the shoppers to get the creative pieces of the artisans from different places and extend their support to the craftsmen,” he said. Deputy director of Handicrafts Development Corporation Ltd Abdul Kadar said that the platform enhances the skills of the craftsmen understanding the needs of different regions.

“Depending on the market potentiality, they try to make better use of their skills every time,” he said.

The ten-day expo which was funded by office of the Development Commissioner (Handicrafts) Ministry of Textiles in association with Lepakshi Handicrafts Development Corporation Ltd will be open at Viswapriya Function Hall till March 3 between 10 a.m. and 9 p.m.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Visakhapatnam / by Staff Reporter / February 23rd, 2013

Colwyn Bay cricket club choose overseas player

INDIAN allrounder Khatib Syed Shahabuddin will be Colwyn Bay Cricket Club’s overseas player for the new Liverpool Competition season.

Bay, who were relegated from the Premier Division at the end of a disappointing 2012 season, will be hoping the seasoned professional, who has 76 first class matches under his belt, will help them bounce back at the first attempt

The 33-year-old Shahabuddin – known as Shobby – who plays his first class cricket for Andhra Pradesh, has a couple of first class tons to his name while scoring more than 2,500 runs at an average just under 25.

The right-arm fast medium opening bowler also has almost 250 first class wickets at an average of 26.7 while his one-day stats include 60 matches with almost 1,000 runs and 73 wickets at a healthy economy rate.

Shahabuddin, who has also played for Hyderabad Heroes and Mumbai Indians, is due to arrive in the Bay during early May and, as he has a Level 2 coaching certificate, he will be expected to help out with coaching at all levels of the club.

Bay start nets at Rydal School on Friday evening and skipper Paul Jenkins is expecting to have many of last year’s squad available for what is bound to be a crucial year for the club.

Jenkins said: “We have lost one or two players but I am confident that we will have a good squad to pick from when the season starts.”

Two players who won’t be in the Bay first eleven this year are promising young batsman Jordan Evans who will be staying in the Premier Division by joining Firwood Bootle after scoring almost 600 league runs for the Bay last season.

Wicketkeeper and former skipper Graeme Jones will also be playing for Bootle next season, six years after leaving that club to join the Bay.

Bay start their 2013 campaign away at Birkenhead Park on Saturday, April 13, in the Bridging Finance Trophy Group 2 and have their first home game the following weekend against Wavertree.

The club’s first Division One fixture is away at Orrell Red Triangle on Saturday, May 4.

source: http://www.northwalespioneer.co.uk / Home> Sports> Cricket / by Andrew Martin / February 20th, 2013

Telugus in US to reach out to poor students in AP

Hyderabad :

]The North American Telugu Association (NATA), which represents Telugus living in the US, is planning to initiate several charitable events to help the poor and the destitute in the state.

The association will finance meritorious poor students, organise paediatric camps and work on projects to supply purified drinking water to people in different districts of the state, NATA president Sanjeeva T Reddy said here on Monday.

Under the scheme, known as “Seva Days”, the body, with a membership of around 6000, will also organise essay writing competitions and cultural programmes, he said.

“We are planning to help poor students in the state. We have identified several meritorious students from government institutions and will soon start sponsoring them,” said Sanjeeva Reddy, who took over as the president of the body in January.

“Our motto is to serve our Telugu brothers and sisters in the state,” he added.

Incidentally, the NATA, which was established only two years back, is planning to start a helpline for the Telugu immigrants in northern United States.

“We want to strengthen our community services for the Telugu immigrants in the US. Soon we will come up with a medical helpline and an IT helpline to help Telugu students and people who have moved to the US,” Reddy said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Home> City> Hyderabad / TNN / February 19th, 2013

A colony about which old timers reminisce with joy

Nearly 5,000 people live in Abidnagar, which is well-planned and spacious

Akkayyapalem is one of the oldest, lively and fledging residential colonies of the new city. The process of establishment of the colony began as early as 1960. In the middle of 60s the then district Collector Abid Hussein allotted land for a residential colony involving several revenue employees which later came to be known as Abidnagar and part and parcel of the grand Akkayyapalem. The housing layout in course of time it developed into an organised employees residential area since the 1970s. Compared to other older residential areas the colony is well-planned, spacious and neat and a clean one. An estimated 5,000 people live in Abidnagar, which is closely connected to the National Highway 5.

Vijaya Kumari, a school teacher, says that the colony is not what it was after the year 2000. The colony lost its pristine beauty. It was once scarcely populated with spacious independent dwellings, and front and backyards had lot of greenery. The original character of the area changed with the demolition of old buildings and apartment complexes coming in their place. Today most of the independent dwellings had been replaced by apartment complexes dwarfing the few buildings, whose owners refused to fall in line. So only few landlords of yesteryears are there to tell the story of the extinct residential township and life that was and that is. Today each apartment complex with 50 to 60 flats have emerged as a township within a township. It is difficult to keep track of people and happenings, say the locals.

Ashok, a resident of the colony since 1970 says that if the old timers who are dead were to rise from the grave, they would not be able to recognise their house as the demography of the area had undergone a sea change. Those were the days when there was a lot of open vacant space for playing cricket and kabbadi and we breathed fresh air. “Today I feel imprisoned in my colony, and the huge structures dwarfing me make me insignificant and insecure,” he says.

Cricket teams

Abidnagar Residents Welfare Association secretary Jafullah Khan recalls the days in his colony when multiple cricket teams played cricket in the colony open space which had been developed into a beautiful park. There was life in the colony when the youth played cricket and youngsters playing games and making noise throughout the day was quite common. The area had 30 to 40 cricket teams but today the colony is full of apartment complexes with no open space left for the children and youth. Development had robbed the zest for life and the picture of life is very hazy today. Old timers have something to go down the memory lane for but the youth of today there will be no fond memories to cherish, says an octogenarian Shyam Sunder.

The colony has a beautiful park with flowers, greenery and a lovely walking track which attracts the young and the old. The old and lost generation in their 70’s and 80’s make it a point to meet at the park in the mornings and evenings to share their joys and sorrows. Jafullah Khan and the association treasurer S. Ramesh are the moving force behind the development of the beautiful park.

About 130 members of the association have generously contributed to the development of the park in partnership with the GVMC. Ramesh says, there is abundant water resource in the Akkayyapalem area, a survey conducted in the past revealed that the area has enough ground water for the next 50 years.

Former corporator and ex-member of GVMC standing committee Banala Sathya Surya Sreenivasa Rao says that underground drainage would come into operation once the pump houses are ready. Houses for scavengers and shadikhana for Muslims were part of the development in Abidnagar.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> Cities> Visakhapatnam / by Ravi P. Benjamin / February 21st, 2013

No effort will be spared to promote Brand Vizag, says Purandeswari

Union Minister D. Purandeswari interacting with investors at a meeting in Visakhapatnam on Wednesday. Photo: K.R. Deepak

‘Pursuing demand for formation of separate railway zone’

Union Minister of State for Industry & Commerce D. Purandeswari on Wednesday said she had been working relentlessly to promote Brand Vizag so as to make it an ideal destination for investments in the industries, tourism, health, education, and other sectors.

She was speaking during an interaction with industrialists here at Hotel Four Points by Sheraton organised by a group of entrepreneurs.

Stating that as per her pre-poll promise, she had been pursuing the demand for formation of a separate railway zone with headquarters in the city. “If the Railway Board is averse to formation of new zone, let the Waltair division be merged with the South Central Railway,” she said.

Recalling her talks with Railway Minister P.K. Bansal and Minister of State K. Suryaprakash Reddy, Ms. Purandeswari said she had strongly opposed the reported bid to shift the proposed location of Railway Wagon Maintenance factory from Duvvada to Odisha. She shot off a letter to Mr. Bansal and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to register her protest against “step-motherly” treatment being meted out to Visakhapatnam.

Ms. Purandeswari said she had demanded introduction of direct trains to Chennai and Varanasi from the city.

Advocating integrated development of the city and its periphery, she said a study was being conducted by IIT-Delhi to find out ways and means for planned development of Visakhapatnam as an international city.

On the demand for relaxation of Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) to pave way for investments in hotels and health resorts all along the coast, the Union Minister said she would pursue the matter with the authorities concerned. The Minister said once financial closure was achieved, NHAI would convert highway roads inside the city into six lanes at a cost of Rs. 863 crore with several underpasses and flyovers.

She said the city needed several multi-level parking complexes. Underlining the potential to put Visakhapatnam on world tourism map, she said temple tourism, health tourism, as well as leisure tourism could be promoted in a big way.

She said the Centre would release Rs.50 crore for developing the beach road from the city to Bhimili as a tourist corridor.

Rushikonda IT Park Association president P. Vishnu Kumar Raju presided and vice-president O. Naresh Kumar welcomed.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Visakhapatnam / by Special Correspondent / February 21st, 2013

Nizam’s classic Napier cars park at Chowmahalla Palace in Hyderabad

Napier cars of VI Nizam Mir Mahboob Ali Khan on display at Chowmahalla Palace in Hyderabad.

The Napier cars were earlier showcased at the Cartier ‘Travel with Style’ Concours D’elegance 2013, a vintage car exhibition, held in Mumbai.

With five such cars, the Nizam of Hyderabad was the single largest owner of Napier cars in India.

The seating of the car is arranged in such a way that the occupants faced the Nizam, who took a central seat in the car.

Napier cars of the Nizam are being moved during a display at Chowmahalla Palace in Hyderabad.

source: http://www.DeccanChronicle.com / Home> News> Current Affairs / Agencies / February 20th, 2013

Where leisure meets its destiny

Given the mounting concerns over safety in public places, Shilparamam has stepped up its security apparatus with the installation of CCTV cameras to keep an eye on the sprawling campus.

One of the popular leisure and shopping destinations in the city, Shilparamam, spread across 65 acres, is visited by thousands every day including tourists from other States. Hosting art and cultural activities, it is also a major attraction for foreign tourists visiting the city.

Strict monitoring

“Already, eight CCTV cameras have been installed at vantage points, and more will be added. As of now, we are able to monitor key points including an uninterrupted vigil of the entrance,” says G.N. Rao, Special Officer, Shilparamam. The strength of security staff has also been raised for more visible presence, he adds.

Nearly 100 sentry guards have been deployed at different areas including the recently opened Night Bazar. Conceived and developed as an art and crafts village with facilities to host cultural events, Shilparamam has nearly 300 artisans from across the country setting up stalls with their goods throughout the year.

On special occasions such as Sankranti, Navaratri and New Year’s eve, the number of artisans swells to nearly 700. “Shilparamam complex has also turned into a much favoured destination for cultural activities, and more than 475 different cultural events were hosted last year,” says Mr. Rao.

A recent addition to the campus is the Sculpture Park where sculptors from across the country participate in a camp and engage themselves in the creation of works of art. Along with a few old ones, a total of 80 sculptures have been put on display at Shilparamam. Meanwhile, the authorities are planning to expand the concept of Shilparamam to other parts of the Andhra Pradesh including a centre at Bhadrachalam.

Sculpture park

“At Bhadrachalam, we are working on a sculpture park and given the mythological appeal of the place, the idea is to base it on the Ramayana theme,” he says. The locations where the much-admired Shilparamam centres have been set up or are under development include Kadapa, Tirupati, Pulivendula, Visakhapatnam, Puttaparthi and Kakinada.

“On an average, a total of 22.5 lakh persons visit these centres every year,” Mr. Rao adds.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by T. Lalith Singh / February 20th, 2013

Best time for office in Hyderabad is, now!

With the sluggish economy and political uncertainty, Hyderabad’s office space rentals have declined by a whopping 22 per cent in 2012, making it the cheapest city among India’s top eight cities. It is also the second cheapest in the world. So, it’s the best time to buy office space as this scenario is not expected to stay longer.

“In the next five years, Hyderabad is expected to witness office space supply of 25 million square feet. Out of which approximately 22 million square feet is expected to be in demand immediately. Demand is driven by the increase in sectors like engineering, professional services and technical services in the city,” said Sanjay Dutt, executive managing director, South Asia, Cushman & Wakefield.

Among three prime locations for offices, central business district, which comprises SP Road, Raj Bhawan Road, Panjagutta and Somajiguda, are expected to see decline in rentals as more and more offices shift to cheaper locations in the peripheral business district like Hitec City, Madhapur, Gachibowli and Kondapur. “CBD saw a sharp drop of 22 per cent during October to December period because developers were trying to lease the limited available stock at competitive prices.

Also, with most companies trying to be cost-conscious in the backdrop of moderating economic growth and increasing costs, Hyderabad appears to be the best place as it offers the most affordable office space in India. According to another real estate research firm Jones Lang LaSalle, Hyderabad’s costliest place — Banjara Hills — has a rental tag of Rs 50 to Rs 60 per sft compared `75 for SB Road of similar category in Pune.

The city also has excellent infrastructure, which is key for a good standard of living. “A number of factors will act as catalyst for the growth,” explained Sanjay Dutt.

According to him, “The leasing activity in Hyderabad is likely to gain momentum in the next 6-9 months with improvement in economic conditions and market sentiments and continued demand from IT and ITeS sector.”

source: http://www.DeccanChronicle.com / Home> News> Current Affairs / by DDC, S. Umamahesh / February 17th, 2013