Is Abids still the Hyderabadi bookworm’s paradise?

Book enthusiasts at the Sunday market in Abids. -FILE PHOTO / The Hindu
Book enthusiasts at the Sunday market in Abids. -FILE PHOTO / The Hindu

With the growing popularity of online shopping and e-books, and a general dip in readership, the Sunday book market at Abids is gradually losing its halo. Or is it?

For long, the Sunday book market at Abids has been regarded a one-stop-shop for every kind of book under the sun.

The stacks of fiction, non-fiction, magazines, comics, journals and the like, arranged in never-ending piles by the roadside, has always been a treat for any booklover. And the fact that they were sold at less than half the market price was the cherry on the cake.

But with the growing popularity of online shopping and ebooks, and the decline in readership, Abids is gradually losing its halo. On being questioned, however, there is a mixed response from people.

Akram, a book seller, says, “I have been selling books for 8 years here [in Abids] and it is very sad to see the number of buyers coming down. There has been a sharp decrease especially since 2010. Our business used to peak in summer, when students would spend their holidays reading fiction. But people are more fascinated by television and movies, and there is a huge drop in the number of youngsters stopping by. The number of elderly people has not gone down much though.”

What has also undergone a sea change is the kind of books that make it to the reading table.

“For instance, youngsters would earlier buy fiction like Harry Potter, but now non-fiction, DIY (Do-It-Yourself) and self-help books focussing on personality development are more popular,” says Akram.

Upbeat

However, Mohammed, who deals exclusively in magazines ranging from Tehelka to Filmfare, says he has not seen much of a decline in numbers. People still like to have a deep insight into things they are passionate about, he says. Staring at the computer screen while reading long articles can also strain their eyes. This is the reason, he feels, his magazines still sell. Most of his customers are movie enthusiasts who buy old film magazines to add up to their collection.

While Humera, a student, prefers online shopping for the sake of convenience; Eva, a fashion designer, stops by at Abids regularly for the wide range and reasonable prices the book market has to offer.

Shards from the blast

A lot of booksellers and customers agree that the recent Dilsukhnagar blast has also brought down the weekend huddle. Rajshekar, who has been buying books from Abids for over 30 years, opines, “I do not understand why people would stop coming and reading because of the blasts. I believe that life goes on and that books constitute a major part of it.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Najah Sameen / Hyderabad – May 16th, 2013

Record revenue from mango loading at Nuzvid

The Hindu
The Hindu

The division has already netted Rs. 4.56 crore

Krishna District is home to one of the best mango varieties in the country and export of the King of Fruits to other States in the country is on an average around 30,000 tonnes annually through the Railways.

This season is not considered to be a very good year for mango crop, but better than last season, helped the Railways also achieve handling 24,415 tonnes from April 1 to May 21 creating a sort of record as the projections for the season are reaching beyond 30,000 tonnes. Last season the Vijayawada Division of South Central Railway had handled only 25,200 tonnes, but now with another 10 days to go for the season to come to an end, Divisional Railway Manager Pradeep Kumar hopes they will gross the highest revenue too.

With freight tariff going up by 25 per cent from June 1 last year, the Division has already netted Rs.4.56 crore sending out 20 rakes comprising 42 covered wagons per rake. “There is still some demand from the aggregators and exporters to send mangoes to Anand Nagar Delhi station and we are ready to supply any number of rakes within a short notice,” the DRM told The Hindu on Wednesday.

While each wagon can be loaded with 30 tonnes, it takes about five to six hours and the Railways places wagons at Nuzvid station at 7 a.m. everyday and ensures that the rake crosses Andhra Pradesh same day to reach New Delhi within 48 hours to ensure the half-ripe Mangoes are just ripe enough for consumption and are sold in the market in Northern States.

The 2009-10 season saw the highest loading of 32 wagons sending out 34,314 tonnes. Now every care is taken in loading and staking them and providing the wagon with a mesh window to keep airflow in-tact. Banginapalli, Chinna Rasalu, Totapuri and Collector are the popular ones. This is one of the two dedicated mango loading stations in the country with other also being Andhra Pradesh – Vizianagaram, now under East Coast Railway.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Vijayawada / by Ramesh Susarla / Vijayawada – May 23rd, 2013

Andhra Pradesh confectioner makes 7,000 kg laddoo, eyes Guinness World Records

The 7,000-kg Samaikyandhra laddu under preparation at Bhaktanajaneya Sweet Stall at Tapeswaram in Mandapeta mandal of East Godavari on Sunday.
The 7,000-kg Samaikyandhra laddu under preparation at Bhaktanajaneya Sweet Stall at Tapeswaram in Mandapeta mandal of East Godavari on Sunday.

Rajahmundry (AP):

A confectioner here is making efforts to prepare the world’s ‘heaviest’ laddoo and enter the Guinness World Records for the third time.

A laddoo weighing 7,000kg is ready for Monday’s Vinayaka Chaturthi festival organised by the Rajahmahendri Ganesh Utsav Committee (RGUC) at Pushkar Ghat in Rajahmundry in East Godavari district of Andhra Pradesh.

“We are preparing a 7,000kg laddoo for which the order was placed by RGUC. It will be handed over to the organisers tomorrow at 10 A.M.,” S. Venkatswara Rao, two-time Guinness record holder and owner of Sri Bhakatanjaneya Sweets in the district’s Tapeswaram, told PTI.

The confectioner has used 2,000kg sugar, 2,000 kg Bengal gram (chana dal), 1,500 kg ghee and other ingredients, including cashew, almonds, cardamom and green camphor, to make the laddoo, which he said, would be taken in a procession to Pushkhar Ghat from Tapeswaram at 8 A.M.

DC debate : Why people not attracted to eco-friendly Ganesh idols ? 

“The laddoo prepared with the help of 16 workers is ready. We have applied for a Guinness Book entry for the third time as our laddoo will be the heaviest prepared anywhere in the world.

“We have made it to the Guinness Book twice, in 2011 and 2012,” he added.

The approximate cost of the laddoo is Rs 14.80 lakh, he said, adding that more than 500 laddoos have been prepared and another 150 orders have been received.

“Our laddoos have been ordered by Telangana region’s Nizamabad, Hyderabad, Coastal Andhra Pradesh districts, Visakhapatnam, Vizianagaram and other parts of the state,” he said, adding that the ongoing Samaikhyandhra agitation had not impacted his business.

“We received 90 orders more than last year’s 410 orders. We prepare laddoos weighing between 5kg to 5,000kg,” he said.

Incidentally, the festival this time is dedicated to the ongoing Samaikhyandhra agitation for a ‘united’ Andhra Pradesh.

RGUC spokesperson Ramamohan Rao told reporters on Saturday that, this year, it would perform what it has termed the ‘Samaikhyha Homam’ and chant the ‘Samaikhya Mantra’ for nine days.

“We have named the laddoo and the Vinayaka idol as Samaikhya laddoo and Samaikhya Vinayaka, dedicating it to the ongoing Samaikhyandhra Pradesh agitation,” he said.

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> News> Current Affairs / by PTI / September 08th, 2013

Students take to robot veda

The Robotics Club members work on a robot at the Sreenidhi Institute of Science & Technology premises | EPS
The Robotics Club members work on a robot at the Sreenidhi Institute of Science & Technology premises | EPS

Streamline Bus Transit System, Voting Machines, Intelligent Traffic Control System, Autonomous Solar Street Light, Electronic Security and Switching System and PC-based Wireless Application Control. Wondering who has developed these products?

Well, not any reputed research labs or corporates but students of The Robotics Club of the Sreenidhi Institute of Science & Technology(SNIST). Founded in 2007 by a few enthusiastic students, it provides a platform to students from different disciplines to come together and share knowledge.

“Acquiring and spreading knowledge in robotics is the governing motive behind the working of the club. Within a short span, it has grown to the level of an organisation that boasts of unparalleled strength and reputation,” says club’s founder-member A Pradeep Iyer.

The club aims not just at building robots for fun but also to inculcate that spirit of engineering among students which drives them to develop automation systems useful for the society, he explains.

The club is meant for every student from every branch in the college, as robotics is not just about mechanics or electronics. It is all about overcoming challenges in designing integrated systems like robots, adds another founder-member B Naga Chaitanya.

Since its inception, the club has undertaken numerous projects such as unmanned agricultural vehicle, all terrain navigator, pneumatic robotic arm, hydraulic robotic arm, automatic brake system, shooting robot, Streamline Bus Transit System, Voting Machines, Intelligent Traffic Control System, Autonomous Solar Street Light, Electronic Security and Switching System and PC-based Wireless Application Control.

Pradeep Iyer, who is presently working in a private firm, points out that ‘Robotic Vision’ has become a prominent area of research in the last decade. While structure and motion estimation from a video sequence has been an active topic for the last two decades.

The Postal department and BSNL officials are using voting machines developed by the club for their organisational polls. Even APSRTC officials have checked the Streamline Bus Transit System developed by the club, discloses its joint secretary V Nagendhar Reddy. Though the equipments developed by the club members are in an initial stage, interested organisations can carry forward the research, he says.

In fact, every year the club organises a national-level robotics festival titled “Roboveda”, meaning “knowledge in Robotics” in which thousands of students from various colleges from across the country participate. This year, around 500 out-station students, including, 232 from Puducherry participated in the event. The DRDO has sponsored Roboveda for about four years in the past and this time, it has been sponsored by AMI Tech.

Becoming a club member is, however, not easy. One has to take various tests before he or she is selected. Around 70 students are selected every year through a rigorous selection process.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Anil Kumar / ENS – Hyderabad  / August 22nd, 2013

All set for the real test

NEW DELHI 25/06/2013: V. Jyothi Surekha, who won the women's compound event in the National Ranking Archery Tournament at Yamuna Sports Complex, in New Delhi on June 23, 2013. Photo:Sandeep Saxena
NEW DELHI 25/06/2013: V. Jyothi Surekha, who won the women’s compound event in the National Ranking Archery Tournament at Yamuna Sports Complex, in New Delhi on June 23, 2013. Photo:Sandeep Saxena

The 17-year-old compound archer from Andhra Pradesh, Vennam Jyothi Surekha, is systematically preparing for the forthcoming major events — the Asian Games in Incheon and the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, writes J. R. Shridharan.

Earning a berth in the national team for premier international events is no mean achievement. And when it is achieved by a teenager, it acquires even more significance.

Vennam Jyothi Surekha, 17, a compound archer from Vijayawada, has proved that she is systematically preparing for the forthcoming big events — the Asian Games in Incheon and the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro — despite facing stiff challenges.

Putting the dismal showings in the World Stage III (Colombia) and IV (Poland) fixtures behind her, Surekha topped the table with 29 points out of 32 in the selection trials in Pune for the World Youth Championships, to be held in Wuxi (China). Later, in the National ranking tournament in Aurangabad, she led the field by garnering 23 points out of 32 to book her ticket to the World Championships in Turkey and the Asian Championships in Chinese Taipei.

As a five-year-old, she swam River Krishna, covering a distance of five kilometres in a record time of 3 hours 30 minutes and six seconds) to enter the Limca Book of Records. She was a talented long distance swimmer before switching over to archery. Many sports administrators are of the view that swimming in her early days had helped Surekha build her breathing and staying power, which have come handy in archery.

“Surekha is a sincere archer and always willing to go the extra mile to achieve perfection. She uses her energy brilliantly while shooting and she knows well how to get the maximum effect out of each release. She is also astute in gauging the wind,” says the Indian compound coach, Jiwanjot Singh Teja, of SAI Centre, Aurangabad.

India’s recurve coach Ravi Shankar speaks highly of the teenager, saying Surekha’s selection to the Indian team for the World Championships is a noteworthy achievement. “Finishing on top while competing against senior archers is appreciable. She is just 17 and has many years to go. In fact, she is the first archer from South India to make it to the World championships,” he says.

However, Ravi Shankar feels the real test for Surekha would be in Antalya (Turkey) where she will be competing with the best of compound archers in the world. “Archers from Korea, USA, and Mexico are the hot favourites. Competing against them will be an acid test for her,” he says.

Many are of the view that proper gauging of the wind would be paramount during the World Championships as the venue is close to the sea. “One who properly gauges the wind trajectory will have the edge,” says Ravi Shankar.

Surekha had a tough time a few months ago when she was forced to quit the Volga Archery Academy in Vijayawada, where she learned the rudiments of the sport from the late India coach, Ch. Lenin, and his deputy J. Rama Rao. This happened following a difference of opinion between the academy administrators and Surekha’s father.

Surekha now practises alone with the help of her father in a paddy field close to River Krishna. “When she is not in the Indian camps, she is finding it difficult to practise without a quality coach. In fact, there is a dearth of compound coaches in the country. The fluctuations in her performances are due to this reason,” says the archer’s father, Surendra Kumar.

source: http://www.sportstaronnet.com / Sports Star / Home> Archery Focus / by J. R. Sridharan / September 28th, 2013

Maneesha gunning for greater glory

K. Maneesha, who won the mixed doubles title at the Maldives International recently with her parents at the Gopi Chand Academy in Hyderabad on Tuesday. — Photo: V.V. Subrahmanyam / The Hindu
K. Maneesha, who won the mixed doubles title at the Maldives International recently with her parents at the Gopi Chand Academy in Hyderabad on Tuesday. — Photo: V.V. Subrahmanyam / The Hindu

The 18-year-old shuttler, fresh from her win in Maldives, says she is keen on improving and winning more titles

Appearances, they say are always deceptive. Not many regulars who visit Gopi Chand Academy in Gachibowli would have dreamt of such a fabulous finish in the big league when three relatively unknown faces — Kidambi Srikanth (winner of Thailand Open), Kidambi Nandagopal and K. Maneesha (mixed doubles winners in the Maldives Open) — hogged the limelight last weekend.

“We enjoyed every match and just played to our potential,” says Maneesha, who visited the academy along with the Kidambi siblings on Tuesday. This B. Com II year student from Kukatpally won her maiden international title at Maldives is a doubles specialist — having won the junior national titles partnering P. V. Sindhu besides the mixed doubles title.

The 18-year-old, who learnt her basics from Mohammad Ali in Kukatpally before joining the academy, says she is keen on improving and winning more titles. Maneesha says since she trains with Nandagopal she had a better understanding in the game.

“Gopi sir will decide if we should as partners in mixed doubles,” she says, even as the trio dedicated their victory to their coaches and parents.

“We hope this is just the beginning,” they said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Hyderabad / by V. V. Suhrahmanyam / Hyderabad – June 12th, 2013

Panoramic Group launches in City of Pearls

 Branded as United-21 Hyderabad, this premium property is the group’s 37th property. The hotel is centrally located at Secunderabad opposite the Passport Office.

PanoramicHF19sept2013

Mumbai :

Panoramic Group, a diversified multi-national conglomerate with business interests in several sectors, has launched its latest property in Hyderabad. This marks the group’s 37th property. The United 21-Hyderabad hotel is centrally located in Secunderabad opposite the passport office. This property forms a part of the group’s timeshare arm Magic Holidays, which is now one of the leading players in the vacation-ownership space in India. Recently, the Group also opened a property in Lonavala, Maharashtra.

The United 21-Hyderabad property is equipped with all modern amenities and is one of the premium properties owned by the Group. There are 58 rooms that are currently functional; this includes 17 suite rooms, 23 super deluxe rooms and 28 deluxe rooms. There is a multi-cuisine restaurant ‘Spices & Sauces’, a lounge bar called ‘Waves’ and a 24-hour coffee shop ‘Anytime’ which serves mouth-watering delicacies and a selection of beverages.

Mr. Hitesh Kshatriya, Chief Operating Officer of Panoramic Group, which owns Magic Holidays, said, “The United 21-Hyderabad property marks our entry into the City of Nizams. Hyderabad is a very important market for us as it is a converging point for both business and leisure travelers. This is our endeavor to provide our customers with experiences that match up to the ‘Unforgettable Times’ promise.”

“We have noticed that Hyderabad is a market that attracts a lot of traffic as the IT industry is booming over here, apart from this it is also a very important destination for tourists who are going to other places in Andhra Pradesh. Keeping all these factors in mind we decided to launch our property here before the festive season. Our Hyderabad property is one of the premium properties in our portfolio, it features all modern equipments and has been designed in a very fluidic and aesthetic style keeping the guest’s comfort in mind. The hotel is centrally located so it is ideal for all kinds of travellers,” he added.

The company’s promise of ‘Unforgettable Times’, which is an integral part of the repositioning, seeks to provide customers with a holiday experience like never before that will keep them coming back for more such magical moments. This promise comes along with the assurance of affordable and flexible holidays supplemented with assured booking of holidays in some of the best locations in India and abroad.

source: http://www.traveldailynews.asia / Travel Daily News Asia-Pacific / Home> News> Regional News> Asia-Pacific / by Theodore Koumelis / September 10th, 2013

Hyderabad through the comic prism

ComicPrismHF18sept2013

Graphic novel creater Jai Undurti talks to Postnoon on the unique concept of a comic kaleidoscope of Hyderabad.

Hyderabad:

Just a few weeks away from the big Comic Con festival in the City, the young lovers of fun have already begun to experience the festival as they got to meet a well known Hyderabad Graphic Novel creator Jai Undurti, who interacted with a hundred-odd audience and shared his ideas of a graphic novel at the coffee cup cafe recently. Speaking to Postnoon, he shares his thoughts about his novel, the Comic Con coming to city and much more.

About their Hyderabad Graphic Novel, which will be on display at the comic con festival, creators Jai and Jasraman Grewal say that the novel is an attempt to tell the story of the City through sequential art. “We are both outsiders but we place ourselves in the long tradition of travellers writing about the City. Great cities influence their inhabitants completely right down to the very way of thinking and perceiving the world,“ says Jai. Just as Mumbai or Paris have their own distinctive ‘voices’, the kineticism of Bombay, for example, often shows in works written there. Hyderabad too has a distinctive psycho-geographical signature.

They call the City the 0.0 Cartesian coordinate, the starting point for all explorations. Jai and Grewal worked with lead artist Harsho Mohan Chattoraj from Kolkata and Federico Zumel from Argentina. Colourist Neeraj Menon and letterer Aditya Bidikar completed the team for the book that will be released next month at the Hyderabad edition of Comic Con India. A digital edition is also in the works.

“It is not a respectable history, but rather a collection of the myths, legends and folklore that has surrounded the City since her birth”. “You could say we use facts as stepping stones to the truth,” says Jai.

The graphic novel consists of four episodes set in different eras.

Undurti came up a mechanism of a time-travelling auto to tie the disparate chrono-threads together. The stories span time and space:

An obsessed scholar travels back in time to meet a mysterious poet.

Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges journeys to Hyderabad to hunt down a mythical beast, a ‘dreamtiger’ whose very sight leads the hunter to madness. A man uncovers a paranoid conspiracy theory on the creation of cities themselves, uncovering their true reason for ‘living’.

The project began as a photo-documentation on the ‘base of the pyramid’- petty entrepreneurs and street vendors. Gradually it evolved into an archival effort. At this point the duo approached Yugantar, the NGO which had commissioned the photo-project. Despite initial skepticism Yugantar agreed to put down the seed money for the first episode and graphic novel was born.

When asked why they chose this medium, Jai, replies, “Comics have been with us ever since the first cave-man sketched on the walls of his abode. Comics have a 40,000 year history – to tell stories through pictures is one of the most deeply ingrained traits of being human. It was out of our respect for the power of this medium that made us choose it”.

Words can be an extremely limiting factor in writing certain things. And when you need to convey an idea in a single stroke rather than serpentine descriptions: a picture is magic. “The Hyderabad we are interested in is long gone, only comics could bring to life this vanished city”.

Talking about the speciality of the novel, he says, “there is no novel that just talks about the City. There are two types of novels mostly in the county, either superhero or mythology. These City-centric is new.” He adds, “we invited people to tell us there locality stories and we would make them into a graphic story. We have been getting few and we are encouraging it and might come up with every locality story.”

How comic con will help City Comic fans, he says, “the festival is already creating a lot of buzz, more than 100 turned up to the workshop, when we expected 25. After the festival there will more groups and many people will start talking about comics and find many like minded people and will start hanging out with each other.”

The Comic Con festival is scheduled to begin on 21st September, you will find the Hyderabad Graphic Novel team at the venue.

source: http://www.postnoon.com / PostNoon / Home> City / by Arun Daniel Yellamaty / August 30th, 2013

Miss America has roots in Vijayawada

V. Koteswaramma, grandmother of Miss America-2014 Nina Davuluri, showing pictures of her granddaughter in Vijayawada on Monday. / Photo. Ch. Vijaya Bhaskar / The Hindu
V. Koteswaramma, grandmother of Miss America-2014 Nina Davuluri, showing pictures of her granddaughter in Vijayawada on Monday. / Photo. Ch. Vijaya Bhaskar / The Hindu

The 24-year-old American of Indian descent Nina Davuluri, who has been crowned Miss America 2014, lived in Vijayawada for a brief period as a child and has strong connections with the city. She is granddaughter of V. Koteswaramma, secretary and correspondent of Montessori Mahila Kalaasala, in the city.

She was just six weeks old when her grandmother brought her to the city and she was groomed by Koteswaramma and her aunt Sashibala, a practising doctor, till the age of two-and-a-half years. “Thereafter her parents took her back to US. But she visits us every summer,” says Dr. Sashibala.

Ms. Nina, who learned Kuchipudi in Vijayawada during her visits in summer holidays, is also a good western dancer. She is fond of Telugu movies and never misses to see the latest. She has not only excelled in dance but has also learnt piano and can wield the tennis racquet with aplomb.

She is a very determined child said Ms Koteswaramma. “She wanted to win the pageant and has done it. And she has done it all alone with a strong one-year preparation. There was strong support of her mother, most importantly she has strong attachment to India and the city of Vijayawada,” said Dr. Sashibala. The rise to fame was not an easy task for the Nina, who is the first Indian-descendent American to win the pageant. In 2006 she was the first runner-up of ‘Teen America’ and from there she resolved to win the coveted Miss America title. In the run-up to the slot, she first won the Miss Syracuse, then Miss New York and finally the Miss America title.

Nina a graduate from University of Michigan wants to join a medical school next year. While her father Davuluri Koteswara Choudhary is a practising gynaecologist in New York, her mother Sheila Ranjani is a web programmer.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Vijayawada / by Sumit Bhattacharjee / Vijayawada – September 17th, 2013

Take the cue

Aditya Shenoy, a Goan by origin is an HR executive at Deloitte in Hyderabad.
Aditya Shenoy, a Goan by origin is an HR executive at Deloitte in Hyderabad.

In a country whose sports culture is synonymous with cricket and more than half of the children’s dream of representing the nation in the cricketing arena, a young 22-year-old Hyderabadi has nurtured his dream and passion of being a professional cueist. To top it, he has recently broken into the top 25 of the junior Snooker rankings.

Meet Aditya Shenoy, a Goan by origin and a HR executive at Deloitte in Hyderabad. The lanky six-footer had dreamt of being a top-ranked cueist as a school kid and today he lives his dream. So from where did the interest for snooker in a cricket crazy nation arise?  “I first developed the interest to play pool back when I was in school. Although the rules for snooker and pool are different, pool is the first game one plays to basically learn how to cue, and later moves on to snooker or billiards,” says Aditya.

Being an HR of a reputed company and cueist at the same time can be taxing and managing time to practice for long hours still remains his biggest challenge.  He owes a lot of his success to his employers for supporting him. “I owe a lot to Deloitte as an organisation for having supported me throughout in pursuing my snooker career as well. They  gave me a 23-day leave  to participate in Gwalior last year. Not only this, I also represented Deloitte at an annual event named Corporate Olympics,” he explains.

Snooker, according to him, has changed his life. Although it started off as a hobby, it has slowly become a part and parcel of his life. “I cannot stay away from a cue stick. Like people look forward to weekends for an outing or a picnic, I look forward to the weekend so that I can put in at least 8-10 hours of practice, ” states the 22-year old.

His proudest moment came when he represented Andhra Pradesh in the Manisha National Snooker and Billiards Championships in Gwalior last year. This, according to him, was the most wonderful experience in his sporting career. It was here that he managed to break into the top 25 in the national junior rankings. Ask him about his inspiration on the snooker circuit, pat comes his reply, “Ronnie O’ Sullivan.” Ronnie, he says, is the best natural snooker player the world has seen. “He is like the Sachin Tendulkar of snooker,” states Aditya.

Outside the sporting circles, he credits all his success to his mother.  “My mom has supported me from the time I approached her with my aspiration to take up snooker beyond a sport I played to pass my time. She has helped me manage both my professional and snooker careers in such a way that I progress equally in both aspects,” he says. On advice to upcoming cueists, he says, “My advice is simple, if you believe that your passion towards the sport exceeds practicing at local snooker parlours, then put in your best efforts to fulfil your dream. You can be the next cueist the state and more importantly, the country is looking for.”

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Pushkar Banakar – Hyderabad / September 02nd, 2013