Category Archives: Records, All

This cop swims to make history

 

Tulasi Chaitanya, a member of the Indian team which won the relay gold in the World Police Games swimming championship in Belfast, seen with his mentor Rajiv Trivedi, Additional DGP (Sports). / The Hindu
Tulasi Chaitanya, a member of the Indian team which won the relay gold in the World Police Games swimming championship in Belfast, seen with his mentor Rajiv Trivedi, Additional DGP (Sports). / The Hindu

Tulasi Chaitanya joined the A.P. Police as a constable only a year ago, but he has now become the toast of the entire sports fraternity by creating history of sorts: becoming the first-ever swimmer from the State to win an international medal.

As a member of the Indian team, Chaitanya bagged the 4 x 50m freestyle relay gold in the World Police Games held in Belfast.

Significantly, Chaitanya, stationed in Vijayawada, will feature in five more individual events and is expected to surprise many with a couple of stand-out performances, says Rajiv Trivedi, Additional DGP (Sports).

Thanks to the initiative of the A.P. Police top brass, Chaitanya had a training stint at the famous Basavanagudi Swimming Pool in Bangalore under the tutelage of head coach Pradeep Kumar.

This is the same national coach who saw many teenagers from Karnataka win gold in the recent Junior National Aquatics at Gachibowli.

Chaitanya’s performance was no surprise to many who followed his career-graph, as only recently he won two gold and a silver in the All India Police Games held in Guwahati, following which V. Dinesh Reddy, Director-General of Police, gave him an out-of-turn promotion as head constable.

Incidentally, Chaitanya is also the first swimmer to be picked from the State for the World Police Games. He also holds the world record timing of 12 hours and 31 minutes for crossing Palk Strait (30-km distance between Sri Lanka and India).

“We are grateful to the government for supporting sportspersons like Tulasi with special grants. We are also trying out similar options in other disciplines where there is a potential to win medals at the highest level. Our goal is to see that one from our department wins a medal in the 2016 Olympics in Rio,” he says.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by V.V. Subrahmanyam / Hyderabad – August 04th, 2013

Social structure decoded

Professor Ramakrishna Ramaswamy, vice chancellor of UoH and Dr C H Hanumantha Rao, chancellor (left) of UoH in conversation with awardees Dr Kalpana Kannabiran and Prof Vamsi Vakulabharanam. | EPS
Professor Ramakrishna Ramaswamy, vice chancellor of UoH and Dr C H Hanumantha Rao, chancellor (left) of UoH in conversation with awardees Dr Kalpana Kannabiran and Prof Vamsi Vakulabharanam. | EPS

At a time when the parameters of justice are being questioned by the masses and the marginalised assert their identity, the symptomatic study of Indian society is a revelation.

Felicitated with the first Amartya Sen Award instituted by Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR), sociologist Dr Kalpana Kannabiran and economist Dr Vamsi Vakulabharanam presented their perspectives at the University of Hyderabad (UoH).

Hailing from the city, both were chosen along with four others across the country for the prestigious award. During a felicitation ceremony organised by UoH, Dr Kalpana Kannabiran spoke about understanding structural violence, the social foundations of non discrimination, and questions of constitutionalism and social justice in India. She was awarded in recognition of her study in the field of sociology of justice, especially in the context of gender and of the marginalised.

“The vast available literature across social sciences focuses on inequality without making a mention of discrimination, which is an active obstruction from attainment of equality,” said the director of Council for Social Development and co-founder of Asmita Resource Centre for Women.

A former sociology professor at NALSAR university of Law, she also pointed out the role of disability as providing foundation for discrimination.

She said that the disability mentioned in the constitution was social disability and not what it is today.

She also urged for debate on the concept of marital rape, which is not considered an offence under law and also questioned Andhra Pradesh (Telangana Areas) Eunuchs Act, 1919, which gives the power to arrest any man dressed in a women’s attire in public places.

In his address, Dr Vamsi Vakulabharanam, associate professor in School of Economics at UoH highlighted his research on inequality in the contemporary economies of India and China.

He shared his work on globalization and agrarian change in India with special reference to Telangana, and consumption and wealth inequality during the period of economic reforms.

He said capitalism sheds its institutional skin in this crisis prone system which every time comes out with a moulding process and grows a new structure

The award, carrying a citation and a cash award of `10 lakh each was presented earlier this year by Nobel laureate Amartya Sen at a ceremony in New Delhi on May 6.

Dr C H Hanumantha Rao, chancellor and Prof Ramakrishna Ramaswamy, vice-chancellor of UoH were present at the ceremony.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express News Service – Hyderabad / July 31st, 2013

Zoo to breed wild dogs in captivity

DogsHF02aug2013

Visakhapatnam:

The Indira Gandhi Zoological Park (IGZP), or Vizag Zoo will soon have the country’s exclusive wild dog breeding centre. It will help conserve a special breed of the fast dwindling population of wild dogs known as Dholes besides propagating them for various international animal exchange programmes, according to officials.

In fact, Vizag Zoo or IGZP is India’s only zoo that’s been successful in breeding of wild dogs for the fourth time. It had been selected by the Central Zoo Authority for conservation of endangered wild dogs.

While the IGZP will have a breeding centre for wild dogs the CZA has chosen Vandalur Zoological Park in Chennai, Tamil Nadu as the associate zoo.

According to IGZP curator G Ramalingam, wild dog population has witnessed massive increase within the protected area from just two to 19. Out of these, seven are female wild dogs, five adult males, four male and three female puppies.

Director of Zoological Parks in Andhra Pradesh, P. Mallikarjuna Rao also confirmed that Vizag zoo has witnessed a substantial increase in wild dog population. Dholes, according to him, are in demand in most of the zoos in Asia owing to the animal’s excellent eyesight and hearing capacity.

The dholes have been classified as the endangered wild dog species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature owing to their habitat loss, depletion of its prey base, according to Rao. “If this experiments turn out success the IGZP will be more popular in the country as far as captive breeding of wild dogs and their conservation is concerned”, he added.

According to Vizag zoo veterinary surgeon V Srinivas, wild dog breeding is a delicate scientific task needs to be and several measures are taken to ensure positive results. Captive breeding of wild dogs is carried out in off display units so that they get complete privacy during reproduction. Ends//

source:http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> News> Current Affairs / DC / July 21st, 2013

Medak boy tops CA entrance exam

K. Sarath
K. Sarath

Hyderabad :

K. Sarath, son of a businessman from Siddipet, Medak district of Andhra Pradesh, has secured all India first rank in the CA-CPT results declared by the Institute of Chartered Accounts of India (ICAI) on Tuesday.

“`I could not believe the news when I received a call from ICAI this morning and I have no words to express my happiness,” Sarath told newspersons here.

His father, K. Chandram services and sells sewing machines while his mother, Bhagyalakshmi, is a house wife.

After completion his schooling in Siddipet, Sarath joined Sri Medha Institute here to purse an integrated intermediate-cum-CA entrance coaching. “He topped the exam which was written by over six lakh CA aspirants. The pass percentage in the exam is generally less than 20 per cent,” Niharika, Director, Sri Medha said.

After successful completion of about four-year CA course, Sarath wants to study management at any one of Indian Institute of Managements.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / by The Hindu Bureau     naga.gunturi@thehindu.co.in / Hyderabad – July 16th, 2013

Biological E’s Japanese encephalitis vaccine prequalified by WHO

Hyderabad :

Homegrown biopharmaceutical company Biological E (BioE) and European biotech company Valneva SE (Valneva) announced that the  World Health Organization (WHO) has awarded its Japanese Encephalitis vaccine  prequalification for global use in adults.

Biological E and Valneva had established a partnership in 2005 for the development and commercialization of a Japanese encephalitis vaccine for endemic regions, based on Valneva’s JEV technology. The vaccine, which was successfully developed under this partnership, is being marketed in India under the trade-name JEEV and its commercialization in other JE-endemic countries is being planned.

BioE said that it expects its pediatric indication to be prequalified by the end of the year.

“This is the first prequalification of a Japanese Encephalitis vaccine and is a key step in ensuring the vaccine can be distributed to developing countries,” the company release said.

Commenting on the development, Biological E Limited managing director Mahima Datla said, “We are happy that our JE vaccine is the first ever WHO prequalified JE vaccine. It is an extremely important achievement for the vaccines community as our vaccine’s prequalification is well in time to support GAVI’s plans of introducing the JE vaccine in several developing countries.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Business> India Business / by Swati Rathor, TNN / July 23rd, 2013

Student wins gold medal for shot put

Teen aced Junior Olympics at age 10

ATHLETE—Kushaal Tadepalli, a freshman at Agoura High School, throws the shot put in a recent competition.
ATHLETE—Kushaal Tadepalli, a freshman at Agoura High School, throws the shot put in a recent competition.

 Agoura High School freshman Kushaal Tadepalli tossed the 4K-gram shot put a distance of 55 feet, 1.50 inches to win the youth boys’ gold medal at the USA Youth Nationals on July 6 in Edwardsville, Il.

Two days earlier he threw the 1K-gram discus 172 feet, 8 inches to win the bronze.

As a 10-year-old athlete in 2009, he won the gold medal on his final shot put throw at the USATF Junior Olympics in Greensboro, NC.

At Wichita in 2011, the 12-year-old Tadepalli seeded fourth yet won the gold medal, outdistancing the competition by more than 2 feet. When going into the finals after the first three attempts, he broke out the “spin technique” for the first time in meet competition.

He competes again at the National USATF Junior Olympics in Greensboro on July 22 to 28. At the event he will be joined by his twin sister and AHS freshman, Sahana Tadepalli, competing in discus.

source: http://www.theacron.com / The Acorn / Home> Sports / July 18th, 2013

Indian Railway Gets Woman Guard For Goods Train

Vijayawada :  (Bernama)

For the first time in the history of Indian Railway, a woman has been appointed as a guard for goods train, Press Trust of India (PTI) reported.

Forty Three-year old D Mohini Kumari was appointed as the woman guard on freight trains by the South Central Railway (SCR) on the other day.

Kumari, a graduate who was appointed a clerk in SCR on compassionate ground in 2006 after the death of her husband, took charge of her new assignment here Friday.

According to railway sources, she qualified for the post of guard in a departmental examination and later underwent training at Secunderabad.

Talking to PTI, Mohini said she is prepared to face any kind of challenge in her new job, where women are rarely appointed.

She advised women to break new grounds and be ready to face challenges in life.

— BERNAMA

source: http://www.bernama.com.my / National News Agency of Malaysia / Home> World> News / by Press Trust of India / Vijayawada – July 20th, 2013

It’s her racket that does the talking

Tennis player Shaik Jafreen of Kurnool, who will be taking part in the Sofia Deaflympics this summer, at the Lal Bahadur Stadium. - / Photo: V.V. Subrahmanyam / The Hindu
Tennis player Shaik Jafreen of Kurnool, who will be taking part in the Sofia Deaflympics this summer, at the Lal Bahadur Stadium. – / Photo: V.V. Subrahmanyam / The Hindu

Hearing and speech impairment has done little to dilute Shaik Jafreen’s passion for tennis and the 15-year-old from Kurnool is set to represent India in the Sofia Deaflympics to be held in Bulgaria from July 26

In an era when innovations on the communications front are shrinking the world, she has a major handicap – cannot speak and comprehend properly what the others say. But, the indefatigable Shaik Jafreen is now keen to let her tennis racket do the talking with her selection to represent India in the Sofia Deaflympics to be held in Bulgaria from July 26.

“This is great news to me. I am really determined to prove a point or two,” gestures the 15-year-old hearing and speech-impaired tennis player from Kurnool. Her father S. Zakeer Ahmed is an advocate. For someone whose dreams of taking part in the 2012 London Paralympics were dashed because of the poor handling of entries for the event, Jafreen strongly believes that the Sofia edition can well be the turning point of her career.

“I badly need a big win and if I get that there, it should do a world of good to me,” she conveys her desire .

She underwent a one-month intensive training session under Anirudh at the KSLTA in Bangalore and also bagged a gold medal in the 2012 Punjab National championship in the hearing and speech-impaired category. Yet, it has been a real struggle for this girl from a relatively small town to be in the competitive circuit as she has little support outside her own family.

Her father even disposed of his plot to let Jafreen pursue her passion for the sport with costs often coming to about Rs. 3 lakh per annum. “She was so dejected when I once threw up my hands that she refused to touch food. I then decided to support her at any cost,” says the father. Jafreen, an Intermediate first year student in KRM Government Junior College, will be joining the national camp in Delhi from July 10.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> City> Hyderabad / by V. V. Subrahmanyam / July 07th, 2013

India owes its Table Tennis gold to Sreeja

Akula Sreeja at the Global Table Tennis Academy in Hyderabad. /  Photo: V.V. Subrahmanyam / The Hindu
Akula Sreeja at the Global Table Tennis Academy in Hyderabad. / Photo: V.V. Subrahmanyam / The Hindu

The 14-year-old clinched her maiden international gold, playing a key role in the Indian team’s win over Sri Lanka in the final of the South Asian Junior Table Tennis Championship in New Delhi

She was the only representative from the State in the Indian team for the South Asian Junior Table Tennis Championship in New Delhi. And, on Sunday, 14-year-old paddler Sreeja made it a memorable trip clinching her maiden international gold as she played a key role in India winning the team event defeating Sri Lanka in the final.

This victory also meant that India qualified for the Asian Junior Championship to be held in Doha later this year.

A product of Global Table Tennis Academy in Anandnagar Colony here, this class X student of Rosary Convent did her coach Somnath Gosh and the officials proud.

“I am delighted at this performance. Honestly, when I entered the meet, I just told myself to give my best. And, the end result is a dream come true. I dedicate this win to my coaches, parents and well-wishers,” an elated Sreeja told The Hindu from New Delhi.

The India No. 3 in the sub-junior girls category had been training really hard under the tutelage of Somnath and today’s performance in the team event (the other members being Sagorika Mukherjee (Bengal) and Harshavardhini (Tamil Nadu) – could well be the beginning of a new chapter for this gifted youngster.

Somnath said India was the clear favourite to win the title and the gold for Sreeja was important in the context of boosting her morale. “She will be a different player now,” he remarked.

“We are hoping that Sreeja’s achievement will lift the morale of the other trainees too,” feels GTTA president Ramdoss Bharatan.

And, the joy of her parents — Praveen and Sudha — was understandable.

“We were waiting for this big moment and hope that she will keep winning many more medals at the highest level,” they said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by V. V. Subrahmanyam / July 22nd, 2013

Many firsts for Andhra Pradesh hospitals to cheer about

Visakhapatnam :

Healthcare wise, it has been a happening year for Andhra Pradesh  with Hyderabad and Visakhapatnam successfully conducting path breaking surgeries like lung and heart  transplants respectively and several milestones achieved in cardiothorasic transplants and endoscopic robotic surgeries. But a renowned cardiologist from Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences (Nims) being caught for bribery earlier this year took some of the sheen off the noble profession.

On the occasion of Doctors’ Day (July 1), eminent physicians from these cities said that while these breakthroughs will go a long way in boosting the reputation of the state and these cities as ‘medical tourism’ hubs, the shortcomings such as lack of affordable healthcare, inadequate trauma and intensive care facilities and lack of awareness about organ transplantations continue to plague healthcare in the state.

According to medical experts, the area of cardiac and related ailments has seen one of the highest advancements with procedures like lung transplant and robot assisted minimally invasive heart surgeries. The launch of the world’s first drug-eluting absorbable stent in the state in December 2012 was another noted breakthrough. in the treatment of coronary artery disease.

“We conducted the first lung transplant in AP last September. Hyderabad is now one of the three centres apart from Mumbai and Chennai to offer this crucial transplant,” said A Gopalakrishna Gokhale, head of Yashoda Hospital Secunderabad’s cardiothoracic department, who incidentally conducted AP’s first heart transplant in 2004. Vizag, however, saw its first heart transplant in December 2012 at Care Hospital.

When it comes to robotic procedures, Apollo Hospital, Hyderabad, has been carrying out these surgeries since the last three months, pointed out Dr Vijay Dikshit, chief cardiac surgeon from Apollo Hyderabad. Dr D Nageshwar Reddy, chairman, Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, said his hospital had conducted the first flexible robotic endoscopic surgery for colon and stomach cancer.

According to Reddy, the hospital had also carried out the ‘Poem procedure’ for a condition called achalasia cardia (difficulty in swallowing) and developed a new stent for treating endoscopic pancreatic necrosis, which is being taken up internationally.

Dr S Vijay Mohan, from Care Hospital, Hyderabad, said that city has shown an improvement when it comes to transplant surgeries and joint replacements and said that stem cell therapy is showing promise. “Liver transplant from live donors has taken off and so have high-end orthopaedic procedures. Stem cell therapy to cure acute ailments is also showing promise in Hyderabad.”

“In the field of organ transplant, after the (NIMS) became a nodal centre for Jeevandan project (cadaver organ transplantation), we have conducted around 15 renal transplants,” said Dr R Gopinath, from NIMShead of the department of anesthesia and ICU at NIMS adding that more awareness about organ donation and transplantation is required.

Care Hospital’s senior cardiologist Dr Sunil Kapoor pointed out that for high BP patients, who don’t respond to medicines, renal de-nervation therapy using radio-frequency in kidney arteries is the latest procedure to hit India and is already being conducted in Hyderabad.

The research scenario is also heartening in the city as principal of Andhra Medical College Dr Kalpana Subrahmanyam said, “New MBBS graduates are opting for research in biochemistry and our 18 PG seats are full this year. It would have been better if the Indian government  gave more funds and encouragement for research to tap the best brains.”

According to general physician Kutikuppala Surya Rao, emergence of new hospitals in the city is a big boon while for Dr C V Rao, principal of Gitam medical college, the setting up of this new medical college has added to the sheen of Vizag.

On the flipside, most doctors pointed out that with the phenomenal rise in the treatment cost , medicare has become unaffordable for the common man. “Patients are subjected to unnecessary tests. Doctors also go for defensive practice and are dictated more by the commercial corporate system. The absence of a family physician has also worsened the scenario,” said Dr Kutikuppala Surya Rao from Vizag.

“There’s also a dearth of anesthetists, intensivists and well-equipped ICUs, developed emergency and trauma care in almost all hospitals though accidents have also gone up,” averred N Subrahmanyam, renowned consultant neurosurgeon and chairperson of Academy of Medical Specialties, Indian Medical Association, AP State branch.

source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Visakhapatnam / by Sulogna Mehta, TNN / July 02nd, 2013