Monthly Archives: June 2015

Jebakumar is CFA Player-of-the-year

Chief guest Justice D. Hariparanthaman (centre) of Madras High Court hands over the senior division trophy to Hindustan Eagles.— PHOTO: M. MOORTHY
Chief guest Justice D. Hariparanthaman (centre) of Madras High Court hands over the senior division trophy to Hindustan Eagles.— PHOTO: M. MOORTHY

The annual day of the Chennai Football Association (CFA) was held here on Saturday. The winners and runners-up of various competitions conducted by the CFA were felicitated with cash awards and trophies.

The chief guest Justice D. Hariparanthaman of Madras High Court gave away the prizes. In the 2014-15 season, 96 clubs participated in the various divisions of the CFA league, with more than 450 matches being held during this period at three venues. Hindustan Eagles won the senior division title and netted a prize money of Rs. two lakh, while runner-up Chennai FC was awarded Rs. one lakh.

In the first division, Chennai City FC clinched the title winning all its 11 matches and securing promotion to the senior division along with runner-up Madras Sporting Union.

D. Jebakumar of Chennai Customs was awarded the R. Muthuraman Rolling Trophy for ‘player of the year’. Eagles’ N.D. Opara received the T. Nagar FC rolling trophy for finishing as the top-scorer with 12 goals. He was also feted with the Tanveer Memorial top scorer award along with a cash prize of Rs. 5000. S.E. Bharanidharan was adjudged ‘referee of the year’.

CFA also conducted inter-school and inter-college tournaments with Don Bosco, HSS Perambur winning the CFA-E. Vadivel Memorial inter-school tournament and Madras Christian College the CFA-Chennai City FC inter-college tournament.

The chief guest also formally launched the website of the CFA www.cfa.net.in.

Winners: Senior division: Hindustan Eagles; I division: Chennai City FC; II division: Chennai United FC; III division: Pachaiyappas SC; IV division: Sangeetha FC.

Runner-up: Senior division: Chennai FC; I division: Madras Sporting Union; II division:Madona Matrix; III division: V.M. Football Club; IV division: Chennai Postal Audit

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sport / by Sports Reporter / Chennai – June 28th, 2015

Three Dalit students from ‘Super 30’ bag medical seats

Collector (in-charge) Madhusoodhan Reddy congratulating the ‘Super 30’ group students who have been allotted seats in medical colleges, in Perambalur on Saturday.
Collector (in-charge) Madhusoodhan Reddy congratulating the ‘Super 30’ group students who have been allotted seats in medical colleges, in Perambalur on Saturday.

Standing on the threshold of realising his childhood dream of becoming a doctor, B.Prasanth, an Arunthathiyar student from a poor family of agricultural labourers from Irur in Perambalur district, is not sure whether his mother would be able to raise the fee for the course.

He is one of the three Dalit students who have secured MBBS admission from a group of 57 students who were handpicked from government schools of the district for special coaching in Plus-Two under the ‘Super 30’ initiative of the district administration. A Dalit girl has bagged a BDS seat, bringing acclaim to the district and the special initiative.

With a Plus-Two score of 1,108 marks and a cut-off of 193.25, Prasanth has been allotted a seat in the Chenglepet Government Medical College. Prasanth is supported by his mother, a farm hand. His father, also a farm worker, spends most of his earnings on liquor.

“I have to pay a fee of Rs.11,000 now. My mother is trying to raise the money and officials have promised to arrange for a loan. But I am not sure whether these will materialise. I am looking for sponsors,” he said speaking to The Hindu over phone.

P.Prakash of Ladapuram, with 1,140 marks in Plus-Two, and T.Aravindaraj of Kolathur, with a score of 1,119, have been allotted seats in the Stanley Government Medical College and Tuticorin Medical College, respectively. M.Manjula of Nattarmangalam, with a cut-off of 191.75, has been allotted a BDS seat in the Chennai Government Dental College and stands a chance of getting a MBBS seat as she is on the wait list. Inspired by District Collector Darez Ahamed, Prakash wants to enter the Civil Services after MBBS.

All the four students belong to poor families of agricultural labourers, says N.Jayaraman, district coordinator, ‘Super 30’. There are about 15-20 other students from the group with good engineering cut-off marks and are hopeful of getting BE seats, he said. A brainchild of Mr.Darez Ahamed, the ‘Super 30’ idea is being implemented over the past couple of years in the district.

All are from poor agricultural families and need assistance to pursue studies

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National> Tamil Nadu / by S. Ganesan / Perambalur – June 28th, 2015

HIDDEN HISTORIES – The Madras media man

During the Emergency, Express Estates, that's now a mall, was a refuge for opposition leaders / The Hindu
During the Emergency, Express Estates, that’s now a mall, was a refuge for opposition leaders / The Hindu

June 25 was the 40th anniversary of the infamous Emergency — the then Indira Gandhi Government’s audacious attempt to stifle democracy. Very few from the South opposed it, and yet, much of the momentum for the resistance came from a feisty press baron of Madras — Ramnath Goenka, the owner of the Indian Express Group of newspapers.

Having come to Madras in the 1920s, with reportedly nothing more than “a lota and a nine-cubit dhoti,” to quote his biographer BG Verghese, Goenka was an all-India figure by the 1940s. Though his papers would later be published from many cities, Madras was always his headquarters, his residence being Hicks Bungalow on Patullos Road. His businesses operated from neighbouring Express Estates, a 23-acre property that he bought from the Madras Club for Rs. 14.85 lakhs in 1946. The quiet thoroughfare connecting the property to Mount Road is still Club House Road.

It is said that when Emergency was declared, Goenka was in the ICU of a Calcutta hospital, recovering from a heart attack. Raring to get into the thick of battle, he disconnected the tubes and “stole out to board a taxi but was detected in time and brought back”. The Indian Express came out on June 25, 1975, with a blank first editorial while the Financial Express published Tagore’s poem, Where the Mind is Without Fear.

A man who loved the good fight, Goenka challenged the Emergency in many ways. He helped in publishing Prajaniti, and its English counterpart, Everyman, vehicles that propagated the thoughts of Jayaprakash Narayan, the doughty opponent to Mrs Gandhi’s regime. The vast Express Estates was also where several leaders of the Opposition, most of them on the run from the police, could find safe haven. One among these was the firebrand George Fernandes. He had come first to the Spur Tank Road residence of tuberculosis specialist and Swatantra Party leader Dr Mathuram Santosham. On coming to know that the police were closing in, he was transferred to Express Estates.

The powers-that-be did their best to stifle Goenka and his publications. There were moves to acquire the business by media houses in sympathy with the ruling party, and when this was resisted, there were, to quote BG Verghese, “raids, court cases, a long series of pre-censorship orders, stoppages of bank advances and advertisements”— in short, all the standard operating procedures of a draconian Government. Goenka, however, stood his ground, despite being in poor health throughout. The stress that he and his family withstood then later resulted in the early demise of his son Bhagwan Das.

The battle against the Emergency gained ground and culminated in the General Elections in March 1977. That saw the landslide victory of the Janata Party and the first national debacle for the Congress. Goenka went on to fight other battles. The Express Estates is now a mall. But we do need a marker to commemorate the Marwari Media Man from Madras who fought the Emergency from there.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Sriram V. / June 26th, 2015

Kovai Doc lands Global Role

Coimbatore :

P Senthilnathan, a surgeon from GEM hospital and Research Centre in the city, has been  appointed as the Asia Pacific expert committee member by the International Hepato Pancreato Biliary Association (IHPBA), for promoting laparoscopic liver surgeries in India.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by Express News Service / June 27th, 2015

In Wellesley, Nilgiris finds a link to Waterloo

Udhagamandalam :

As Europe celebrates the 200th anniversary of the battle of Waterloo, which changed the history of the continent, the Nilgiris in Tamil Nadu too has found a reason to mark the occasion. Fifteen years before leading the British troops against Napoleon in 1815, the hero of Waterloo, Duke of Wellington Arthur Wellesley, described by Queen Victoria as ‘the greatest man England ever produced’, was on the borders of Nilgiris fighting the Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja of Wayanad. Details of this lesser known battle have been documented by the Nilgiri Documentation Centre (NDC).

As the governor of Mysore, after the death of Tipu Sultan in 1799, Wellesley had to personally intervene to put down resistance from local chieftains, including Pazhassi Raja, who were believed to have been promised material support by Napoleon himself. Within a year, Kerala Varma was wandering the jungles of Wynad to stay free and was finally captured in 1805, historical records available with the NDC confirm. NDC director Dharmalingam Venugopal says, “Though the Nilgiris is situated in a remote part of South India, its history is intertwined with national and international history”.

“Though Wellesley never visited the Nilgiris uplands, he had advocated establishing a sanatorium on the hills for British troops as recommended by John Sullivan in 1832,” adds Venugopal. According to him, Col John Ouchterlony chose the site of present day Wellington town for the sanatorium and a close associate of Wellesley, the Marques of Tweeddale, started work on a military barracks in 1851. After the death of Wellesley in 1852, the Marques suggested naming the military barracks after Wellesley. However, it was his successor, governor Sir Charles Trevelyan, who named the place Wellington in 1860. Historians too confirm the Nilgiris link to the Battle of Waterloo. Noted historian Narasiah says Wellesley fought Tipu in 1799.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai / by Shanta Thiagarajan, TNN / June 23rd, 2015

Sundarapandian Period Stone Inscription Found at Palani

Dindigul :

A team of persons found a stone inscription established during Pandya King Sundarapandian at Sampalanayakkanpatti village near Palani on Thursday

An archeology team found the historical stone at sambalanayakanpatti near palani on Thursday - Express Photo
An archeology team found the historical stone at sambalanayakanpatti near palani on Thursday – Express Photo

Based on the information, Narayanamurthy, an archeologist, and Thatchinamurthy, Director to MK university evening college and professors Kannimuthu, Rajavarman and Manivannan, visited Sampalanayakkanpatti village.

They found a stone inscription belongs to 1256 AD and it is believed, it was established by Sithra Mezhi Periya Nattar traders group. The stone inscription has possessed a trisul, plough and a musical instrument on top of the stone which indicated the traders group.

An archeology team found the historical stone at sambalanayakanpatti near palani on Thursday - Express Photo
An archeology team found the historical stone at sambalanayakanpatti near palani on Thursday – Express Photo

The 18 traders group of 18 country (places) ( 18 kooda Vanigar Kuzhu) erected  Desa Vinayagar temple after donating Oru Panam (one rupee) from each group, at Vaigavur Nadu (country) located near Periya Odai Kulam.

They mentioned, the money should be utilized to perform poojas and other things at the temple. It should be performed till the Moon and Sun are here. The Sithra Mezhi Nattar traders group was familiar between 11 AD and 13 AD.

It had possessed the rights to conduct local panchayat and to erect stone inscription equal to King. However, the Lord Pillair temple is not here at present.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by Express News Service / June 25th, 2015

60+ Vayadhinile!

Ophthalmologist Dr.G. Natchiar and educationist Premalatha Panneerselvam are less known for their green house revolution.

Some films inspire us to go the distance. The Malayalam movie How Old Are Youand it’s Tamil remake 36 Vayadhinile were liked by people not only because they were comeback films of Manju Warrier and Jyothika but also because it helped people to change the way they look at things. In the film, the protagonist finds her niche and respect in her family and society after she successfully meets a challenging order of supplying organic vegetables to a marriage party. When celebrities on or off screen boost an idea, they inspire people and often set off a transformation.

DAUGHTER OF THE SOIL: Dr.G. Natchiar, Director Emeritus, Aravind Eye Hospital at Aurofarm. / Photo: S. James / The Hindu
DAUGHTER OF THE SOIL: Dr.G. Natchiar, Director Emeritus, Aravind Eye Hospital at Aurofarm. / Photo: S. James / The Hindu

But for Dr.G.Natchiar, Director Emeritus at Aravind Eye Care Systems and Mrs.Premalatha Panneerselvam, the founder of Mahatma group of schools in Madurai, taking up farming was a dream long nurtured and they would certainly love more people to know and see their lush biodynamic farms – a result of sheer passion and labour of years. They are Madurai’s stars for whom life has come full circle because both belong to agricultural families.

“I am back to my roots, you will find me less in the hospital now,” laughs Dr.Natchiar, who after many debates with the family earmarked two acres for organic gardening within the Aurolab campus, a state-of-the-art products manufacturing facility of AECS at Veerapanchan. The year was 2005.

“I had no scientific training but followed my instincts and interest and started planting a variety of trees,” she says. Today, her family, staff, friends and visitors to Aurolab marvel at her “blossoming property” spread over 70 acres now and buzzing with butterflies and birds.

As we walk around the coconut, banana and mango orchards, the aroma garden with every type of jasmine, the organic garden of champa in 30 different colours and endless fields of vegetables, fruits and grains, Dr.Natchiar shares how creating, running and maintaining a farm is a lifestyle.

Unless she is travelling, Dr.Natchiar, is at the Aurofarm everyday at 8.30 a.m. to oversee the requirements of her plants – fondly she calls them babies – and the dozen permanent farmers whom she has hired and the other daily wagers who come depending on the load of work. “After taking a round, I assign them the day’s task,” she says with pride reflecting her intense love for what she enjoys doing the most — gardening and farming.

She zips around on her battery-operated two-wheeler and inspects every field personally. “Everything produced here is 100 per cent organic and the yield caters to about 40 per cent requirement of our hospital and staff canteens,” she informs, and asserts, “I am into this not for selling the produce and making money. I want more people to learn about growing strategies and eat organic.”

It was only after attending series of workshops, interacting with local farmers and researching on eco-friendly farming techniques that Dr.Natchiar could initiate a system that is regenerative to the soil, flora and fauna that are part of the farm ecosystem and the benefactors of the food grown here. “I have learnt from mistakes and now I understand every plant’s requirements and how and why business models should not be compared to farming models,” she says of organic farming still not becoming a financially viable option.

For Dr.Natchiar it is purely a heart warming relationship between her and nature. Farming makes my heart sing and I am focussing all my energy on it now, she says. “All you need is planning and hard work,” she says.

DAUGHTER OF THE SOIL: Premalatha Panneerselvam, Secreatary and Correspondent, Mahatma Group of Schools./  Photo: R. Ashok / The Hindu
DAUGHTER OF THE SOIL: Premalatha Panneerselvam, Secreatary and Correspondent, Mahatma Group of Schools./ Photo: R. Ashok / The Hindu

Likewise, no matter howsoever much tired she is after the day’s or week’s work, Premalatha Panneerselvam finds farming cool and spends all her evenings and Sundays in her organic farm adjoining her school’s residential campus at Alagar Koil. “I find my inner peace here, she says, taking me to her favourite spot under a banyan tree, one of the seven trees that stood tall among the shrubs and bushes on the 50-odd acres she bought a quarter Century ago in Ayathampatti village.

We had to accommodate our growing number of students and planned a residential school for them here at the foothills. The land was strewn with rocks, stones and pebbles tand we had to clear the area to raise our buildings. About 15 acres was set aside for farming and for the past eight years Premalatha has been growing a variety of plants using only organic practices. The monthly yield of fruits and vegetables from the farm not only meets the demand of all the school canteens but also saves her an expense of nearly Rs.One lakh every month. Some produce is also in excess which we sell at a discount to our teachers and other staff or in the market at a nominal rate,” she says.

There is an indescribable happiness in seeing your plants grow and flower. To feel the texture of the fruits and vegetables is a different kind of joy, says Premalatha as we walk through her multiple gardens looking at the bounty. Rows of leafy plants growing in orderly abundance reveal the wealth that can only be measured by physical labour of clearing, planting and harvesting and the physical growth of the fauna. Her zero-budget farming with home-grown vermicomposting and bio-pesticides is seductive.

Premalatha has been regularly reading about and practicing G.Nammazhvar’s agro-techniques. “With professionals like us having the wisdom and knowledge base, passion is good enough to turn around such zero-budget farming,” she says. She also understands farming, leave alone organic, many not be an easy choice for many. But hopes and advocates that more people get motivated and start doing it within their home compounds, in their small balconies or terraces, kitchen gardens or backyards, sufficient for their family’s needs.

Both Dr.Natchiar and Premalatha share a vision for a sustainable food system. That is, the food we eat should be fresh, nutritious and taste delicious and should be grown in harmony with nature. It is this thinking that makes them the true ‘FarmHers’ belonging to a period when organic farming was hardly considered an option and even less talked about.

Farm facts:

“I proved myself as an ophthalmologist but never felt proud as one. But now at my Aurofarm I feel very proud each time my plants produce something. I can show off as a farmer now.” Dr.G.Natchiar

At Aurofarm you will find over 10,000 trees including 450 mango trees, 300 coconut trees, tamarind, coriander, curry leaves, timber and almond trees; Vegetables such as lady’s finger, brinjal, cluster beans, bitter, bottle and snake gourd, pumpkin, spinach; Fruits such as black and goose berries, sapota, banana; Flowers including jasmine, manoranjitam, mullai, parijatam, bougainvillea, oleander; Paddy fields that yield 200 bags of rice every year. The farm is fenced by mehndi trees about 20 acres are fed by the Dewatts system that is 51,000 litres of waste water from the kitchen, staff quarters and washrooms are treated for use in the fields, water from the Aurolab is also recycled besides the usage of ground water. Another highlight at the Aurofarm is the 20 feet deep rain water fed quarry used for fish breeding.

“If I had not started a school, I would have surely done farming. I want to turn green ideas into meaningful action for the larger benefit of all”. Premalatha Panneerselvam.

The Mahatma-Azhagar campus farm is fenced with teak wood trees all around and has over 200 mango trees, 400 coconut trees besides several other flowering and locally grown trees, banana, papaya, gooseberry, jackfruit, sapota, custard apple, lemon and neem trees. Spinach, tomatoes, brinjal, carrot, drumstick, cluster beans, lady’s finger, groundnut, guava, custard apple are grown in abundance. Seed dispersal, multiple-cropping, drip irrigation practiced at the farm that also boasts of a small poultry and six milching cows. Apart from the two-dozen farmers working here, ten labourers are exclusively deployed to clear the land of stones regularly. Given the location of the site at the foothills, every spell of rain leads to soil erosion.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Soma Basu / Madurai – June 24th, 2015

HIDDEN HISTORIES : Wealth out of Waste

The seeds of innovation sown by Gokuldas Thulsidas is continuing to help the region create wealth out of waste.

Thulsidas Murarjee and his brother Keshavlal were Gujarati merchants from Porbander. In the 19th Century, They travelled between Porbander and Calicut and traded in nuts and silk from Persia and took back spices and tiles to Gujarat. It took them more than 10 days to do a one way trip in those days. On one such trip a storm delayed their return and they decided to visit Coimbatore. They liked the city and decided to settle down here. They lived in Vysial street and began trading in cottonseeds by procuring them from Pollachi. More than 100 years ago, they established Thulsidas Murarjee & Company and thus began their business tryst with Coimbatore.

Thulsidas Murarjee had five sons and two daughters. The third and fourth sons, Gokuldas Thulsidas and Narsi Thulsidas continued with the firm. Gokuldas (1904 -1957) travelled on his motorbike to Pollachi for his work. He was an innovative entrepreneur. He used cottonseed waste as fillers in pillows and mattresses.

Gokuldas Thulsidas
Gokuldas Thulsidas

Gokuldas was an excellent communicator who quoted extensively from the Thirukkural. He also spoke fluent Hindi, Tamil and Telugu, besides Gujarati. He had only studied only till the fifth standard. Gokuldas or Babu Sait as he was popularly known married Kesaribai from Calicut and the couple had one daughter and three sons – Suresh, Pratap and Arun. They lived Vysial street, spent a few years in Race Course before moving permanently to R.S.Puram.

Gokuldas tied up with some foreigners who wanted cotton waste to make coarse yarn used in the manufacture of jeans. He procured and exported cotton waste from mills in Tamil Nadu and these included Rajapalayam Mills, C.S & W Mills, Lakshmi Mills, Radhakrishna Mills and Pioneer Mills. He exported cotton waste to USA, UK, Italy and Germany prior to the World War II. Later in 1951 he went to England and furthered his business knowledge. He was a pioneering Coimbatorean who unlocked the commercial potential of cotton waste in South India. Thanks to this vision and ability Thulsidas Murarjee & Company made a fortune those days.

Gokuldas acquired the Managing Agency of Sharadha Mills during the early years of independence. The doyen of South Indian industry R.Venkataswamy Naidu was also associated with this venture and a dividend was declared within two years of their administration. Gokuldas visited the silk mills located in various parts of our country and studied their potential.

Septugenarian Suresh fondly recalls his father, “My father was a workaholic and he took very good care of his family, employees and clients. He wanted me to learn business after my school education (Stanes School), but he passed away early. He built a maternity home in his mother Ramkurbai’s name in R.S.Puram. He promised my mother Kesaribai that he would build a school and temple.

The Kikani family took this dream forward. We built the Satyanarayana Temple in R.S.Puram within a year of his death in order to make his dream come true. He was the agent for the global major Snia Viscose of Italy and motivated mills to use viscose yarn that was unheard of those days. He guaranteed returns to the early users of viscose. Balasubramanya Mills was his first customer.

The Italian Directors of Snia Viscose, Dr.Spinelly and Cesar Rossi, often came home and ate with us. My father was an active Rotarian and was associated with the Rotary Club of Coimbatore and an avid Bridge player. He was very close to a number of leading mill owners such as G.K.Devarajulu, S.R.P.Ponnuswamy Chettiar, Karumuttu Thiagaraja Chettiar, G.R.Govindarajulu and others from across the country. He had excellent overseas contacts and several large ventures were born in Coimbatore as a result of his networking.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Rajesh Govindarajulu / June 19th, 2015

TAKE Solutions secures patent for clinical data standardization process

Chennai :

TAKE Solutions — a Chennai-based global business technology solutions provider — has been awarded a patent by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) for its clinical data standardization process.

The process, delivered by Navitas — the life sciences arm of TAKE Solutions — is referred to as “Method for Optimizing Clinical Data Standardization.”

This process captures data from clinical trials coming in different formats and leverages TAKE’s clinical accelerator systems to standardize the data.

According to TAKE, the patented process is capable of reducing the time taken to standardize trial data, thus simplifying the analysis process by regulators and also reducing time to market.

“The process includes various pre-defined steps that convert raw data into tabular data sets. This enables regulators to easily understand the data, as well as enables easy analysis of trial data,” TAKE Solutions said in a statement.

“The clinical data and regulatory service accounts for almost 30% of our life sciences business and we expect the patented process to reduce cost of providing the services by around 20%,” Srinivasan H R, vice-chairman and MD of TAKE Solutions, told TOI.

TAKE’s clinical data and regulatory services team offers clinical data solutions, including clinical data standardisation, clinical data management, statistical programming and data standards.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India /Home> City> Chennai / by Sindhu Hariharan, TNN /June 25th, 2015

Nonagenarian Tamil Scholar Bags Bhasha Samman Award

Coimbatore :

Nonagenarian Tamil scholar K Meenakshi Sundaram of Coimbatore has been selected for the Bhasha Samman award given by Sahitya Akademi this year.

Meenakshi Sundaram, who is an author of numerous books including The Contributions of European Scholars to Tamil, was born in the village Vellakinar near Thudiyalur on July 11, 1925. He took his BA (Mathematics) from the Government Arts College, Coimbatore in 1948 and his MA (Tamil) and MLitt from Annamalai University. He did his Phd from the University of Madras.

Having worked as a lecturer in Tamil in Annamalai University, Meenakshi Sundaram taught in various government arts colleges in Tamil Nadu. However, he was the first Tamil professor to become the Director of Collegiate Education.

“Professor K Meenakshi Sundaram is the second Tamil scholar to bag the Bhasha Samman. Previously, the award was given to Prof. S V Subramaniam of Kerala University, who was my teacher,” said K Nachimuthu, convenor, Sahitya Akademi, Tamil Nadu and professor of Tamil in Central University of Tamil Nadu.

Poet Sirpi Balasubramaniam, a two time Sahitya Akademi award winner from Coimbatore, who was a student of Meenakshi Sundaram in Annamalai University, said, “The Bhasha Samman is given by Sahitya Akademi for two scholars of different languages in India every year. Nevertheless, the award comes rarely for Tamil scholars.”

Nonagenarian T C Ramasamy, who translated Raja Rao’s famous novel The Serpent and the Rope in Tamil and penned books on Meenakshi Sundaram as Kattror Nokkil Munmadhiriyana Oru Mamanithar and Perasiyar Ka Mee Aaraychi Thadangal, says: “Meenakshi Sundaram is a great research scholar in Tamil. And I am glad that Bhasha Samman award is given to him.”

Meenakshi Sundaram is an author of famous books like A Study of the Poetical works of Subramanya Bharathi, Pannmayil Orumai, Silambil Thunai Paathirangal, Manonmaniam Sundaranar Puratchithiran and son.

The Sahitya Akademi has also selected Chella Ganapathy,a Coimbatore-based writer of Children’s literature for Sahitya Purashkar award for his book Theduthal Vettai and Veerapandian for his Tamil novel Parukkai.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by B. Meenakshi Sundaram / June 25th, 2015