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The rise of the Indian-American comedian: Hari Kondabolu

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“Rice, laughs and curry sauce.” That was the description one student at Skidmore College, a small liberal arts college in upstate New York, used to describe Indian-American comedian Hari Kondabolu’s routine.

But to pigeonhole Hari Kondabolu as a comedian who jokes about his ethnicity misses the valuable contribution that he and other Indian-American comedians represent in today’s political landscape. 

During his comedic performances at the Goodnights Comedy Club Thursday through Saturday evening, Kondabolu used his comedic arsenal to tackle a host of sociopolitical topics, using jokes to talk about race relations, women’s rights and immigration, among other topics. 

It’s nothing new that comedians use their medium to tackle sociopolitical topics, especially in an era that has produced Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Larry Wilmore and John Oliver.

But Kondabolu is just one of the members of the group he refers to as the “Indian Illuminati” of comedians, which also includes actor and comedian Kalpen Modi, known by his stage name Kal Penn; “Daily Show” correspondents Aasif Mandvi and Hasan Minhaj; Aziz Ansari, who played a significant role on “Parks and Recreation” and had a successful comedy solo career; and stand-up comedian Russell Peters, who is actually Indo-Canadian, but probably can be credited with raising the profile of comedians with Indian and South Asian heritage in comedy. 

All of these comedians have embraced political and social justice in their material, and often times it is that which drives the rest of their comedy. 

The most tangible example of the embrace of political engagement certainly comes from Kal Penn, who worked in President Barack Obama’s administration as an associate director in the White House Office of Public Engagement from 2009-2011, with a special emphasis of outreach to members of the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities. Penn also went on to become a National Campaign Co-Chair for Obama’s reelection effort in 2012.

The dramatic rise of the Indian-American comedian has been naturally attributed to the rise of Indians and Indian-Americans now living in the United States, but I believe their rise as a group can be tied to a more powerful reason than that: the willingness of many of these comedians to align themselves with those least advantaged in society. Through their humor, they have found a place to defend Muslims, women, the LGBT community and immigrants of all colors and ethnicities, among others. 

Kondabolu, for one, has spoken at some length about his “obsession with race.”

“I don’t think I’m obsessed with race,” Kondabolu told NPR in a 2014 interview. “It’s part of my lived experience and my day-to-day and the history of this country. Certainly when I look at things, I see things in terms of a racial angle [and] I spot things maybe faster than other people maybe because I pay close attention to it.”

The title of Kondabolu’s album,“Waiting for 2042,” also pokes fun at the fears of Americans of the impending 2042, the year in which the U.S. Census Bureau predicts that Americans who identify themselves as Hispanic, black, Asian, American Indian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander will cumulatively outnumber non-Hispanic whites.

In today’s political atmosphere where the leading Republican candidate for presidency has fed off the racism and fears of white Americans and has only grown more popular after calling Mexican immigrants “rapists” and “killers” while one of the other front runners has said he believes that a Muslim shouldn’t be president of the United States, it is perhaps comedians who may be the best foot soldiers in the war against intolerance.

Divi Murali in Forbes India's 100 Richest People list

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Divi Murali Krishna ranked #42 in Forbes India's 100 Richest People with $2.4 Billion net worth. He ranked #1044 in The World's Billionaires ($1.85) list 2015. His net worth increased by $0.55 Billion in the recent days.

U.S.-educated chemist Murali Divi founded generics maker Divi's Laboratories 25 years ago. Shares of the $472 million (revenues) company are up 22% from last year, buoyed partly by a 45% spurt in net profits in a recent quarter to $26 million. Divi, whose factory was hit by a cyclone last year, has decided to invest $75 million in a new factory to "de-risk our business," he says. Divi enjoys horticulture and grows his own orchids.


Dr.Sreekant Cherukuri creates hearing aids to fit low-price niche

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Ear, nose and throat doctor Sreekant Cherukuri found that some of his patients couldn’t fork over thousands of dollars for the hearing aids he had available, so he made a new one.

Six years later, his direct-to-consumer company MDHearingAid has 22 employees, a manufacturing facility in Detroit and three options for hearing aids that cost less than $600.

The size of his business pales compared with large hearing aid makers such as Sonova, Siemens and Starkey Hearing Technologies. But Cherukuri said he thinks his product brings sorely needed price transparency and choice to the market. Now, he says he’s working to make his products better and cheaper.

MDHearingAid’s employees work out of a Chicago operations office and the manufacturing facility, and the company plans to continue hiring, Cherukuri said.

“Based on my research and interaction with patients, (I realized) if we made a one-size-fits-most, pretty good hearing aid that’s user-adjustable, we could actually do it, and do it at a cost-effective price point,” he said.

Custom-fit hearing aids typically cost $1,000 to $6,000 for a pair, and most insurance companies don’t cover them, according to Consumer Reports.

MDHearingAid now offers three options — at $199.99, $349.99 and $549.99 per ear. Users can adjust the aids based on their needs or environment, Cherukuri said.

“We’ve positioned ourselves not as the hearing aid of choice,” he said. “The best solution is a custom fit, but that’s going to cost you some money. The second-best option is an affordable hearing aid.”

 MD Hearing Aid- The Doctor's Choice for Affordable Hearing Aids
Dr. Cherukuri was an attending physician in otolaryngology and found most patients couldn't afford hearing aids.
MDHearingAid’s devices are direct-to-consumer, meaning consumers don’t need to see a professional to purchase them. Buyers must click a box indicating MDHearingAid has advised them that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the State of Illinois have determined their “best interest would be served” if they received a medical evaluation before purchasing a hearing instrument.

Customers are not required to take a hearing test to purchase aids through the company. They can, however, take a test and send it to the company's licensed hearing aid dispensers, audiologists and ear, nose and throat doctor, who can make recommendations, Cherukuri said.

More expensive hearing aids are often bundled in special features and professional services such as fitting and adjustments, said Todd Ricketts, a board member of the American Academy of Audiology and a Vanderbilt University Medical Center professor of hearing and speech sciences.

“A professional is not just evaluating hearing loss; they’ll evaluate the shape, geometry and size of ear,” he said. “They’ll also evaluate listening needs: Where are you having problems? What types of situations?”

The reaction from the hearing community to the direct-to-consumer hearing aid market is a notable parallel to the optometric community’s view on Chicago-based Opternative, which this year began offering online refractive exams to consumers.

Andrew Bopp, executive director for the Hearing Industries Association, said professional examinations can determine whether there’s a medical reason for hearing loss, whether it’s as simple as impacted earwax or a more serious condition.

“You should always see somebody,” Bopp said.

Five industry groups related to the hearing aid industry, including the American Academy of Audiology and the American Speech-Language Hearing Association, expressed caution in 2012 about a growing trend of direct-to-consumer hearing aids. Other examples include aids from America Hears, HearSource and Hi HealthInnovations.

“While we appreciate the desire of persons, companies, and organizations to reach more individuals in need of hearing aids, our organizations believe that patients must have access to a comprehensive hearing evaluation performed by a hearing health professional, be appropriately fitted by an individual licensed/registered in the state to dispense hearing aids, and have access to auditory rehabilitation and counseling to ensure appropriate fit and use of the hearing aid device,” the groups said in a statement.

Another group, the Hearing Loss Association of America, took a different stance on direct-to-consumer services.

“Our stance is to give innovative programs such as this one a chance,” Brenda Battat, the group's executive director at the time, said in a 2012 statement regarding an online hearing test offered by UnitedHealthcare’s hi HealthInnovations.

Though the group said it always encouraged consumers to work with professionals when purchasing hearing aids, “… because of the multitude of approaches available to consumers to address their specific health care needs today and because not all individuals will need the same level of care HLAA is recommending caution with trying to shut down innovative models that might be a viable alternative for some people."

Cherukuri said he also recommends customers receive a hearing test before purchasing aids. But he said his company gives consumers the option of a quality product for less than the industry-average price.

“I can say a large percentage of our customers (if not vast majority) have had a hearing test, experienced the sticker shock and come to us for their needs,” he wrote in an email to Blue Sky.

Dhivya Suryadevara in the list of Fortune's "40 Under 40"

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Fortune announced its newest class of "40 Under 40" of the most influential young people in business (there's not a single repeat from last year). 

Five of the 40 personalities picked in Fortune’s '40 Under 40' 2015 list of the most influential young people in business, are of Indian origin. Although none of them is part of the bustling Indian startup ecosystem or business arena, two of them have made their mark in the American market as entrepreneurs.

These include - Dhivya Suryadevara (GM Asset Management). Dhivya Suryadevara, who is the highest ranked among the Indian origin pack at number 4, is vice-president of finance and treasurer, GM besides being CEO of GM Asset Management. The Harvard grad was CIO of General Motors (GM) Asset Management since 2013 and became its CEO in early 2014 where she manages $80 billion in assets across the automaker’s retirement plans. The 36-year-old, who hails from Chennai, joined the automaker, once the world's largest, in 2004 from UBS. 

List of Kamma Movie Ditrectors (Updated)

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List of Kamma Movie Ditrectors
1) Gudavalli Ramabrahmam
2) Akkineni Lakshmi Vara Prasad (LV Prasad)
3) Kovelamudi Bapayya
4) Veeramachineni Madhusudhana Rao
5) Kovelamudi S.Prakasa Rao
6) Kolli Pratyagatma
7) G.Sambasiva Rao
8) Tammareddy Krishnamurthy
9) Mannava Balayya
10) Tatineni Prakasa Rao
11) Tatineni Rama Rao
12) Tatineni Prasad
13) Kovelamudi Raghavendra Rao
14) Gutta Ramineedu
15) Kolli Hemambaradhara Rao 
16) Uppalapati Visveswara Rao
17) Tripuraneni Maharadhi
18) Tripuraneni Gopichand
19) Tottempudi Krishna
20) Madala Ranga Rao
21) Siva Nageswara Rao
22) Uppalapati Narayana Rao
23) P.Sarat
24) A.Mohan Gandhi
25) Bezawada Gopal
26) T.Kranthi Kumar
27) Maganti Vijaya Bapineedu
28) Tammareddy Bharadwaj
29) K.Vasu
30) Edara VV Satyanarayana
31) Muppalaneni Siva
32) Yalamanchili VS Chowdary
33) Theja Jasti
34) Sreenu Vytla
35) Koduri Srisaila Sri Rajamouli
36) Vemulapalli Srikanth
37) AS Ravikumar Chowdary
38) Koduri Vijayendra Prasad
39) Katta Deva Kousik
40) Tammareddy Ravibabu
41) Paruchuri Murali
42) Jonnalagadda Srinivasa Rao
43) Jagarlamudi Radhakrishna
44) Chandra Siddartha
45) Gunnam Gangaraju
46) Yeleti Chandrasekhar
47) Boyapati Sreenu
48) Kovelamudi Prakash
49) Malineni Gopichand
50) Tatineni Satya
51) Mullapudi Veerabhadram Chowdary
52) Siva Koratala
53) Bhagyaraj
54) Lingusamy (Pandem kodi, Run, Bheema fame) Tamil
55) Mandava Prasanth
56) Veeru Potla
57) Posani Krishna Murali
58) Pavan Sadineni
59) Akshay Akkineni (Pizza fame)
60) Anil Ravipudi
61) Ajay Nuthakki (Ravana Desam - Telugu and Tamil)
62) Gogineni Srinivas
63) Sarath Mandava
64) Bose Nelluri
65) Yogesh Maganti (Yogie)
66) Kittu Nalluri
67) Bobby (Kolli Santosh Ravindranath)

జగన్ రామోజీని ఎందుకు కలిసాడంటే!

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కొద్ది రోజుల క్రితం జగన్ రామోజీని కలవటం పెద్ద చర్చనీయాంశం అయ్యింది. ఇక్కడ విషయమేమిటంటే ఇద్దరూ ఏదైనా ఫంక్షన్లో కాకతాళీయంగా కలవలేదు లేదా రామోజీ రావు జగన్ ను కలవలేదు, జగనే స్వయంగా రామోజీరావు ఇంటికి వెళ్లి కలిశాడు. రామోజీ రావు తెలివికల వ్యాపారవేత్త, తాము అధికారంలోకి వస్తే రామోజీ ఫిలిం సిటీని నాగళ్ళతో దున్నిస్తామని ప్రకటించిన కెసిఆర్ నే బుట్టలో వేసుకుని రామోజీ ఫిలిం సిటీ ప్రపంచంలోనే అద్భుతం అని, తెలంగాణా రాష్ట్రానికే మకుటాయమానం అని, స్టూడియో కు అన్ని రకాల సహాయం అందించటానికి తాము సిద్ధంగా ఉన్నానని కితాబు ఇప్పించుకున్న ఘనుడు. శత్రువునైనా ఏదోరకంగా  తనదారిలోకి తెచ్చుకుంటాడే తప్ప, తనంతట తాను ఎవరికైనా లొంగిపోవటం రామోజీ రావు జీవితంలో ఇంతవరకు జరగలేదు. 

రాజశేఖరరెడ్డి ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా ఉన్న కాలంలో రామోజీరావును తన దారిలోకి తెచ్చుకోవాలని అన్ని రకాలుగా ప్రయత్నించి విఫలమై ఆ తరువాత అతన్ని అన్ని రకాల వేధింపులకు గురిచేయటమే కాకుండా రామోజీరావు ఆర్ధిక మూలాలను దెబ్బతీయటానికి అన్ని రకాల ప్రయత్నాలు చేసినా  సఫలంకాలేక పోయాడు. రామోజీ రావు జీవితంలో అత్యంత గడ్డు రోజులు ఎదుర్కొంది ఆ సమయంలోనే అనే విషయం అందరికి తెలిసిందే. ముఖ్యమంత్రి స్థానంలో ఉండి కూడా ఈనాడు పేపర్ కొనవద్దని, ఈటివి చూడవద్దని బహిరంగంగా ఎన్నోసార్లు ప్రకటించిన సిగ్గుమాలిన వెధవ రాజశేఖరరెడ్డి. 

జగన్ తన సాక్షి మీడియాలో  రామోజీరావు గురించి, ఈనాడు పేపర్, ఈటివి గురించి ఎన్నో అసత్య వార్తలు రాశాడు, అసభ్య కథనాలు ప్రచారం చేశాడు. జర్నలిజం విలువలకు తిలోదాకాలిచ్చి సంస్కారం మరచి రామోజీరావు పై నీచమైన వ్యాఖ్యానాలెన్నో చేశాడు. తన తండ్రికంటే నీచంగా, సంస్కార హీనంగా జగన్ రామోజీరావు పట్ల ప్రవర్తించాడు. ఇవన్ని అంత త్వరగా మర్చిపోయే విషయాలు కావు.


రామోజీరావుతో మోహన్ బాబుకు అత్యంత సాన్నిహిత్యం ఉంది, మోహన్ బాబు సినిమాలు తన సంస్థ ద్వారా పంపిణీ చేయటమే కాకుండా,  సినిమా నిర్మాణ సమయంలో ఎన్నో సార్లు మోహన్ బాబుకు అన్ని రకాల ఆర్ధిక సహాయం కూడా చేశాడు. ఎన్టిఆర్ కు రికమండ్ చేసి మోహన్ బాబు కు రాజ్యసభ సభ్యత్వం ఇప్పించటంలో రామోజీరావు హస్తం ఉందని చెప్పుకుంటారు. ఇప్పటికీ మోహన్ బాబుకు రామోజీ రావు అంటే ఎంతో అభిమానం. జగన్ తో బంధుత్వం ఉన్న మోహన్ బాబు రామోజీ విషయంలో మూర్ఖంగా ప్రవర్తిస్తే జగన్ కు నష్టమే తప్ప లాభం ఉండదని, ముఖ్యమంత్రి చంద్రబాబు, ప్రధానమంత్రి మోడికి అత్యంత సన్నిహితుడు రామోజీరావును ఎదిరించిన వారెవరైనా తుదకు నష్టపోవటమో లేక లొంగి పోవటమో తప్పదని సోదాహరణలతో సహా జగన్ కు వివరించి, ప్రత్యర్ధి బలవంతుడైనప్పుడు యుద్ధం చేసి ఓడిపోవటంకంటే, గౌరవప్రదంగా సంధి చేసుకుంటే పరువు నిలుస్తుందని, రామోజీరావు వ్యాపార ప్రత్యర్దే తప్ప, రాజకీయ ప్రత్యర్ధి కాదని, అతనితో సంధి చేసుకుంటే పోయేదేమీ లేదని, ఇప్పటికైనా సమయం మించి పోలేదని సలహా ఇచ్చి రామోజీ, జగన్ మద్య రాయబారం నడిపి జగన్ ను రామోజీ దగ్గరకు పంపించాడు. తనకు అత్యంత ఆప్తుడు తన వ్యాపారాల్లో, కేసుల్లో భాగస్వామి, ముఖ్య సలహాదారు విజయసాయి రెడ్డి కూడా ఈ ప్రతిపాదనను బలపర్చటంతో తనకు  ఇష్టం లేకపోయినా, కష్టమైనా, కాలం కలిసిరాని పరిస్థితుల్లో జగన్ రామోజీరావుతో సంధి కోసం అతని ఇంటికి వెళ్లి కలిసాడే తప్ప ఇందులో ఎటువంటి రాజకీయాలు, బేరసారాలు లేవని తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ వర్గాలు కూడా అంటున్నాయి. 

జాతీయ పార్టీగా ఎదిగే సత్తా తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీకి ఉందా?

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వారం రోజుల క్రితం అండమాన్ లో పోర్ట్ బ్లెయిర్ మునిసిపాలిటీకి జరిగిన ఎన్నికల్లో తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ 24 స్థానాలకు గాను 18 స్థానాల్లో పోటి చేసి 2 స్థానాలు మంచి ఆధిక్యతతో గెలుపొందింది, మరో 4 స్థానాల్లో రెండవ స్థానంలో నిలిచింది. విశేషమేమిటంటే తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ తరుపున గెలుపొందిన వారిరువురు మహిళా అభ్యర్ధులే, వీరిలో ఒకరు తమిళ మరొకరు బెంగాలి. బిజెపి తరుపున నలుగురు తెలుగువారు గెలుపొందారు. ఇక్కడ బిజెపి, తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ కలిసి పోటి చేస్తే తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీకి మరొక నాలుగు స్థానాలు, బిజెపి పార్టీకి మరో రెండు స్థానాలు అదనంగా లభించి ఉండేవి. వచ్చే ఎన్నికల్లో తెదేపా, బిజెపి ఇక్కడ కలిసి పోటిచెస్తే తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ బలపడే అవకాశం ఉంది. అండమాన్ దీవుల్లో తెలుగు వారి జనాభా షుమారుగా 49,000, వీరిలో ఎక్కువ మంది పోర్ట్ బ్లెయిర్ లో ఉంటున్నారు. 

తెలుగువారి జనాభా ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్, తెలంగాణా తరువాత అత్యధికంగా తమిళనాడులో సుమారుగా 78,00,000, కర్ణాటక రాష్ట్రంలో 22,00,000, మహారాష్ట్ర లో 14,00,000, ఛత్తీస్ ఘర్ లో 11,50,000, ఒరిస్సాలో 2,30,000 ఉంటుంది. 


తమిళనాడు రాష్ట్రంలో 22 మంది తెలుగు వారు శాసన సభ్యులుగా, ఇద్దరు పార్లమెంటు సభ్యులుగా ఉన్నారు, రాష్ట్ర మంత్రి వర్గంలో కూడా నలుగురు తెలుగు వారు మంత్రులుగా, ఒకరు ప్రభుత్వ చీఫ్ విప్ గా ఉన్నారు. కొన్ని సంవత్సరాల క్రితం వరకు 50 మందికి తక్కువ కాకుండా తెలుగువారు తమిళనాడు శాసనసభకు ఎన్నికయ్యే వారు, కాని రాను రానూ ఈ సంఖ్య గణనీయంగా తగ్గిపోతుంది. ఇక్కడి తెలుగు వారికి తెలుగు మాట్లాడటం తప్ప రాయటం, చదవటం తెలియదు. చెన్నై పట్టణం, క్రిష్ణగిరి, సేలం, కోయంబత్తూర్, వెల్లూరు, కాంచీపురం, నమక్కల్, కరూర్, తిరువళ్లూర్, తిరువన్నమలై, దుండిగల్, తిరునెల్వేలి, విరుదునగర్, మదురై, తిరుచ్చి, తూత్తుకుడి, రామనాధపురం, కడలూరు జిల్లాల్లో తెలుగువారు గణనీయంగా ఉన్నారు.  తమిళనాడు రాష్ట్రంలో MDMK అధ్యక్షుడు వైగో, DMDK అధ్యక్షుడు విజయకాంత్ కూడా తెలుగు వారే. ప్రస్తుత ప్రభుత్వం తెలుగు భాషపై చూపుతున్న నిర్లక్ష్య, పక్షపాత వైఖరిని ఇక్కడి తెలుగు ప్రజలు తీవ్రంగా నిరసిస్తున్నారు. తమిళనాడు రాష్ట్రంలో తెలుగు వారి జనాభా ఎక్కువగా ఉన్న ఇక్కడి తెలుగు వారిలో భాషాభిమానం మెండుగా ఉన్నా కాని రాజకీయంగా ఒకేతాటిపైకి రావటం చాలా కష్టం.  కొన్ని నెలల క్రితం తమిళనాడు తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ తమిళనాడు శాఖకు అంకురార్పణ జరిగింది, కానీ రాష్ట్రంలో తెలుగు ప్రముఖులెవరు ఇందులో చేరటానికి ప్రస్తుతం ఆసక్తిగా లేరు. పార్టీ పరంగా ఇప్పటినుంచి గట్టి పునాది వేసుకుంటే వచ్చే ఎన్నికల్లో రాందాస్ సారధ్యం లోని పి.యమ్.కె, విజయకాంత్ సారధ్యం లోని డి.యమ్.డి.కె పార్టీలతో పొత్తు పెట్టుకుని తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ పోటి చేస్తే కనీసం రెండు, మూడు సీట్లు సాధించే అవకాశం ఉంది. 


తెలుగు వారి జనాభా గణనీయంగా ఉన్న రాష్ట్రాల్లో కర్ణాటక నాలుగవ స్థానంలో ఉంది. కర్ణాటకలో తెలుగు వారి జనాభా బెంగుళూరు, బళ్ళారి, కొప్పల్, రాయచూర్, యాద్గిర్, చిత్రదుర్గ, ధవణగిరి, కోలార్, తుంకూర్, చిక్కబల్లాపూర్, గుల్బర్గా, బీదర్ జిల్లాల్లో ఎక్కువగా ఉంది. ఇక్కడి తెలుగు వారిలో చాలా మందికి తెలుగు భాష బాగా మాట్లాడటమే కాకుండా రాయటం, చదవటం కూడా వచ్చు. ఈ రాష్ట్రంలో తెలుగు సంఘాలు చాలా చైతన్యవంతంగా పనిచేస్తున్నాయి. విశేషమేమిటంటే ఈ రాష్ట్రంలో కన్నడ మాతృ భాషగా కలిగిన వారు కూడా కొంతమంది తెలుగు చక్కగా మాట్లాడగలుగుతారు  కర్నాటక రాష్ట్రంలో ప్రస్తుతం తెలుగు వారు 8 మంది శాసనసభ్యులు, ఇద్దరు ఎంపిలు, ఇద్దరు మంత్రులు ఉన్నారు. బెంగుళూరు కార్పొరేషన్ మేయర్, 14 మంది కార్పొరేటర్లు తెలుగు వారే. ఇక్కడ తెలుగు వారు ఎక్కువగా బిజెపి పార్టీలో ఉన్నారు. కొన్ని నెలల క్రితమే కర్ణాటక లో  తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ శాఖ ఏర్పాటైంది. ఇక్కడ బిజెపితో లేదా జనతాదళ్ పార్టీతో పొత్తు పెట్టుకుని పోటీ చేస్తే తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ నాలుగైదు స్థానాలు సులువుగా గెలుచుకునే అవకాశం ఉంది.


తెలంగాణా రాష్ట్రం సరిహద్దులో  ఉన్న మహారాష్ట్రలో షోలాపూర్, నాందేడ్, లాతూర్, చంద్రాపూర్ జిల్లాల్లో తెలుగు వారు చెప్పుకోదగిన సంఖ్యలో ఉన్నారు. కాని ఇక్కడ తెలుగు వారిలో మొదటి నుండి రాజకీయ చైతన్యం తక్కువ, అప్పుడప్పుడు ఒకరిద్దరు శాసనభ్యులుగా గెలవటం తప్ప రాజకీయంగా మహారాష్ట్ర శాసనసభలో తెలుగువారికి ఎప్పుడూ పెద్దగా ప్రాతినిధ్యం లభించలేదు. సరిహద్దు జిల్లాల్లో కన్నడిగుల ప్రభావం కూడా ఎక్కువే. ముంబాయిలో దక్షిణ భారతదేశం నుండి వెళ్ళిన వాళ్ళు గణనీయమైన సంఖ్యలో ఉన్నారు. మహారాష్ట్రలో కన్నడిగుల, తమిళుల మద్దతుతో పోటిచేస్తే తప్ప ఇక్కడ తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీకి కనీస సంఖ్యలో కూడా ఓట్లు పోలయ్యే అవకాశం లేదు. బహుశా మహారాష్ట్రలో తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ పోటీ చెయ్యకపోవచ్చు.


ఛత్తీస్ ఘడ్ రాష్ట్రంలో బస్తర్, దంతేవాడ, రాయపూర్, బిలాసపూర్ జిల్లాల్లో తెలుగు వారి జనాభా చెప్పుకోదగిన సంఖ్యలోనే ఉంది. ముఖ్యంగా వీరిలో ఎక్కువమంది షెడ్యూలు తెగలకు చెందిన వారు ఉన్నారు. ఛత్తీస్ ఘడ్ అసెంబ్లీలో ప్రస్తుతం ఇద్దరు తెలుగు శాసనసభ్యులకు ప్రాతినిధ్యం ఉంది. ప్రస్తుత బిలాస్పూర్ మునిసిపల్ కార్పొరేషన్ మేయర్ వాణి రావు తెలుగు వారే. వీరి మామగారు ఈడ్పుగంటి అశోక్ రావు గతంలో దిగ్విజయ్ సింగ్ మంత్రివర్గం లో మంత్రిగా, బిలాస్పూర్ కార్పోరేషన్ కు మొదటి మేయర్ గా కూడా పనిచేసారు. అశోక్ రావు తండ్రి ఈడ్పుగంటి రాఘవేంద్ర రావు గారు స్వాతంత్రానికి పూర్వం మధ్య పరగణాలు మరియు బీరార్ ప్రాంతానికి గవర్నర్ గా, కొంత కాలం మధ్య ప్రదేశ్ అసెంబ్లీలో శాసనసభ్యునిగా, మంత్రిగా,  పాత నాగపూర్ రాష్ట్రానికి ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా కూడా పని చేశారు. వీరే కాకుండా మరికొందరు తెలుగు వారు కూడా గతంలో శాసనసభ్యులుగా ఎన్నికయ్యారు. ఇక్కడ బిజెపి తో కలిసి పోటి చేస్తే తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీకి ఒకటి లేదా రెండు సీట్లు లభించ వచ్చు. ఒంటరిగా పోటి చేసిన పక్షంలో పెద్దగా ప్రభావం చూపించలేక పోవచ్చు. 


శ్రీకాకుళం సరిహద్దులో ఉన్న ఒరిస్సా రాష్ట్రంలో తెలుగు వారి జనాభా సుమారుగా 2,30,000 ఉంటుంది. సరిహద్దు జిల్లాలైన కోరాపుట్, రాయగడ, గజపతి, గంజాం జిల్లాల్లో తెలుగు మాట్లాడే వారి జనాభా గణనీయంగానే ఉంది. ఈ జిల్లాల్లో తెలుగు వారు శాసనసభకు ఎన్నికవుతున్నారు, ప్రస్తుతం ముగ్గురు తెలుగువారు ఒరిస్సా అసెంబ్లీలో శాసనసభ్యులుగా ఉన్నారు. బరంపురం నుండి గతంలో తెలుగు వారైన మాజీ ప్రధాని పి.వి నరసింహారావు 1996 లో యంపి గా ఎన్నికైన విషయం అందరికి తెలిసిందే.1957 నుండి 1980 వరకు ఇక్కడ తెలుగు వారైన జగన్నాథరావు యంపి గా ఉండేవారు. మాజీ రాష్ట్రపతి వివి గిరి బరంపురం వాసి. గతంలో రాయగడ జిల్లా, జైపూర్ నియోజకవర్గం నుండి అసెంబ్లీకి ఎన్నికైన నూతక్కి రామ శేషయ్య ఒరిస్సా రాష్ట్ర ఆరోగ్యమంత్రిగా పనిచేశారు. సరిహద్దు జిల్లాల్లో తెలుగు వారి జనాభా పర్లాకిమిడి, ఛాత్రపూర్, గోపాలపూర్, చికిటి, బెర్హంపూర్, జైపూర్, కోరాపుట్ మొదలైన ప్రాంతాల్లో గణనీయంగా ఉంది. బిజెపి తో లేదా బిజు జనతాదళ్ పార్టీతో పెట్టుకుని పోటి చేస్తే ఒరిస్సాలో తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ మూడు నుండి నాలుగు స్థానాలు గెలుచుకునే అవకాశం ఉంది. ఒంటరిగా పోటి చేసినా ఇక్కడ తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీకి కనీసం ఒకటి లేదా రెండు స్థానాలు దక్కే అవకాశం ఉంది. 


జాతీయ పార్టీగా తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ కర్ణాటక, తమిళనాడు, ఒరిస్సా, అండమాన్ రాష్ట్రాల్లో తెలుగువారు అధికంగా ఉన్న ప్రాంతాల్లో స్థానిక సంస్థల ఎన్నికల్లో గణనీయమైన ప్రభావం చూపి, గణనీయమైన సంఖ్యలో స్థానాలు గెలుచుకొనే అవకాశం ఉంది. శాసనసభ ఎన్నికల్లో కూడా కొద్దోగొప్పో ప్రభావం చూపి కొద్ది సంఖ్యలో స్థానాలు సాధించే అవకాశం ప్రస్ఫుటంగా కనిపిస్తుంది. తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ ఒంటరిగా పోటి చేసేకంటే బిజెపి లేదా అక్కడి ప్రాంతీయ పార్టీలతో పొత్తు పెట్టుకుని పోటిచేస్తే తన ఉనికిని చాటుకుని, బలం పెంచుకునే అవకాశం ఉంది. 

Sreya Vemuri wins prestigious $25,000 prize for work in math, science

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Judges were impressed by Sreya Vemuri's research into how light travels through optic fibers.

Sreya Vemuri never expected that her research into how light travels through optic fibers would yield a result, let alone a $25,000 prize.

The 17-year-old Carmel High School student said she was stunned to learn she was named one of the 2015 Davidson Fellows by the Davidson Institute for Talent Development, a national organization devoted to nurturing intelligent youths and providing opportunities for them to develop their talents.

Vemuri is one of only 20 students across the country to receive this honor.

“I really just submitted it on a whim,” the senior said. “When I first started the research, I didn’t even expect to get results. I was really, really surprised when they informed me that I won.”

Vemuri, who has had a lifelong interest in math and science, said she is curious about the world, and that inquisitive spirit fueled her project. Vemuri’s work has applications in many areas of optics, such as making lasers, and has important applications in designing computers.

One of the judges who reviewed her work said it was on par with that of a college senior or graduate student, said Tacie Moessner, Davidson Fellows Scholarship program manager.

“One judge said that Sreya’s project is one of the best fundamental projects he’s ever reviewed — he’s been a judge for many years,” Moessner said. “Her application speaks truth about the quantum world, and that is of interest to any civilization, human or otherwise.

“That means it has huge implications for the future.”

Vemuri’s project stood out because of its subject matter, Moessner said. It was extremely complex and was a mathematical feat, she said.

“She was able to focus her research on this one particular problem and not get sidetracked or distracted by other things,” Moessner said. “She was able to have this narrow focus and delve deeply into it.”

Vemuri, who is the second Carmel student to place in the competition since 2011, said she’s undecided about where she’ll attend college and will use the $25,000 prize to help pay her tuition.

“Ever since I was a little kid, I’ve done math competitions, and I’ve been fascinated by how you can solve such complex problems using mathematics,” she said. “I’ve discovered that it’s exciting to solve an unknown problem that no one knows the answer to.

“For a moment, you’re the only person in the world who knows this science and this knowledge.”

Vineet Kosaraju has been selected as a 2015 Davidson Fellow

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The Davidson Institute of Talent Development has announced the 2015 Davidson Fellows. Among the honorees is 16-year-old Vineet Kosaraju of Saratoga, Calif. Vineet won a $10,000 Davidson Fellows Scholarship for his project, Towards Rational RNA Therapeutics: 3D RNA Engineering in a Massive Open Laboratory. He is one of only 20 students from across the country to receive this honor.

Vineet’s project focused on RNA, which is found everywhere in life from humans to bacteria. This molecule is relevant to current research not only because it is so prevalent in life, but also because it can be used to fight disease such as vision degeneration, create RNA vaccines, destroy viral genes, and combat cancer. However, it is being underutilized because trial and error is currently the method of choice to find new RNA therapeutics. Vineet created an interface that allows for the design of accurate 3D RNA molecules. “My project focuses on fixing the limitations of 2D RNA structuring by creating an interface to design 3D RNAs and discovering its folding rules so that scientists can design RNAs without using expensive trial and error processes,” Vineet said. “By analyzing RNA designs synthesized in vitro, I was able to create three rules that govern the stability of the tertiary structure, the first of their kind.”

Vineet is a rising senior at The Harker School in San Jose, Calif. Apart from learning from the advanced coursework at his high school, he enjoys his Stanford lab work, and volunteering and teaching at MathAndCoding, a non-profit he co-founded. Vineet hopes to attend a college that has, among numerous academic and extracurricular offerings, a strong computer science curriculum with an undergraduate research program.

Vineet serves on his local congresswoman’s student advisory board, and participates in his school’s Honor Council and Research Club. In 2014, he was a Siemens Competition regional finalist and has participated in the USA Computing Olympiad Gold Division for the past couple of years. When he is not busy with school and research, Vineet enjoys hanging out with friends and family, playing the piano, and enjoying a round of golf with his brother.

Godavari Harathi Video

Godavari Nitya Harathi video

Power Mech Projects: The Engineering Hub

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In the last two years, the Hyderabad-based company has achieved exceptional scale in the business of setting up plants for India's power companies.

The first step of setting up a plant is the most arduous for any power company. It requires intense engineering expertise which is often in short supply—and also proves expensive to acquire and retain. The simpler option is to outsource the heavy-lifting: Enter Power Mech Projects, a Hyderabad-based company, which spotted this opportunity back in 1999. 

Having overcome the hurdles of bank financing and talent, it has now become one of the few players to achieve scale in this business. With a consistent growth of about 15 percent annually, Power Mech boasts a list of marquee private players—Tata Power, Adani Power and Jindal Power to name a few—as well as public sector power producers such as NTPC. 

2013 has been one of Power Mech’s busiest years: It built, tested and commissioned projects for a cumulative capacity of 40,000 MW across India. It also erected 65 boilers and 80 turbines during the period. And, in the process, it crossed Rs 1,000 crore in revenues for the first time.

The man behind it
Entering this industry is not for the weak-hearted. Sajja Kishore Babu (Chairman and MD),however, was confident when he took the call to set up Power Mech. After all, he had spent the first 14 years of his career in an engineering company, Indwell Construction, where, at the age of 28, he was part of a team that helped set up power plants. He rose up the company’s ranks to additional managing director and, later, to joint MD. That was when Babu decided to branch out on his own. 

As he saw it, he was the driving force behind the company’s success and had, over the years, built strong associations with NTPC and BHEL, a power plant equipment manufacturing and engineering PSU. “Why not do it for myself I thought,” says Babu, now 49. Within a year of his quitting Indwell, he had tapped into his extensive network and founded Power Mech. 

Babu’s personal touch and execution skills have resulted in his company gaining contracts from several large power producers in India. His colleagues describe him as someone who is relationship-oriented. “Once he sees someone, he does not forget the face,” says an employee at Power Mech. 

The company had a modest start in 1999 with a maintenance job at Tata Power’s plant at Trombay in Mumbai. “They knew me, and that is how I got the job,” says Babu. 

In its first year, Power Mech generated revenues of Rs 5 crore; this helped him get the bank guarantees necessary to start offering construction services that included erecting boilers, turbines and other machinery. A year later, BHEL also registered Power Mech as a contractor and the company began to get a steady stream of projects. 

Power Mech has now been in the business for 15 years. It has acquired a high-profile and large customer base. These relationships are not easy to replicate, and managing them are a particular strength of Babu’s. Also, now that it has strong ties with these companies, it has started to get maintenance jobs as well. Unlike construction contracts, these are annuity businesses with 3-5-year-long contracts and Ebidta margins of 20-22 percent. This ensures a steady stream of revenue for Power Mech. 

Most significantly, while several companies have reached the Rs 50 crore-level, few have managed to break out to this extent. With revenues of Rs 1,196 crore, Power Mech is an exception. In fact, the buoyancy of the last two years has led Bapu to up the sales target to Rs 1,650 crore by 2016. A listing by March 2015 is also being discussed. 

While Power Mech’s current numbers may be impressive, it took Babu 15 years to achieve scale and get private equity players interested in the business. It was only in 2009 that Motilal Oswal Private Equity took note of it and invested Rs 40 crore for an undisclosed stake. Further, despite its obvious relevance—and the fact that it plays a role in keeping our lights on—Power Mech’s work with power plants is not a consumer-facing business.

Laurus Labs: A hot startup in the pharma sector

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Although a chemist by profession, Satyanarayana Chava's astute business sense is reflected in the success of his Hyderabad-based pharmaceutical startup

When Dr Satyanarayana Chava started Laurus Labs in 2007, he invested nearly Rs 60 crore of his own money into it. His confidence in its success was neither bravado nor bluster, but defined by his knowledge of the pharmaceutical industry. Eight years on, the Hyderabad-based company is on track to reach revenues of Rs 2,000 crore by the end of FY2016. 

Chava, now 52, has more than two decades of experience in the pharmaceutical industry; in his last job, he was chief operating officer (COO) of the successful startup, Matrix Laboratories. Of his 10 years there, he says with pride, “I never skipped a promotion and got to work in all departments.” His dedication, coupled with a sound understanding of what it takes to start a pharmaceutical company, is what makes Laurus Labs among the hottest startups in this sector. 

Initially, Chava planned the business around research and development (R&D). He wanted Laurus Labs to focus on contract research and make money from royalties. “In India, companies start with manufacturing and then get into R&D,” he explains. “I did it the other way round.” He focussed his fledgling company’s resources on developing formulations for medicines, and licensed them to other pharmaceutical players. In the early months, Laurus Labs had 10 people in manufacturing and 300 in R&D. 

In June 2007, Aptuit, a US-based contract research organisation (CRO), signed it on for a $20 million (then Rs 80 crore) contract. But despite this injection of funds, Chava was unable to sustain his original idea of developing technologies for other companies. At the time of the Aptuit deal, Laurus Labs’s annual revenues were not even $20,000 (Rs 8 lakh at the time). In 2008, Chava decided to start manufacturing active pharmaceutical ingredients (API), which, as the name suggests, are chemicals or key ingredients in drugs required to make the medication work. His early investment into R&D benefitted Laurus Labs; it maintains a large repository of research-based knowledge that forms the bedrock of any successful pharmaceutical business. 

Today, it is a key manufacturer supplier of APIs and holds its own against better-known competitors like US generic drug giant Mylan, which, incidentally, acquired a controlling stake in Matrix around the time Chava founded Laurus Labs. It has also carved a niche for itself by supplying antiretroviral or ARVs (used to fight infections caused by retroviruses like HIV) and oncology drugs. And despite being a relatively new player, its clients include giants like Pfizer, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and Merck.

The person behind it
A Master’s degree in chemistry was never on the cards for Chava Satyanarayana. In the early 1980s, the best students usually studied physics, and he had planned to do the same. But when he went to his college in Amravati (Andhra Pradesh) to enroll, his elder sister’s friend suggested he study chemistry too. Chava took up the subject on a whim. He ended up liking chemistry so much so that in his final year he topped his batch despite not having written one out of the four required papers. He went on to complete his PhD in the subject in 1991.  

Upon graduating, he was hired by Ranbaxy Laboratories in Delhi as a researcher. In those early years itself Chava knew he’d spend a lifetime in the industry. He enjoyed the work and gained valuable experience as a young researcher in what was then India’s finest pharmaceutical company. 

But through his years in the industry, Chava was conscious of the fact that he needed to broaden his experience outside of research. His stint at Matrix Laboratories afforded him that opportunity. As it was a startup, he was able to rise through the ranks quickly and got the opportunity to work in key departments from sales and marketing to finance and accounts. Within eight years of joining Matrix, he became its COO. 

This experience was to come in handy when, due to differences with the board—he refused to elaborate on this—he decided to leave Matrix and set up Laurus Labs. And though he is the company’s chief executive officer (CEO), Chava remains true to his calling as a chemist. He has strived to build an organisation that is not very hierarchical. It is not uncommon to see him interacting with the chemists in the company and discussing formulations with them—something unheard of in an industry where most CEOs are from a sales and marketing background. 

Why it is a gem
Laurus Labs is targeting a Rs 2,000-crore topline in eight years. Even in the profitable pharmaceutical business, such a rapid pace is not seen very often. This success can be attributed to Chava’s decision to develop APIs, through which the company is able to enjoy higher margins compared to an average generic drug manufacturer. APIs generally constitute between 20 and 35 percent of the total cost of a drug, but the ones that Laurus Labs develops, like ARVs, constitute 70 to 75 percent of the cost of the drug. 

One indicator of the company’s success is the average revenue earned per employee every year, which stands at $115,000 (about Rs 75 lakh). An employee’s annual earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (Ebidta) is $20,000 (Rs 12 lakh). “This is on par with what the top five Indian generic companies in the world make,” says Chava. 

Why it was hidden
Apart from the fact that Laurus Labs is a relatively new player in an already crowded market, it does not manufacture over-the-counter products and follows a business-to-business model. But investors always on the lookout for the next new kid on the block were aware of its potential. 

In October 2014, private equity (PE) firm Warburg Pincus picked up a significant stake in the company for  $92 million (then Rs 560 crore). “What excited us about Laurus Labs was the company’s relentless focus on innovation and quality to become the most efficient manufacturer in its products. This has made them a market leader in some products in a relatively short period of time,” says Narendra Ostawal, managing director, Warburg Pincus India.

Other PE players who have made smaller investments in Laurus Labs include Fidelity Biosciences and Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe. Chava declined to divulge his or the investors’ stakes in his company. He did, however, say that Laurus Labs has enough cash flow to fund its expansion over the next three to five years. 

Risks and challenges
For now though, Laurus Labs is still a fledgling company with about 20 customers; the top 10 make up 80 percent of its sales. Chava admits that one client accounts for a quarter of his company’s sales. While acknowledging this risk, he says, “We haven’t lost a single customer and are growing with them.” 

There is also the risk of product concentration, but Laurus Labs periodically reviews its portfolio and is getting into newer areas like APIs for diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. 

Regulatory risk is always a clear and present danger for pharmaceutical companies with inspections by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) haunting even India’s drug giants. “We were very clear that we wouldn’t have a different plant for sales abroad and a different plant for sales in India. Quality has to be built into the organisation,” says Chava, adding that the company has not received an adverse remark during any of the FDA inspections. 

Chava has big plans for his company, which, is still seen primarily as an API manufacturer. This will change as Laurus Labs is planning to also become a consumer-facing business by getting into areas like manufacturing health care supplements. Active plans for this are already under way. And while he may be a chemist by profession, Chava is also a canny businessman. He knows that such a move has the potential to increase the company’s valuations. Only then will Chava consider an initial public offering.

G R Damodaran: Educationist and Parliamentarian

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Prof. G R Damodaran (20 February 1914–1986) was an educationist, an administrator and founder of The GRD Trust in Coimbatore. He was the founder of PSG College of Technology and founder principal of PSG College of Arts and Science. Dr. G R Damodaran held numerous positions of leadership and had served education in a wide range of field and sectors. He was the Chairman of the Southern Regional Committee of the AICTE. He was the Chairman of the Govt. of India's High Power Committee on the Reorganisation of Polytechnic Education (1969–1970). He was the Vice-Chancellor of the Madras University.He served as a Member of Parliament and of the Legislative Council of Tamil Nadu.

Early life and education
Prof.G R Damodaran was born to Divan Bahadur P S G Rangaswamy Naidu and Krishnammal on 20 February 1914. His early schooling began in an elementary school in Peelamedu, later he continued his education in Sarvajana High School, established by the PSG Charity Trust. His Intermediate Studies was at Government Arts College, Coimbatore in Mathematics. He completed B.Sc(Electrical Engineering) and B.Sc(Mechanical Engineering) in King's College, New Castle on Tyne, United Kingdom.

Career
In the year 1943, Damodaran joined the PSG Industrial Institute. In 1948, he started a Tamil Monthly Magazine "KALAIKATHIR", devoted to Science and Technology. It installed Heidelberg Printing Machine and Computerized Photo typesetting machine. He was the founder of PSG College of Technology and founder principal of PSG College of Arts and Science.

He served UNESCO International Committee on training abroad policies, the All India Council for Technical Education, National Council for Vocational Trades and the All India Board of Technicians Education.

He was a member of the Syndicate of the Madras University for 33 years during which time he introduced far reaching changes in the Engineering curriculum.

His unswerving commitment to the cause of the rural and urban masses through the NSS and Social Service League which he founded was something laudable.

In 1952, he served as a Member of Parliament in Pollachi Lok Sabha constituency. He was elected to the Legislative Council of Tamil Nadu from the Teachers Constituency and once from the Graduate Constituency. In 1955, he organized Adult Literacy Workshop at Coimbatore. His stint in politics brought him close to stalwarts like K. Kamaraj, C. Subramanian, R. Venkataraman, Dr. V K R V Rao, Prof. N G Ranga, T T Krishnamachari, Dr. Triguna Sen and others.

Vision
Dr G R Damodaran, believed education as the better means for securing the nation's economic future and social well-being, He often defined and addressed Education as :- "Education deals with the human growth in mind, spirit, character and effective behavior. The habits and attitudes a student acquires, the interest that cultivates, the ideals that is learned to practice - All these becomes the basic for an individual's future growth and the basics to the prosperity of our Nation". It is taken as the guiding principle of Dr G R Damodaran College of Science, a college posthumously established in 1988 to honour Dr. G. R. Damodaran.

Contributions
The English books titled "The Teacher in You" and "Evaluation and Grading" were written by him.
He also wrote a Tamil book titled "Electron".
His speeches made on various occasions were published in the form of a book titled "Listen to a Leader in Education".
He also contributed a dictionary of Technical Terms which was translated from English to Tamil, "Kalaichol Agarathi".

Kammas pride: AP and Tamilnadu's first private sector Medical and Engineering colleges

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Kammas Pride:


Tamilnadu:



In 1966, GR Govindarajulu took the initiative to start the first private medical college in Tamil Nadu along with the Lakshmi Group. Land was purchased and a medical college building was constructed in 1966. The medical college was managed by both the PSG and Lakshmi Groups till 1969, when it was taken over by the Government of Tamil Nadu and renamed as Coimbatore Medical College Hospital.



PSG College of Technology is an autonomous, government aided, private engineering college in Coimbatore, India. It is affiliated to Anna University. The college offers a total of 48 full-time and part-time programs in Science, Engineering and Management at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. The college was founded in 1951 by Dr.G.R.Damodaran as the first private engineering institution established in Tamil Nadu.



Andhra Pradesh:



Velagapudi Ramakrishna Siddhartha Engineering College is the First Private Engineering College in the state of AP, 1977. It is also the First institution in the private sector in the entire state to start M.Tech programmes (1999)



Siddhartha Medical College was the First private Medical College in the state (1980-81), later taken over by the Government of AP and renamed as Dr. NTR University of Health Sciences 



Kommareddy Venkata Sadasiva Rao Siddhartha College of Pharmaceutical Sciences (1994) is the First Private Pharmacy college in the state

Padmabhushan Dr.R.V Perumal (Former Director ISRO)

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Dr.Ramanujam Varatharaja Perumal (A Kamma, Native of Tuticorin District - Tamilnadu) was a well known aeronautical scientist of India. For 36 years he worked with Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) in design, development of launch vehicle hardware, project management, launch operations including two years as Director of Liquid Propulsion Systems Center. He did his M.E in Aircraft Structures (1965-67) from the Indian Institute of Science, Department of Aeronautics - Bangalore. R V Perumal  He was a Director at Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). He was responsible for the flight integration and launch operations of the first three PSLV flights. From 1996 to 2001, he was Project Director of the Geo-Synchronous Launch Vehicle Programme (GSLV) Trivandrum. Perumal was a pioneer in the development and assembly of the Geo-Synchronous LaunchVehicle. .From May 2001 he has been the Associate Director (Projects), Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, 

He was awarded Padma Bhushan by Government of India in 2002.

Satya Nadella on Forbes' List of ‘Most Powerful People’

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Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, has made it to Forbes’ seventh annual list of “The World’s Most Powerful People.” The executive — the only Indian American on the list — ranked 61, moving up three spots from last year.

About Nadella, Forbes said: “Now in his second year as CEO, Satya Nadella is making strong progress re-establishing the $93.58 billion-in-revenues company as an innovator in tech. The company's new operating system, Windows 10, successfully launched in July; flashy new gadgets like the HoloLens augmented reality goggles made headlines, and new consumer hardware like the Surface Book earned rave reviews.”

AMD appoints Raja Koduri head of Radeon Graphics Group

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AMD has announced that it is bundling its disparate graphics efforts into a single division, dubbed the Radeon Technologies Group, under freshly-promoted senior vice president and chief architect Raja Koduri.

Acquired by CPU specialist AMD back in 2006 for $5.4 billion, GPU maker ATI was rapidly absorbed by its new parent and found its technologies spread throughout the company. Rebranded simply as AMD, ATI's technologies can be found in embedded, consumer, enthusiast, and even server and high-performance computing products. This, however, has given the fiscally-challenged AMD a fresh issue: how to regain the focus the company once enjoyed as a separate entity.

AMD's solution: to bring the graphics division back under a single leader, Raja Koduri. The newly-formed Radeon Technologies Group will handle every aspect of graphics and GPGPU computing at the firm, with the 47 year old executive at the helm.It's far from Koduri's first rodeo: he has previously overseen the development of the High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) technology found in AMD's latest graphics products, and has been leading the company's LiquidVR initiative. Prior to rejoining AMD, Koduri worked as director of graphics architecture at Apple, and before that he was at ATI pre-acquisition and AMD post-acquisition.

'AMD is one of the few companies with the engineering talent and IP to make emerging immersive computing opportunities a reality,' crowed Koduri of the company that has just given him a hefty promotion. 'Now, with the Radeon Technologies Group, we have a dedicated team focused on growing our business as we create a unique environment for the best and brightest minds in graphics to be a part of the team re-defining the industry.'

'We are entering an age of immersive computing where we will be surrounded by billions of brilliant pixels that enhance our daily lives in ways we have yet to fully comprehend,' added Lisa Su, president and chief executive of AMD. 'AMD is well positioned to lead this transition with graphics IP that powers the best gaming and visual computing experiences today. With the creation of the Radeon Technologies Group we are putting in place a more agile, vertically-integrated graphics organization focused on solidifying our position as the graphics industry leader, recapturing profitable share across traditional graphics markets, and staking leadership positions in new markets such as virtual and augmented reality.'

The organising of the graphics division into a distinct entity is, however, likely to refresh rumours of a split that would see AMD spin off the Radeon Technologies Group - possibly even regaining its former name of ATI - in order to stem its growing losses. AMD has not, however, publicly commented on the likelihood of such a move.

Apurva Kanneganti scores perfect on SAT and ACT creates record

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GERMANTOWN, TN - Apurva Kanneganti, A Shelby County Schools student has accomplished two nearly-impossible feats, achieving perfect scores on both the ACT and SAT.

Germantown High School Senior Apurva Kanneganti scored a 36 on the ACT and a 2400 on the SAT.

"And in the future I want to be a physician, so helping out people is one of my major things,” Kanneganti said.

The college board which oversees testing said just 0.02 percent of students earn a perfect score on their SAT test, while ACT officials said about 0.06 percent make a perfect score on the ACT.

"Well, definitely they are not a piece of cake; I did study for them,” she said.

Kanneganti will be graduating from Germantown High School at the top of her class this year, and she’s only 16 years old.

Apurva is a member of the International Baccalaureate Program and president of five clubs at GHS. She credits her parents, both of whom work at St. Jude, with her success.

“They never told me you have to get a 36, you have to get all As. They just said ‘do your best.’”

She hopes to attend Harvard, but still considers herself a normal teenager.

Apurva also does a lot in the Indian community in Memphis, performing classical dance and organizing cultural activities.

"I just try to balance everything out so I'm not lame,” she said with a laugh. “I do have a lot of fun, but I just make sure that my academics are kind of where they should be as well.”

Colleges around the world are trying to recruit the teen. At last check, she has been offered more than $400,000 in scholarships.

Rishika Sunkara wins ITF singles title

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Raipur: Top seed Rishika Sunkara of Vijayawada (Playing for Delhi) subdued a fighting Natasha Palha 7-5, 3-6, 6-2 in the final of the $10,000 ITF women’s tennis tournament and lifted the Gondwana Cup here on last Saturday.

It was her third singles final on the trot for the 22-year-old Rishika. Incidentally, it was her second singles title in the international circuit, with the earlier one having been won in Delhi in May 2012.

After having lost to Fatma Al Nabhani of Oman and four-time National champion Prerna Bhambri in the last two finals in Hyderabad and Lucknow respectively, the wiry Rishika was resolute about enhancing her title collection.

Incidentally, she has eight doubles titles, including four this season, and had lost the doubles final with Prerna on Friday.

It was Rishika who called the shots early on, when she led 3-1 in the second set after having served out the first set at love. However, the athletic Natasha, who had started well but had lost her way, stepped up her game to reel off six games on the trot.

The 21-year-old Natasha swept away with the second set, dropping only four points in five games.

In the decider, Natasha missed her chances as, after having broken Rishika’s serve in the first game, she missed six gamepoints and dropped her serve on the third breakpoint.

From then on, Rishika dictated the course of the match to eventually pull through in two hours and 51 minutes.

Interestingly, it was the fourth victory for Rishika over Natasha in as many meetings in the international circuit, from 2007, when the two had met in the junior circuit for the first time.

The 582nd ranked Natasha was sharp in converting her chances as she won seven of nine breakpoints, but Rishika did it better by breaking Natasha’s serve nine times after forcing 22 breakpoints.

The champion collected 12 WTA points and the runner-up, seven WTA points.

The results (final): Rishika Sunkara bt Natasha Palha 7-5, 3-6, 6-2.
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