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Engineering students develop robotic arm

Arakunnam (Ernakulam) Kochi,  KERALA :

Students of Toc H Institute of Science and Technology, Arakunnam, with the Electromyography-controlled prosthetic arm that they developed.
Students of Toc H Institute of Science and Technology, Arakunnam, with the Electromyography-controlled prosthetic arm that they developed.

It will meet the basic daily requirements of an amputee

Five engineering students of Toc H Institute of Science and Technology at Arakunnam near here have come up with an Electromyography (EMG) controlled prosthetic arm.

The students – Mereena Baby, Aysha Zenab Kenza, Nikitha Sajan, Lakshmi Mohan, and Sharon Alex – are in the final year of their B.Tech Computer Science programme.

A release issued by the college claimed that the robotic arm would meet the basic daily requirements of an amputee, even though it lacked advanced features.

The prosthetic arm is priced at ₹2 lakh while those with advanced features cost anywhere between ₹15 lakh to ₹25 lakh, which is out of the reach of the common man, it said.

The students said that the Myo-armband interprets the electric signals produced as a result of the muscle movements and converts them into accurate hand gestures. They are then read by a micro-controller through a Bluetooth dongle.

Server motors

Based on those signals read, an appropriate number of server motors are rotated to move the prosthetic limb, they said.

The release said that the product could be made faster and easier by using advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence.

The students expressed the hope that they would get support from investors to take the product to users.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / June 03rd, 2018

Muslim organisations too promoted cause of Telangana

TELANGANA :

Many participated actively in the agitation for Statehood

At a time when the Telangana sentiment was at its peak, several Muslims and Muslim organisations jumped into the movement. Be it the 1969 agitation or, for that matter, more recently, in 2008 and 2009. And with the anniversary of the formation of the State on Saturday, some of those involved in the movement share their experiences.

Jamaat-e-Islami Hind Telangana and Odisha president Hamid Mohammed Khan says that it was in 2008 that the socio-religious organisation jumped in to the fray.

The Jamaat, he says, was aware of the region’s backwardness and its causes which is why the decision was taken to join the movement.

“We formed an advisory committee to study these injustices. We analysed a lot of government released data, Planning Commission reports and the distribution of resources to Telangana region. We analysed government employment patterns too. In 2008 we decided to wholeheartedly support the movement,” Mr. Khan says.

Organised garjanas

The Jamaat, he says, was a part of the Telangana Joint Action Committee, and its organs supported the cause. “We organised Telangana garjanas in all districts and used our established units to further the cause of Telangana,” he says.

While the Jamaat formally took part movement in 2008, the All India Majlis-e-Tameer-e-Millat (AIMTM), another socio-religious organisation was active during the 1960s.

According to its vice-president Ziauddin Nayyar, it was in 1969 that the then general secretary Laiq Ali Khan was actively associated with the Telangana Praja Samithi, co-founded by the then chief minister of erstwhile Andhra Pradesh M. Chenna Reddy.

“Several of the Tameer-e-Millat’s leaders were even jailed for being a part of the agitation. Our ties were so close with the movement. Another member, Tahir Osmani, was well known for his renditions of poetry and slogans for Telangana statehood,” Mr. Nayyar recalled.

Observers said that with the passage of time and weakening of the organisation, the AIMTM could not be an active part of the later years of the Telangana movement.

“Apart from these two organisations, several individuals too took part in the movement. They were well aware of the injustice meted out to the people of the state,” an observer said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Syed Mohammed / Hyderabad – June 04th, 2018

This Royal Hakeem knows the pulse of the Bullet

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Sayeed bin Abdul Rabb giving the final touches to a Bullet, which had come in for repair. | Photo Credit: The Hindu
Sayeed bin Abdul Rabb giving the final touches to a Bullet, which had come in for repair. | Photo Credit: The Hindu

The septuagenarian bike specialist just plays it by the ear to fix the bikes or restore them from scrap

He is called the hakeem — a doctor in Urdu — of the Royal Enfield Bullet. His diagnostic ability is like the practitioners of Unani medicine who can identify an ailment just by checking a patient’s pulse.

The Bullet’s famed thump is its pulse, and he only has to listen to tell what’s wrong.

Sayeed bin Abdul Rabb has been restoring Enfield Bullets since his pre-teens. His proficiency in dealing with the motorcycle’s cast iron engines is well known not only in Hyderabad but also in Marathwada.

“I was 10 years old when I started working for marhoom [deceased] Enfield mechanic Mahbub Patel. I think I’m 75 years old now. In my 65 years as a Bullet specialist, I must have repaired thousands of Bullets and restored hundreds,” he says.

A Yafai tribesman, Mr. Rabb’s grandfather, Sayeed bin Abdul Rabb, after whom he is named, arrived in the city from Hadramaut in the modern day Yemen. Unlike his countrymen, Rabb Sr. did not join the Afwaj-e-Beqidah, the Nizam’s irregular army. Instead, he dabbled in small trades.

Room for workshop

Mr. Rabb’s workshop is a room in Troop Bazaar in the city centre. Hanging on walls is an array of spares: handlebars, silencers, wheelrims and a toghra (wall hanging) with a verse from the Quran. In a corner is a rudimentary lathe machine, used to fabricate out-of-stock spare parts for other British Classics such as Norton and Triumph.

In a conversation peppered with delightful Dakhni idioms, he says: “I’ve been repairing motorcycles for 65 years, miyan. Hau? I only need to listen to the firing [for thump] or the sound of the engine. If the tapit [tappets] make a certain sound or the bigin [corruption of the world flywheel] sounds strange, I know there is some gadbad,” Mr. Rabb says.

His customers also come from Nanded, Parli Vaijnath, Osmanabad and Latur in Maharashtra.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Syed Mohammed / Hyderabad – May 26th, 2018

Food has gone viral

Bengaluru, KARNATAKA :

Shazia wanted a create a book where you feel like cooking what you see
Shazia wanted a create a book where you feel like cooking what you see

Bengaluru’s Shazia Khan, runner-up at Masterchef 2, is out with her book What’s On The Menu

It may be easy to cook from a recipe off the Internet, or cook watching a YouTube video. But how do you know, for example, which biryani recipe to pick from the hundreds that pop up?

And therein lies the charm of a cookbook — you will go for the recipe that comes from a person you know, or whose food you are familiar with or are a fan of.

That is the logic that drove Bengaluru’s Shazia Khan, runner-up at the Masterchef India 2 series a few years ago to write What’s On The Menu? “When I started cooking, I was an amateur. I learnt from cookbooks. I wanted to write my own after Masterchef, which would feature cuisines of the world, and use easy ingredients — something that a beginner or an expert could cook from,” says Shazia smiling the smile that she was noted to flash, even under all the pressure of the TV show. “I also wanted generation-old recipes to be treasured. I wanted it to be a pictorial because it is only when you see good food that you feel like cooking.” Shazia’s food has been made more gorgeous looking by photographer Saina Jaipal.

She agrees the book is a “hotchpotch” of recipes. The book takes you through salads, soups, and sections dedicated to vegetarian, chicken, mutton, seafood, and desserts. An introductory section teaches you how to put together masalas and chilli oil and other such ingredients necessary for the dishes.

Food is something that always brought people together in her large joint family where Shazia grew up as one among seven siblings.

“Food was always a celebration and it spread a lot of happiness — something that rarely happens today among people.”

Shazia admits that food has taken on new avatars. “There is surely a food revolution. With the Masterchef craze, awareness is high. With everyone Instagram-ing food pictures, food has gone viral. People are more confident now to try new recipes. It has gone beyond being just a three-time meal. It is about being more creative and food presentation is gaining more importance.” Exposure is huge, as is availability. “When I started cooking, I didn’t even know what zucchini was. Today you will get three colours of bell peppers in your neighbourhood market.”

Having all along cooked for family and friends, it was her sons who egged her on to try for the Masterchef series. “It has almost been four years since, and I’ve done a couple of TV shows, YouTube videos and demos. I take private classes for individuals. I run summer camps,” she says, talking of the endless possibilities of what one can do these days in the food business. Shazia, who is also involved in the family-run education business, is a member of the board of management at Delhi Public School (Bengaluru/Mysuru). She hopes to start a culinary school, because “going abroad to study culinary arts is very expensive. I want to make it a finishing school for women, so they can get employment opportunities and placements as home cooks using their training. I mean who wouldn’t love to have a trained cook at home!” she says.

Kitchen talk

* Three things you will find in my kitchen: Cheese for sure! Cooking chocolate, and eggs.

* What I love eating: Thai, because it bursts with flavours.

* What I love cooking: Modern Indian food — not twisting its taste but presenting it in a different way. My tandoori chicken roulade is a good twist to the whole grilled chicken, using the French technique to make it more healthy. My grilled semolina with mushroom is nothing but the uppit presented to look like breadsticks, with mushrooms thrown in for a twist.

* When I eat out: My husband is not a big foodie. He loves Indian or Chinese. But when we are travelling, I love to experiment, try local cuisine, learn dishes and pick up recipes.

Pumpkin and peanut subzi

Shazia shares this recipe of a subzi from her book What’s On The Menu that her father-in-law enjoys, made in his village near Mandya, in Karnataka:

(Serves: 4 to 5 )

Ingredients

Vegetable oil – quarter cup

Onion – 2, (finely diced)

Ginger paste – 1 tsp

Garlic paste – 1 tsp

Tomato – 2,

( finely diced)

Red chilli powder – 1 tsp

Coriander powder – 1 tsp

Turmeric powder – half tsp

Fresh coriander leaves – 3 tbsp,

Pumpkin – 600 gms,

(peeled, chopped &

cubed)

Salt to taste

For the Peanut Masala

Peanuts – 100 gms, (dry roasted & skin removed)

Garlic – 10 cloves

Long, dry red chilli (Kashmiri) — 8 (dry roasted)

In a pan, heat oil. Add onions and fry till golden brown. Add ginger-garlic pastes and fry for a minute. Add tomatoes, chilli powder, coriander powder, turmeric powder, coriander leaves and fry till the tomatoes become so. Add the pumpkin cubes and sauté. Add salt and cook till the pumpkin is so and done. Coarsely grind the peanut masala ingredients and add to the cooked pumpkin. Garnish with coriander leaves and serve with hot akki rotis and ghee.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Food / by Bhumika K / Bengaluru – April 16th, 2016

Naazim Khan of Kumta to represent India in Spain

Kumta (Uttar Kannada District), KARNATAKA :

NaazimJavedKhanMPOs04jun2018

Kumta:

Once again, a young sportsman of the town, Naazim Javed Khan has made the entire town proud after qualifying to represent India in ‘ITTF Para Table Tennis Spanish Open’, which will be held at Barcelona in Spain from 7th to 11th June 2018. Around 9 players from various states including Naazim Javed Khan and two others from Karnataka have been selected for this championship game in Spain.

Speaking to SahilOnline Kumta correspondent, Naazim said that he obtained two years of coaching in Maharashtra Mandal table tennis club at Hubli. As a player, he always participated in various levels of table tennis games held across the country. Recently, a team of 9 players from across India was selected by Indian Table Tennis Federation to represent India in Spain, which included him too. VRL will be the official sponsor for Naazim.

It may be noted that, Naazim had represented India in the ‘Para Asian Regional Table Tennis Championship’ in August 2017 in China and had also participated at ‘Para Table Tennis Games’ held in Thailand in 2013. Other than this, Naazim is a student of Karnataka Institute of Medical Science (KIMS) in Hubli, studying MBBS.

As the news of his selection made rounds on social media platforms, the smiles and happiness spread among the people of Kumta and many expressed their best wishes for his upcoming games in Barcelona, Spain.

On this occasion, various organizations of Kumta including the management of Kumta Jamatul Muslimeen, North Kanara Muslim United Forum, Kumta Muslim Association, and Al-Ittihad Youth Committee Kumta have congratulated him and wished him all the success in the upcoming games.

Team SahilOnline also wishes all the best for his upcoming games.

source: http://www.sahilonline.net / Sahil Online / Home / source: S.O. News Service / Coastal News  – National News  / by Sajjad Qazi /  June 02nd, 2018

False terror charges against local youth inspires Bhatkal boy to become a lawyer

Bhatkal (Uttara Kannada District) , KARNATAKA :

NehzanMPOs04jun2018

Bhatkal has got another young man as a lawyer as Mr. Nehzan Ekkery s/o Abdul Azeez Ekkery successfully completed his studies and is poised to step into legal practise soon. Nehzan completed his studies at the School of Law in the prestigious Christ University, Bengaluru and was awarded the BA LLB degree in an official ceremony at his college on Sunday.

At 22, Nehzan Ekkery strikes people as a typical Bhatkali boy with an outgoing demeanour and a disarming smile. It’s when he starts speaking that you get a glimpse into the depth of his mind, the clarity of his purpose and the seriousness with which he grasps the subtle realities of life.

As a young Muslim man, especially as a Bhatkali youth, Nehzan is no stranger to the ongoing violations of human rights by law enforcement agencies in India, who have rounded up hundreds of young Muslims, accusing them of being involved in terrorism. According to a DNA report, hundreds of Muslim youth have been named in terror cases without proof.  While this has struck fear in the minds of many young men of the town, for Nehzan, it was the catalyst that put him on his current path. “The fundamental idea that every person is innocent until proven guilty is quite often put to shame by law enforcement agencies, and that was my propelling factor to pursue law as a profession.” He explains.  “I was moved when youngsters were being falsely implicated in criminal and anti-terrorism laws consequently being deprived of the right to life and personal liberty for too long.” he adds.

The profile of Mr. Nehzan Ekkery appeals more to the locals and people of Bhatkal because he is one of them. He completed his primary education in Naunihaal Centra School and Anjuman Hami-e-Muslimeen’s Islamia Anglo Urdu High School, both prominent educational establishments in Bhatkal. He later enrolled at Ryan International School in Surat and in 2013, was selected to study at the prestigious School of Law at the Christ University. He completed the five-year integrated program of BBA + LLB (Honors) with flying colors.
Nehzan is up for a flying start as he is beginning his practise as junior of Advocate K. Diwakara (legal advisor for Karnataka’s State Government). He willl be working in the High Court and other lower courts of Karnataka and will be handling Civil, Criminal and Arbitration matters.

With an inspiring confidence, he states that “he wants to be the thorn in sight of injustice, be the necessary disruption, a distraction with the passion that transcends the confines of my own consciousness and play my part, howsoever little in reinstating the faith in justice system.” He has been an active proponent against the government endorsed absurdity, policy paralysis and excesses of law and aims to play an imperative role in socio-political system with the instrument of law.

The Bhatkali community has seen an encouraging rise in the number of lawyers among locals in the last few years. The number saw a significant rise after a famous lawyer of the region, Naushad Kashimji was gunned down in Mangalore in 2009. Naushad’s shocking death had united the community at that time and many young men ha d vowed that they will avenge his death by becoming lawyers themselves. The trend caught on and currently, the town has several young lawyers who have established themselves not only in their practise but also in the public sphere as socio-political leaders.

source: http://www.sahilonline.net / Sahil Online / Home / source: S.O. News Service / Coastal News  – National News – Special Report / June 02nd, 2018

A miracle of faith, this Varanasi mosque was built in a night

Varanasi, UTTAR PRADESH :

Varanasi :

Ek Raat Ki Masjid – the name catches one’s attention immediately for its uniqueness.

Believed to have been built in one night, the mosque is located in a narrow lane of Varanasi’s Lallapura, an area famous for the master weavers who turn silk yarn into Banarsi sarees and stoles.

Some of the visitors, who walk through the lanes to watch sarees being woven on handloom, also go to see the mosque.

Dr Abdul Waheed Ansari, a local scholar, says, “The mosque is known as Ek Raat Ki Masjid since it was built in a night around 175 years ago. A faqir had taken the initiative for its construction and locals helped him implement his plan.”

Dr Ansari says many people express surprise when they learn the mosque was built in a night…

source: http://www.htsyndication.com / HTDS Content Services / Varanasi – June 02nd, 2018

Ramadan 1439: Shaista Yacoob

Bengaluru, KARNATAKA :

ShaistaYacoobMPOs03jun2018

Shaista Yacoob, 43, is a writer, poet based in Bangalore. Born and brought up in Bangalore, she has been living in Benson Town since Childhood. She has done journalism in College. Recently, she started a small catering business called Shaista’s Little Kitchen.

“It has been a few years since I have been learning the Quran. It is very difficult to understand the true meaning of the Quran, unless you have someone to teach you. I have always read the Quran, but understanding it’s true meaning is very tough.”

“I really want to put in the effort of learning it. You have to understand the context of what was said and why it was said. There has been a reason, there has been a context, a moment in the prophet’s life when something has happened, and the revelations came on him. So we have to know the situation to understand what it is all about.”

I saw a friend of mine recently who is also learning the Quran. She found a few things in Quran which she thought were very demeaning to women. but then when she went and researched, she realised what she had been thinking is not what the Quran says. It was actually a very beautiful interpretation of a woman.”

Her earliest memory of Ramadan was of an old man who used to come to the locality to wake everyone up for Sehri. She says “I remember this old, frail man, so bent and concave, he used to come every morning with a duff. This year he did not come. I don’t know why, but he came every year without fail. It is a beautiful moment when you wake up in the morning for sehri. God has said that he is listening, and that there is no veil between you and him, at that moment.”

” It is a magical month, Ramadan. It leaves you with a new feeling. After it is over, it is a big turmoil, its very challenging. You are so much in the mode of this month. Your soul is peaceful and your desires limited that coming out of it is not easy.”

TCN Series: Ramadan 1439

source: http://www.twocircles.net / TwoCircles.net / Home> Indian Muslim> Lead Story> Women / by Poornima Marh, TwoCircles.net / June 02nd, 2018

Noorpur Assembly bypoll results: Samajwadi Party’s Naim Ul Hasan defeats BJP’s Avani Singh

Noorpur (Bijnor District) , UTTAR PRADESH :

Samajwadi Party leader Naim Ul Hasan has defeated Avani Singh of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) by 6211 votes.

The bypoll in the Noorpur Assembly seat was necessitated after the death of sitting BJP MLA Lokendra Singh Chouhan. He was a two-time MLA from the seat.

While the BJP had reposed faith in Avani Singh, wife of late MLA Lokendra Chauhan, as its candidate, former chief minister Akhilesh Yadav-led Samajwadi Party fielded Naim Ul Hasan as its candidate.

Meanwhile, in Kairana Lok Sabha seat, BJP candidate Mriganka Singh is trailing against RLD leader Tabassum Hasan, who has been backed by opposition parties Congress, Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party.

After the defeat of the BJP in Gorakhpur and Phoolpur Lok Sabha bypolls, opposition parties were upbeat aiming to consolidate anti-BJP votes, whereas the ruling BJP had made extra efforts to retain both Kairana Lok Sabha and Noorpur Assembly seats in order to send a message to voters, party cadres — as well as opposition parties — that the recent reversals are a closed chapter now, and that it was still strong in western UP.

source: http://www.zeenews.india.com / Zee News / Home> News> India> Noorpur Assembly Bypoll Results / by Zee Media Bureau / May 31st, 2018

Mohammad Kaif Mulla of Belagavi is the state topper in SSLC after revaluation

Belagavi, KARNATAKA :

He scored a  perfect 625 out of 625

MohammedKaifMPOs03jun2018

Belagavi :

Mohammad Kaif Mulla, student of St. Xavier’s High School has topped the state in the SSLC examination with 625 marks out of 625.

Kaif Mulla had secured 624 marks when the SSLC results were announced. While he had scored cent percent in all the subjects, he got 99 in Science. But Kaif was confident that he did not make any mistake in the subject and should get full marks, and applied for revaluation.

His confidence was proved true when he scored a perfect 100 out of 100 in Science after revaluation. With 625 out of 625 marks Kaif Mulla is the topper in the state. He is also the first from Belagavi District to top the state in SSLC examination.

Kaif’s father Harun Rashid Mulla teaches Kannada in a government high school, while his mother teaches Urdu in a government primary school. This topper wants to be a doctor and then pursue his dream to become an IAS officer.

source: http://www.english.varthabharati.in / Vartha Bharati / Home> Karnataka / May 30th, 2018