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KSOU: Gold medal, Cash prize winners

 

 Gold medallists (from left) Chalapathi Rao Kasarabada, V. Kiran Ayyar, Shaista Begum, T.R. Sunitha and A.S. Vijayabharathi are seen displaying their medals at the 14th Convocation of KSOU.
Gold medallists (from left) Chalapathi Rao Kasarabada, V. Kiran Ayyar, Shaista Begum, T.R. Sunitha and A.S. Vijayabharathi are seen displaying their medals at the 14th Convocation of KSOU.

Mysore :

The 14th convocation of KSOU saw over 40 students from all ages and from all walks of life bagging gold medals/cash prizes. The gold medal/cash prize winners include: A.S. Vijayabharathi, who bagged 3 gold medals and one cash prize in M.A. Kannada; Sudeshma Nag one gold medal and a cash prize in M.A. English; Shaista Begum A. Bijapur, 2 gold medals in M.A. Urdu; Padma Seshadri, one gold medal and a cash prize in M.A. Sanskrit; 72-year-old Chalapathi Rao Kasarabada, one cash prize in M.A. Sanskrit; K.Sowmya, 2 gold medals and 2 cash prizes in M.A. Economics and V. Kiran Ayyar, 2 gold medals in M.A. Hindi.

The Ph.D awardees are: M.N. Pushpalatha in Sanskrit, N. Srimadhavi in History, V.N. Nagashetty in Sociology, Basavaraju in Management and Vasudev Shetti in Hindi.

M.Phil degrees were awarded to 3: Muthigi Srinivas in Kannada, H.L. Ravindra in Political Science and K.C. Dhanaraja in Sociology.

Love for subject: 72-year-old Chalapathi Rao Kasarabada who bagged a cash prize in MA Sanskrit said that he had studied Sanskrit as a subject while doing his B.Sc degree, which he got in 1962. He pursed his studies in Sanskrit out of sheer love for the subject. He was delighted at getting the prize and added that he holds a Ph.D. degree from an American University.

A.S. Vijayabharathi who bagged 3 gold medals and a cash prize in Kannada said that after securing her BSc., degree in 1981, she served the postal department for 25 years before taking voluntary retirement. As she was in the habit of reading books from her early age, she developed interest in doing MA Kannada. She studied the subject without wasting time, even while looking after her family comprising her husband, a son doing his Engineering degree and a daughter pursuing her M.Tech.

K. Sowmya, who bagged 2 gold and 2 cash prizes in MA Economics said although she had hoped for a medal, felt surprised when she got 2 gold. Stating that she had bagged third rank in MBA earlier, Sowmya said she was currently serving as a guest lecturer at Adichunchanagiri college in Channarayapatna and Government first grade college at H.N Pura. She has enrolled for M.Com degree at KSOU and hoped to pass out with flying colours.

V. Kiran Ayyar, who bagged 2 gold in Hindi said he is an M.Sc holder in Physics and currently working as a lecturer at Vidyavardhaka PU College in Mysore. As he had keen interest in Hindi since his young days, he pursued MA in Hindi. He was extremely delighted over winning 2 medals.

Shaista Begum, who bagged 2 gold in MA Urdu said she is currently working as a Urdu teacher at a Government high school in Haveri. She felt very happy upon receiving the medals, she remarked and added that she was interested in pursuing Ph.D degree in the same subject.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / May 11th, 2014

Mohammed Shami becomes 2nd fastest Indian to take 50 wickets in ODIs

Mohammed Shami

Mohammed Shami  has completed 50 wickets in one day internationals. In the 9th match of Asia Cup 2014 between India and Afghanistan, Shami picked up two wickets which helped him to reach the landmark.

Mohammed Shami is the second fastest Indian to 50 wickets in ODIs. Shami reaches the landmark in his 29th innings. Samiullah Shenwar was his 50th victim.

Ajit Agarkat  is the fastest Indian to 50 wickets in ODIs. Agarkar reaches the landmark in his 23rd innings.

Here is the list of top 5 fastest Indians to 50 wickets in ODIs:

ChartsMPOs17may2014

Note: Stats updated till 5th March 2014

source: http: //www.sportskeeda.com / SportsKeeda / Home> News> Cricket – One Day International Cricket / by Sarath – Cricket Analylst / March 05th, 2014

An open letter to Mohammed Shami

Mohammed Shami

Dear Shami,

First of all, congratulations on your first full season, and a great one at that, in Indian colours. In the last few tours, you have enthralled us all with pace and swing alike. You have shown big promise, and you certainly have the potential to fill the one void that Indian cricket has in an otherwise complete set-up: that of a genuine fast bowler.

India has never had a plenitude of bowlers who can clock speeds of 140 kilometres per hour constantly and swing the ball at that pace, not since the days of Kapil Dev and Javagal Srinath anyway. In you, we now have one who can do just that.

Albeit briefly up until now, you have shown us that you have it in you to mature into a genuine fast bowler. You can clock 140+ kilometres per hour on a regular basis and swing the new ball as well as reverse the old one. There is nothing as potent and dynamic as swing coupled with pace. Do not let go any of these traits, and we will have a world class fast bowler, one that we’ve been waiting for.

That brilliant opening spell in an ODI against the Aussies at Ranchi, your fifer on Test debut that broke the backbone of the Windies’ line-up and a few great spells against the Proteas and the Blackcaps have led us to believe that, potentially, we now have a bowler who can challenge the best in the world.

All we ask is for you not to fail us.

In the last decade or so, we have been searching for someone who can lead the bowling attack, someone who can be called “the spearhead of the pace attack” in the right sense of the phrase. Alas, all in vain.

Yes, a few people came along who showed promise for a brief period of time but could not live up to it in the long run. We pinned our hopes on Irfan Pathan before he  faded away into oblivion.   We  believed in Lakshmipathy Balaji before he  was plagued with injuries. Ishant Sharma got Ricky Ponting and a few more batsmen to dance to his tunes before he lost his rhythm and pace.

How so many Indian bowlers have gone from lethal to innocuous in the space of a few years is an enigma. Maybe they cut down on pace to gain accuracy or to try and prolong their careers by avoiding injuries. Maybe someone has advised them to do so. Do not let these thoughts creep into your head, and, if someone gives you such advice, please turn a deaf ear to them, for god’s sake.

Hope can be a treacherous thing. Our hope for a fast bowler who won’t just be fiery for a few years and then fizzle out, but one who will sustain his lethality throughout his career, has certainly been treacherous.

Us fans, we’ve done our share of waiting and hoping, Shami. But all we can still do is hope against all hope that you will be able to put an end to it. Let our hope not betray us this time.

– An ardent and hopeful fan.

source: http://www.sportskeeda.com / SportsKeeda / Home> Opinion> Cricket / by Kunal (cricket fan) / May 15th, 2014

Jung assess functioning of various departments

Lieutenant governor of Delhi  Najeeb Jung took a meeting of top officials of various departments to assess their functioning.

The meeting was held at Delhi Secretariat, and along with Chief Secretary S K Srivastava, principal secretaries, secretaries and HODs of various departments like Public Works Department, Health, Revenue, Social Welfare Child Development and DTC were present.

The Lt governor was briefed about the improvement of work in various department since his field inspection, Delhi government officials said.

He was also told that  Delhi Jal Board  has been informed about the water and sewerage leakage points discovered during inspections. The governor was also told about the shortcomings related to electronic token system, non-operational CCTVs, incidence of touts, poor infrastructure, shortage of staff.

As for the industrial areas, Jung stressed on the need for immediate repair of roads, drains and signage, regular de-silting of drains including outfall connecting drains where discharge from industrial areas is falling.

Jung directed that closure orders issued to the polluting units by Delhi Pollution Control Committee should be enforced by concerned agencies.

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> PTI Stories> National> News / Press Trust of India / New Delhi – May 09th, 2014

Prof Talat Ahmad is new V-C of Jamia

Talat Ahmad is currently the V-C of university of Kashmir.
Talat Ahmad is currently the V-C of university of Kashmir.

SUMMARY

Ahmad was awarded the National Mineral Award, 1994, by the Government of India and is a life member of the Mineralogical Society of India.

The Vice-Chancellor of University of Kashmir Professor Talat Ahmad has been appointed V-C of Jamia Millia Islamia on Tuesday.

Ahmad’s appointment comes nine months after former Jamia vice-chancellor Najeeb Jung was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Delhi. Although the decision is yet to be announced, sources at Jamia have confirmed the appointment. Ahmad, who hails from Giridih in Jharkhand, is an alumnus of Aligarh Muslim University, University of Leicester and Cambridge University. He was serving as vice-chancellor of University of Kashmir for the last three years.

Prior to that, he had served as a geologist at the Geological Survey of India and as a professor at the Department of Geology, University of Delhi, from 2003 to 2011.  He is an expert member on the board of several environmental and geological organisations, including the Science & Engineering Research Council, and has won several accolades for his research.

Ahmad was awarded the National Mineral Award, 1994, by the Government of India and is a life member of the Mineralogical Society of India. He is also a fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences and a J C Bose fellow, 2011. Prof Ahmad could not be reached for comments.  In November, the union HRD ministry advertised the position of Jamia V-C on the recommendation of the search committee.

Many names were doing the rounds for the position including those of former Hyderabad University vice-chancellor Seyed Ehtesham Hasnain and former member of the National Commission for Minorities Zoya Hassan. In September last year, more than 300 Jamia teachers wrote to President Pranab Mukherjee, also the Visitor of the country’s only central minority university, requesting his intervention in the process of appointment of the next vice-chancellor. In the letter, the teachers emphasised the need to appoint “an academician of high repute and integrity” as vice-chancellor.

The search committee comprised three members — Justice Aftab Alam and Jamia Hamdard V-C Professor G N Qazi, named by Jamia’s Executive Council along with Visitor’s nominee UGC chairperson Ved Prakash. Professor Hasnain had declined to take up the position after he heard that his name was in the fray without receiving any official word from the search committee.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Delhi / by Naveed Iqbal / New Delhi – April 30th, 2014

Whiff of an Arabian spread

 

‘Instant’ kabsah kits are in much demand in Kozhikode. / The Hindu
‘Instant’ kabsah kits are in much demand in Kozhikode. / The Hindu

Shawarma, Shawaya, and Khubuz came to Kerala crossing the Arabian seas several years ago. They were served in wayside eateries and fast-food outlets, initially started by the Gulf-returned cafeteria employees.

These dishes, however, did not make their way to the Malayali kitchen even in the Malabar region, where most of the households have at least one member employed in the Middle East.

Of late, a few Arabian dishes such as Mandi, Kabsah, and Majboos, which figure on the main course menu of Arabian countries have become popular in Malabar. These rice-meat combination dishes are not only cooked in the kitchens of the region, but are also served as “prestige” dishes on occasions such as weddings.

Some places like Koduvally, with a huge expatriate population, also have exclusive Mandi and Kabsah eateries. “I know many who come from the city just to eat these dishes,” says P. Abid, a native of Koduvally.

Author and sociologist Hafiz Mohammed says this is only a continuation of the culinary influence Arabia has cast on Kerala for the past 30 years. “The close socio-cultural association between the two countries has paved the way for these dishes’ smooth entry into our society,” says Dr. Mohammed. Ready-to-cook kits of these dishes, including Majboosthe regional variant of Kabsah, are available in shops and supermarkets here now. Dealers of these kits also provide cooking instructions in regional languages on their cover. “I prepare them at home quite often,” says A.K. Ali, who returned from Saudi Arabia a few years ago and is settled at Kalanthode in Kozhikode.

The dishes are much in demand for weddings and parties in the region. Local chefs, with some experience in eateries in the Gulf, have started advertising their skills here, says Mr. Ali.

Dr. Mohammed sees ‘status symbol’ in play here. “Many affluent families in Malabar serve these Arabian dishes during wedding parties for this reason,” he says.

The trend is here to stay for some time at least. “My father, who was in the Gulf for several years, prepared Kabsah at home a couple of years ago during his vacation. All of us liked it. Now I too can prepare the dish,” says Sayed Junaid, from Ayencheri near Vadakara in Kozhikode.

source: http://www.thehindu.com /  The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kozhikode / by Jabir Mushthari / Kozhikode – May 10th, 2014

An NDA govt may skip seniority, name UP’s Javed Usmani as Cabinet secretary

Javed Usmani is the current chief secretary of Uttar Pradesh. (TOI file photo by Pawan Kumar)
Javed Usmani is the current chief secretary of Uttar Pradesh. (TOI file photo by Pawan Kumar)

New Delhi :

The new government may give seniority a miss in selecting the next Cabinet secretary and opt for a “relatively junior” officer as the country’s top bureaucrat, a senior BJP leader indicated on a day when exit polls predicted an NDA government at the Centre.

Ajit Seth, the current Cabinet secretary, is due to retire on June 13 and a successor is usually named a fortnight in advance. As a result, the new government will have to decide on a new Cabinet secretary within days of taking charge.

Going strictly by seniority, Sutanu Behuria, a 1976-batch Himachal cadre IAS officer is the next in line, followed by Alok Rawat from Sikkim. Although there are another eight officers from Rawat’s 1977 batch who are currently working at the Centre, the new government may ignore the entire batch and could opt for Javed Usmani, a 1978 batch official, who is currently Uttar Pradesh chief secretary.

What seems to be going in Usmani’s favour is his familiarity with working in the Prime Minister’s Office, having spent close to seven years — first during the United Front government and then as joint secretary during Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s term. He returned for a second stint from 2004 to 2007 when Manmohan Singh took charge.

If the Modi government goes ahead and appoints Usmani, it will break from recent trend when the government has played it safe and gone by seniority, both in case of Seth as well as his predecessor KM Chandrasekhar.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Lok Sabha Elections 2014> News / TNN / May 13th, 2014

World’s largest diamond, Mughal necklace in Geneva auction

A staff member poses with 'The Blue' diamond during an auction preview for Christie's in Geneva. (Reuters photo)
A staff member poses with ‘The Blue’ diamond during an auction preview for Christie’s in Geneva. (Reuters photo)

New Delhi :

A rare necklace, engraved with names of Mughal emperors Akbar and Jahangir goes under the hammer in Geneva tomorrow by Christie’s, which is also auctioning the world’s largest flawless blue diamond, in a sale expected to total $80 million.

Dating 17th century, the seven Mughal engraved spinel bead necklace is estimated to fetch between $1,500,00 to $2,000,000 at ‘Magnificent Jewels’ sale, auctioneers said.

Mughal emperors were known for their love of precious stones. The tradition of engraving titles and names on stones began with the Timurids, who were the ancestors of Mughals. They did their engraving on diamonds, emeralds and other outstanding quality stones with large spinel beads considered to be their favourites.

As much as these gems were a symbol of the opulence and dignity of the empire, they were also treasured as protective talismans.

The Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar exhibits an important necklace with eleven Mughal spinel beads with a total weight of 877.23 carats. Three of them engraved with names of Emperor Jahangir and one with that of Emperor Shah Jahan.

Leading the ‘Magnificent Jewels’ sale is world’s largest flawless vivid blue diamond ‘The Blue’ estimated to fetch between $21,000,000- $25,000,000.

The diamond leads the 250 lot strong sale, estimated to mop up a total in the region of $80 million, Christie’s said.

Six months earlier, Christie’s Geneva sold ‘The Orange’ the largest fancy vivid orange diamond in the world for $35.5 million, a global record for an orange diamond and a world auction record price per carat for any diamond at $2.4 million.

The sale will also feature many important coloured and colourless diamonds such as the 5.50 carat ‘The Ocean Dream’, the largest fancy vivid blue-green diamond in the world to come to auction, with an estimate of $7,500,00- $9,500,000.

‘The Rajah Diamond’ a 26.14 carat old-mine brilliant-cut diamond of is among 14 jewels that are being auctioned under ‘A Passion for Jewels: Collection of an European Gentleman’. The diamond is estimated to go for $3,000,00-5,000,000.

Another section of the sale ‘Noble Jewels’ features a natural pearl and diamond necklace estimated at $550,000-700,000 and was orginally in the personal jewellery casket of Queen Elizabeth of Prussia.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> India / PTI / May 13th, 2014

Of passion and pure thrill of flying high

Hyderabad : 

The Air Force Station at Begumpet was one of six heritages of the city to be acknowledged with an award by the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (Intach) on the occasion of World Heritage Day 2014. The event brought into focus little known facts about Hyderabad’s history, including the city’s pioneering efforts in the field of aviation which commenced in 1911 when a Belgian aviator, Baron de Caters, along with his assistant Jules Tyck, arrived with a fleet of planes to give demonstration at the Secunderabad Parade Ground.

The three-day affair received wide publicity and drew large crowds of onlookers including quite a few women. A newspaper report preceding the event announced that “a popular society lady will be taken up by the Baron on the first day”. Unfortunately the identity of this enigmatic passenger remains unknown and it is believed that it must have been a member of the European community then living in the cantonment.

The first direct association of Hyderabad with aviation was established a few years later when during World War I, a British pilot challenged the enemy while flying an aircraft bearing the name of ‘Hyderabad’ over the skies of Germany in 1917. In recognition of contributions to the Imperial war effort, the names of native states had been inscribed on the aircraft of ‘Gift Squadrons’ raised and maintained with funds donated by the Indian rulers. Subsequently, the British formed two more Hyderabad Squadrons during World War II with public contributions raised at Hyderabad, and the Spitfires and Hurricanes of these units had the legend “Presented by His Exalted Highness, the Nizam of Hyderabad” emblazoned on their fuselage. Among the three Hyderabad Squadrons of the Royal Air Force, the 152nd had the Nizam’s crown, the distinctive ‘dastar’, displayed prominently on its insignia.

The credit of introducing Hyderabad to flying as a hobby goes to two adventurous youngsters, Babar Mirza and Pingle Madhusudhan Reddy, who developed a keen interest in flying while pursuing their studies in England. While Reddy managed to keep his passion for flying in check long enough to obtain a degree in mechanical engineering from Leeds, Mirza concentrated more on developing an expertise in handling aircraft. Reckless by nature, he purchased a Simmonds Spartan and set out from Croydon in late 1932 with the sole obsession of reaching Hyderabad within the shortest possible time despite his father having explicitly banned him from undertaking such a “perilous and foolish adventure”. Without giving a second thought to the logistics involved in undertaking such an arduous journey and despite refusal of permission to transit Turkey, Mirza successfully bluffed his way out of tricky situations including some perilous moments at Konya where he inadvertently landed on a military parade ground and was promptly marched off at gunpoint! Unable to take the punishment of the “Air Mad” Hyderabadi anymore, the plane’s engine gave way over the Iraqi desert. Rescued by Bedouins, he was packed off to India along with the wreckage of his aircraft.

Within a year of the mishap, Babar Mirza had somehow convinced his father Manzoor Jung to support his plans of establishing an Aero Club at Hyderabad. Laying out a landing strip on the polo ground of the family estate at Habsiguda, he flew in the now restored Spartan from Karachi and applied to the Nizam’s government for permission to start a private Flying Club and ordered another aircraft from London. Meanwhile Reddy, having purchased an Avro Avian in England in 1933, flew it to Hyderabad and touched down at Habsiguda to join the Deccan Aero Club. Official permission still pending, Babar Mirza took it upon himself to garner support and went about it in a unique way. Inviting the then Prime Minister of Hyderabad Maharaja Kishen Pershad and other elite to Habsiguda for an evening of flight demonstrations, he put on a show that they would never forget. After his colleagues had shown their skills in performing ‘loops’ and ‘rolls’, Mirza swooped down low over the heads of the visiting dignitaries creating ‘quite a sensation’! The dare seems to have had little effect on the administration as it was another three years before the Hyderabad State Aero Club was formally inaugurated in 1936. Mirza’s antics though, seem to have set a precedent for disgruntled aviators. Old-timers of the city narrate the exploits of another pioneer, a scion of the Bilgrami family who, jilted by his beloved because of a stubborn refusal to give up his ‘dangerous’ passion for flying, made repeated low passes over her wedding venue; blowing away the shamiana, scattering the guests and turning a lavish spread inedible with a coating of dust!

(This is the first of a two-part series on Hyderabad’s aviation. The writer is a heritage activist)

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Hyderabad / by Sajjad Shahid, TNN / April 27th, 2014

_________________________________________________________________________

PM Reddy: An aviator and engineer par excellence

The founding of the Hyderabad State Aero Club ushered in an era of relative decorum and the unchecked exploits of buccaneering aviation pioneers of the city were finally tamed to a large extent. Over succeeding years Babar Mirza and P M Reddy, matured into serious aviators who took on the task of ensuring that aviation in the Deccan kept pace with international trends. Their enthusiasm for flying inspired others to take up the hobby and also hastened the plans of the Nizam’s government to establish an airline. Aban Pestonji Chenoy, the teenaged daughter of the Nizam’s Mint Master, became the first woman member of the Hyderabad State Aero Club to qualify for an aviator’s license in 1938, a year in which 55 of the club’s 70 members were Indians.

The club’s operations were suspended during World War II and its pilots, aircraft and facilities were commandeered for use by a training squadron. The association of Begumpet with the Air Force has continued ever since. The acute need for pilots during the war resulted in the establishment of a center of the Indian Air Training Corps on the Osmania University campus in 1945. Trained by Hyderabad’s own pilots along with British officers, cadets of the very first batch passing out from the Osmania University made such a strong impression on the recruiting board that a majority of them were recommended for a commission in the Air Force.

Princess Durru Shehwar laid the foundation stone for the passenger terminal at Begumpet in 1936 as part of the Nizam’s Silver Jubilee celebrations and Deccan Airways Limited was incorporated in 1945, becoming the first airline to be promoted by a native State. A joint venture of Hyderabad State and Tata Airlines, Deccan Airways had a fleet of a dozen Douglas DC-3 ‘Dakota’ aircraft when Hyderabad was absorbed into the Indian Union in 1948.

It was with Pingle Madhusudhan Reddy’s encouragement that the last Nizam, Mir Osman Ali Khan, first boarded an aircraft for a sortie over the city intended to check out his reactions to flying. Initially thrilled at being able to view from the skies, the Nizam is said to have later issued orders prohibiting any aircraft from flying over his palace. On one of his later flights in a twin engine aircraft, he enquired from PM as to what would happen if an engine conked off during flight. “Not a problem Your Exalted Highness”, PM replied, “We can safely carry on with the remaining engine”.

Years later when boarding a flight for Delhi, he pointed to the four engines of the Super Constellation and exclaimed; “Now that is what I call a safe aero-plane!”

By 1947 Deccan Airways had a fleet of sturdy Douglas DC-3 ‘Dakota’ aircraft which connected Hyderabad with key cities through regular services. Apart from scheduled flights, the airline also took on charters and diplomatic sorties on behalf of the Nizam and his government. The airline continued to serve the ruler of Hyderabad in his capacity as the Rajparmukh subsequent to merger and one of the tasks personally supervised by PM was to ensure a daily supply of fresh water for the Nizam during his sojourns away from Hyderabad. Drawn from a protected source which had supplied his ancestors, the waters of the Bam Rukn-ud Dowlah, a spring near the Mir Alam Tank, were shipped under guard in special sealed containers for the Nizam and his family.

Pingle Madhusudhan Reddy saw the airline through its most difficult phases of existence including a ban imposed by the Indian government just prior to the Police Action and later when Deccan Airways along with all other private airlines of the country, was nationalized in 1953 becoming part of the Indian Airlines Corporation. Having been appointed the first Operations Manager of Deccan Airways in 1945, he rose to become its General Manager and later Managing Director. Under his dynamic leadership Deccan Airways gained the reputation of being one of the best and the most efficient airlines in the country. Despite being named Regional Director of Indian Airlines, PM resigned and opted to revert to Hyderabad State service in 1954 and was put in charge of the Industrial Trust Fund and its operations; Praga Tools and Hyderabad Asbestos which was eventually handed over to the Birlas. At the request of the defense ministry, PM was released from state service and took charge of HAL Bangalore in 1957 to set up the jet engine factory from where he retired in 1967. After a long and eventful life PM passed away in Hyderabad in 1986.

(This is the second and concluding part of the column on pioneers of aviation in Hyderabad. The writer is a well known heritage activist)

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Hyderabad / by Sajjad Shahid, TNN /  May 04th,  2014

Salman Khan’s protege Zarine Khan makes her debut in Punjabi cinema with ‘Jatt James Bond’

ZarineKhanMPOs14may2014

Salman Khan’s discovery Zarine Khan is all set to make her debut in the Punjabi film industry with Jatt James Bond.

The second poster of the film is out and actress plays the role of a Punjabi girl in the film.

The actress, who made her Bollywood debut opposite Salman in Veer, will be paired with Gippy Grewal in the film.

Despite Zarine’s dream debut and a mentor like Salman, the actress did not have a very successful run in Bollywood. After Veer bombed at the box office, Salman gave Zarine another shot at fame with the item song Character Dheela in Ready. While the film did a good business, Zarine did not get enough adulation for her sexy act in the song.

The actress’ next film Housefull 2 did a decent business, but her co-stars Asin and Jacqueline Fernandez stole the limelight.

And given Salman’s penchant for spotting new talent and mentoring them, Zarine had no other option than looking for help somewhere else to keep her filmi dreams afloat.

Directed by Rohit Jugraj, the film also stars Vindu Dara Singh, Mukesh Rishi, Avtar Gill and stand-up comedian Gurpreet Guggi.

The film, produced by Fortune House Productions, will hit the screens on  April 14.

source: http://www.dnaindia.com / DNA / Home> Entertainment> Place:Mumbai, Agency: DNA Web Team / Thursday – January 02nd, 2014