Everything in the world is a miracle, if only one dives deep - Swami Siddhinathananda
Happy New Year 2021
WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY, HEALTHY,
PROSPEROUS AND PURPOSEFUL
NEW YEAR 2020
Monday, March 31, 2008
Monday, March 24, 2008
My Album-25: "Sri Ramakrishna Jayanthi Celebrations-2:"
A section of the audience of the Sri Ramakrishna Jayanthi function at 'Vivekanandam Sevai Maiyam'. Seated at the centre is Professor (Mrs) Avudayammal Dayalan, Former Principal, Sri Sarada Niketan College for Women, Amaravathi Pudur, who distributed the prizes to the meritorious students and mementos to all the participants.My Album-24: "Sri Ramakrishna Jayanthi Celebrations-1:"
Sri Ramakrishna Jayanthi was celebrated in a very small way at the Vivekanandam Sevai Maiyam on March 9, 2008. Dr.V.Sundaram, Deputy Director and Head, Planning, CECRI, Karaikudi presided over the function. In the photo, Dr.Sundaram is sitting on the left and Dr.A.Selvaraj delivering a special address for the students who participated in the celebrations.Saturday, March 08, 2008
Letters-10: “Farm Loan Waiver”
1. This refers to the article “Ending the debt trap and attaining food security” (The Hindu, Madurai, March 3, 2008). The settling of debts of just one section of poor farmers who are beneficiaries of institutionalized loans will not help matters much. The government should identify those dependent on private sources which lend money at exorbitant rates. Clearing the debts in a one-time move, and glossing over it till the elections are over, is meaningless.
Our lands have become degraded and lost all productive capacity. Farmers should be provided subsidized inputs and timely buyback of their produce at reasonable rates. This would amount to teaching a person how to fish for livelihood rather than giving him fish as a one-time generosity. Spending Rs.60,000 crore on debt relief is not enough. The beneficiaries should be made self-reliant. (M.Kamal Naidu, Hyderabad)
2. The waiver is like providing food to the hungry in the morning who become hungry again in the evening. Does the Finance Minister propose to clean up the accumulated dust year after year? Instead, Rs.60,000 crore could have been spent on educating the farmers, providing them with water, seeds and fertilizers, setting up food processing units in every district and buying the produce at a fixed price. (Naresh Jain, Bangalore)
3. A debt relief does not fully mitigate the farmers’ problems in India. In fact, it will only encourage them to evade the repayment of bank loans. In the long run, the waiver will do more harm to farmers because financial institutions will hereafter be wary of advancing big loans to them. The government should evolve better remunerative prices for agricultural produce. (A.Madan Mohan, Chittoor).
4. Will the debt relief actually solve our farmers’ tribulations? The fact that most of the farm borrowings is from moneylenders has been overlooked. The Finance Minister could have ploughed the funds towards welfare measures which would have assured earnings. The farmers would have then earned enough to repay their loans. (C.Jeevitha, Chennai).
5. The waiver announcement has come a little too late. Had it come earlier, some precious lives could have been saved. It has also created an anomalous situation. Honest farmers sacrificed many things while honouring their schedule of repayments. Many who were unable to repay loans resorted to suicide. Both these categories do not benefit from the waiver. Is not it cruel? (A.R.K.Pillai, Mumbai).
6. The agricultural loan waiver has essentially proved that the policy of economic liberalization drawn up by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has not worked and that the Finance Minister could not do anything to take the so-called liberalized markets to the rural masses. Election-eyed loan waivers to one and all will only ruin the economy in the long run. (S.Subramanian Balaji, Chennai).
7. The waiver of farmers’ loans amounting to Rs.60,000 crore is laudable. However, it may set a bad precedent. In future, farmers may take loans and wait for the next elections and a waiver. It will also serve as a disincentive to those farmers who pay off their loans regularly. (Wg.Cdr.V.Sundaresan (retd), Secunderabad)
8. Rather than arguing whether the waiving of the loans has been done with an eye on the elections, we should think of setting up credible structures to ensure that our farmers do not get into the debt trap again. (Vaibhav Minocha, Ghaziabad)
Courtesy: “Letters to the Editor”, The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
Our lands have become degraded and lost all productive capacity. Farmers should be provided subsidized inputs and timely buyback of their produce at reasonable rates. This would amount to teaching a person how to fish for livelihood rather than giving him fish as a one-time generosity. Spending Rs.60,000 crore on debt relief is not enough. The beneficiaries should be made self-reliant. (M.Kamal Naidu, Hyderabad)
2. The waiver is like providing food to the hungry in the morning who become hungry again in the evening. Does the Finance Minister propose to clean up the accumulated dust year after year? Instead, Rs.60,000 crore could have been spent on educating the farmers, providing them with water, seeds and fertilizers, setting up food processing units in every district and buying the produce at a fixed price. (Naresh Jain, Bangalore)
3. A debt relief does not fully mitigate the farmers’ problems in India. In fact, it will only encourage them to evade the repayment of bank loans. In the long run, the waiver will do more harm to farmers because financial institutions will hereafter be wary of advancing big loans to them. The government should evolve better remunerative prices for agricultural produce. (A.Madan Mohan, Chittoor).
4. Will the debt relief actually solve our farmers’ tribulations? The fact that most of the farm borrowings is from moneylenders has been overlooked. The Finance Minister could have ploughed the funds towards welfare measures which would have assured earnings. The farmers would have then earned enough to repay their loans. (C.Jeevitha, Chennai).
5. The waiver announcement has come a little too late. Had it come earlier, some precious lives could have been saved. It has also created an anomalous situation. Honest farmers sacrificed many things while honouring their schedule of repayments. Many who were unable to repay loans resorted to suicide. Both these categories do not benefit from the waiver. Is not it cruel? (A.R.K.Pillai, Mumbai).
6. The agricultural loan waiver has essentially proved that the policy of economic liberalization drawn up by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has not worked and that the Finance Minister could not do anything to take the so-called liberalized markets to the rural masses. Election-eyed loan waivers to one and all will only ruin the economy in the long run. (S.Subramanian Balaji, Chennai).
7. The waiver of farmers’ loans amounting to Rs.60,000 crore is laudable. However, it may set a bad precedent. In future, farmers may take loans and wait for the next elections and a waiver. It will also serve as a disincentive to those farmers who pay off their loans regularly. (Wg.Cdr.V.Sundaresan (retd), Secunderabad)
8. Rather than arguing whether the waiving of the loans has been done with an eye on the elections, we should think of setting up credible structures to ensure that our farmers do not get into the debt trap again. (Vaibhav Minocha, Ghaziabad)
Courtesy: “Letters to the Editor”, The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
Health Watch-4: "Breakfast Keeps Teens Lean"
Teenagers who regularly eat their breakfast tend to weigh less, exercise more and eat a more healthful diet than their breakfast-skipping peers, researchers said in Washington on Monday, the March 3, 2008.
The study involved 2,216 adolescents whose eating pattern, weight and other lifestyle issues were tracked systematically for five years.
The more regularly the teens ate breakfast, the lower their body mass index was, according to the study. Those who always skipped breakfast on average weighed about 2.3 kg more than their peers who ate the morning meal every day.
Courtesy: Reuters and The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
The study involved 2,216 adolescents whose eating pattern, weight and other lifestyle issues were tracked systematically for five years.
The more regularly the teens ate breakfast, the lower their body mass index was, according to the study. Those who always skipped breakfast on average weighed about 2.3 kg more than their peers who ate the morning meal every day.
Courtesy: Reuters and The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
Science Watch-7: "Remote Control with a Wink"
Don’t read too much into someone winking at you in Japan – a researcher says he has developed a system that will let people run their iPods with the flick of an eye.
The system, comprising a single-chip computer and a couple of infrared sensors, monitors movements of the temple and is so tiny that it can be built into the side of a pair of eyeglasses.
Closing both eyes for one second starts an iPod, while blinking again stops the digital machine. A wink with the right eye makes the machine skip to the next tune while with a wink of the left eye, it goes back.
The system can serve as “a third hard” for rock-climbers, motorbike drivers and astronauts, as well as people with disabilities.
The system – dubbed – “Kome Kami Switch,” or “Temple Switch” – can easily differentiate a deliberate one-second wink from natural blinking, said the device’s developer Kazuhiro Taniguchi.
“Normally you blink in an energy-saving manner, very quickly and lightly, but you would close your eyes more firmly to operate a device,” the developer said.
The Kome Kami Switch is also capable of operating television sets, air conditioners, room lighting and other household electronics.
Courtesy: AFP and The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
The system, comprising a single-chip computer and a couple of infrared sensors, monitors movements of the temple and is so tiny that it can be built into the side of a pair of eyeglasses.
Closing both eyes for one second starts an iPod, while blinking again stops the digital machine. A wink with the right eye makes the machine skip to the next tune while with a wink of the left eye, it goes back.
The system can serve as “a third hard” for rock-climbers, motorbike drivers and astronauts, as well as people with disabilities.
The system – dubbed – “Kome Kami Switch,” or “Temple Switch” – can easily differentiate a deliberate one-second wink from natural blinking, said the device’s developer Kazuhiro Taniguchi.
“Normally you blink in an energy-saving manner, very quickly and lightly, but you would close your eyes more firmly to operate a device,” the developer said.
The Kome Kami Switch is also capable of operating television sets, air conditioners, room lighting and other household electronics.
Courtesy: AFP and The Hindu, Madurai, March 4, 2008
A Thought for Today : March 8, 2008
Stop the habit of wishful thinking and start the habit of thoughtful wishes - Mary Martin
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