Thursday, March 4, 2021

Bride scoots, groom’s family goes berserk

Bride scoots, groom’s family goes berserk

Chennai:  04.03.2021 

A group of guests ransacked a marriage hall in Nazarethpet after the bride did not turn up for wedding scheduled for Tuesday evening.

Family members of the groom from Chembarambakkam and the bride from Madurantakam were staying at a city hotel to attend the marriage. The bride had gone to a beauty parlour but never returned to the hotel.

Following this, her family members launched a search for the woman, but to no avail.

Subsequently, they informed the bridegroom’s family. By that time, more than 100 guests from both sides had gathered at the hall. In a fit of rage, people from the groom’s side ransacked the hall. A case has been registered. TNN

Sasikala quits politics, urges ‘Jaya followers’ to ensure DMK defeat


Sasikala quits politics, urges ‘Jaya followers’ to ensure DMK defeat

But AMMK Will Fight Poll, Declares TTV

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:04.03.2021 

In a development that may come as a shot in the arm for the ruling AIADMK, V K Sasikala, the close-aide of late chief minister J Jayalalithaa, on Wednesday announced her decision to quit politics. “I have decided to step aside from politics to ensure that the golden rule of Amma (Jayalalithaa) prevails, I am praying hard to my sister whom I consider as god and every god I know,” Sasikala said in a two-page emotional statement. The announcement came on a day when the ruling AIADMK led by chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami and his deputy O Panneerselvam ruled out any tie-up with Sasikala and her nephew T T V Dhinakaran. The BJP, meanwhile, made it clear that it would not interfere in the internal affairs of the AIADMK.

Sasikala urged the “true followers of Jayalalithaa” to stay united and work for the continuance of the golden rule of former chief ministers M G Ramachandran and Jayalalithaa. Jayalalithaa’s wish was to see the party rule the state for more than 100 years, Sasikala said. “Cadres will have to work hard to prevent the evil force DMK from returning to power and ensure that the golden rule of Amma prevails,” she said, thanking party workers and well-wishers.

Seat talks tough task for AIADMK, DMK

Though filing nominations for the TN assembly polls is just10 days away, the AIADMK and the DMK camps seem to have made little headway in clinching a deal with potential allies. While the national parties — the BJP in the AIADMK camp and the Congress on the DMK side — took time off from the seat-sharing talks on Wednesday, smaller parties in both the camps, too, preferred to act tough. While the DMDK upped its ante on the AIADMK side, MDMK has convened a meeting of its high-level committee on Saturday to discuss DMK’s offer of a few seats. Another DMK ally, the VCK, too, was in no mood to return to the discussion table with the DMK. P 7

Sasikala’s decision aimed at uniting Jayalalithaa’s loyalists, says TTV

Reacting to Sasikala’s decision, AIADMK deputy coordinator K P Munusamy said he was happy to note that Sasikala remained loyal to Jayalalithaa. “But it is Dhinakaran, who is creating hurdles for the continuation of Jayalalithaa’s government in Tamil Nadu,” Munusamy said.

Dhinakaran said while his aunt’s decision saddened him, it was aimed at uniting Jayalalithaa’sloyalists.“Shewasworried that Amma’s followers were not united,” the AMMK leader said after a meeting with his aunt at her T Nagar residence. On February 8, while returning to Chennai, Sasikala told reporters that she would return to active politics.

“I urged her to try and do what she wanted (help Jayalalithaa’s government to return to power) by being inside and not by keeping away from politics. That’s why there was a delay in her releasing the statement,” Dhinakaran told reporters.

In her statement on Wednesday, Sasikala didn’t name the AIADMK or AMMK. “I am not hankering after any position, title or power. I will remain grateful to beloved cadres of Puratchi Thalaivi (revolutionary leader) and the people of Tamil Nadu,” she said.

Sasikala was released from Bengaluru prison in January after a four-year imprisonment in a disproportionate assets case. She was hospitalized for Covid-19.Afterherreleasefrom hospital and a two-week isolationperiod,shesetoutonalong journey by road on February 8 and reached Chennai the following day. “She was the one who ensured the continuation of Amma’s (Jayalalithaa’s) government by getting the MLAs to elect the present chief minister,” Dhinakaran said.

Dhinakaran said AMMK would go ahead and contest the assembly election. “Talks to form an alliance are on. We will announce it in due course . Meanwhile, the party will announce the candidate list on March 10,” Dhinakaran said, adding that he would contest the polls.

TNCCpresident K S Alagiri said Sasikala had “escaped the trap laid by BJP”, which wanted to take control of AIADMK by creating internal trouble. “Sasikala had enough experience in understanding politics and governance, having spent several years assisting Jayalalithaa. But she lacked the stature of a tall leader,” Alagiri said.

HDFC cuts interest rate to 6.75% for all amounts


HDFC cuts interest rate to 6.75% for all amounts

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Mumbai:04.03.2021 

The country’s largest housing finance company HDFC has cut interest rate on its home loans to 6.75% from 6.8%. HDFC has cut its retail prime lending rate by 5 basis points (100bps = 1 percentage point), which will bring down interest rates for existing borrowers too.

While SBI’s best rate is 5bps lower than HDFC, there are some categories where the latter matches SBI, as the private lender’s new rates are applicable for loans irrespective of the amount.

Speaking to TOI, HDFC MD Renu Sud Karnad said this was the best time for homebuyers as besides rates being at an alltime low, many state authorities have reduced stamp duties and reduced circle rates, which have an impact on stamp duty calculations. “Builders are willing to negotiate prices when they are approached by buyers. With demand picking up, my call to builders is that confidence is still to come in and they should refrain from trying to increase rates,” she said.

According to Karnad, HDFC has the best turnaround time in the industry and it is getting better due to use of technology. “We are able to process applications of even self-employed applicants within a couple of days.” She said the corporation was an early adopter of video KYC and straight-through processing of applications. Karnad said that while the pandemic has resulted in many homebuyers looking for an additional room, the demand for office space would not go away.

Convocation Notification


 

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Making the unfamiliar familiar

CITY CITY BANG BANG

Making the unfamiliar familiar

SANTOSH DESAI

03.03.2021 

How do we grasp new ideas? How do we bring into the realm of understanding what is hitherto unknown? The internet, for instance, is a completely new kind of experience for us. Nothing in the past prepared us for this boundless and user-generated resource teeming with knowledge, entertainment content and opportunities to connect with each other. How have we made sense of something whose scale and function is so vastly beyond our previous modes of knowledge and experience?

Language plays a key role. More precisely, metaphors help us make sense of the new by connecting with the old. The internet is brought alive to us through a host of metaphors from the natural and physical world. The internet is imagined in various forms — as a new world (cyberspace), as a highway (information superhighway), a web, a library, a village square, among many others. In each case, we are using a familiar template to shed light on aspects of the new. No one metaphor captures the entirety of the idea, but they also help us make sense of this new beast. The list of nature-inspired metaphors is much larger — we surf the net, we navigate using GPS, we talk of the cloud as a form of storage, we stream content, dip into data lakes, we fear viruses, worry about piracy, phishing and worms, we bookmark pages. The iconography uses familiar symbols like files, the trashcan and the hourglass.

Metaphors are to use Kenneth Burke’s memorable description ‘the thisness of a that and the thatness of a this’. They help render concepts of a new kind intelligible by relating them to things we already know. Almost invisibly, language shepherds us towards the new by inserting references that are familiar. We learn to see things and concepts that are unfamiliar in terms that make us feel that we understand them better.

The ability to bring to life abstract ideas by rendering them in terms that are familiar is a great advantage in many areas. Technical disciplines use metaphors all the time to render intelligible what is otherwise too obscure for lay audiences to grasp.

Metaphors do not confine themselves to new ideas alone. In a more general sense, they express one idea in terms of another. While it enriches our understanding of concepts in general, when we are able to see the interconnections between seemingly disparate ideas, it also pushes us towards a certain interpretation of a concept by almost invisibly slanting meaning in a particular direction.

In their seminal book, Metaphors We Live By, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson explore the way in which our communication is dependent on metaphors. We use these so unconsciously that they appear invisible. Among the several examples they use to illustrate our use of metaphors, a particularly striking one is about how we understand the argument as a concept.

The dominant metaphors used to describe arguments tend to imagine arguments-aswar. We attack the opponent’s position, defend our own, try and find chinks in their armour, win or lose ground, prepare ammunition to bolster our case. All of these implicitly locate the idea of an argument in the landscape of war. Lakoff and Johnson use this example and contrast it with the possibility as imagining ‘argumentas-dance’ instead. What if we used metaphors that spoke of tuning and balance, searching to find resonance, adjusting our positions constantly to find a common rhythm, being graceful and valuing the aesthetics of the process? Would the manner in which we argue change if the metaphors that described it were different?

The difficulty of communicating a context that shares no common reference points is brought out in a very unusual way by Robert Macfarlane in his fascinating book Underland, where he takes us through a journey across many different kinds of underground landscape- cave systems, underground sewage networks in cities, precipitous gorges and the like. But his most eerie experience is of travelling 1,500 feet underground to a place erected for disposing of nuclear waste. Built in a remote area in Finland with a staggering amount of reinforcement in construction so as to guard against all conceivable forms of natural disasters, the job of this site is to ensure that the toxic nuclear waste lies undisturbed for the next 1,00,000 years. This is a time frame that is impossible to conceive, given that most continuous civilisations have not lasted beyond a few thousand years. The vexing question is as to how does one communicate to such distant generations about the dangers associated with the toxic waste inside?

It is a problem with no easy solutions. There is no knowing what form of communication will be prevalent that far ahead in the future. No existing language will survive in any form that is recognisable. If we go back a mere 1,000 years, then English becomes an utterly incomprehensible language, so different it is from the version we know today. Visual symbols may not mean the same, and physical obstacles to entry might just heighten the thrill of discovery. The pharaohs tried their best to protect their resting places from future generations, but their very inaccessibility was a magnet to explorers and adventurers.

This problem underlines the difficulty we have when faced with an utterly unfamiliar context. Without some kind of conceptual bridge to the new, some rooting of the unfamiliar in the familiar, sense making becomes impossible. Which is probably why our language is so full of analogies and metaphors.

Perhaps there can be nothing really new. Any act of birth originates with an existing source. The new is then the old dislocated, transformed, distorted, magnified, displaced, reconstituted, reconceived. The new is contextual, the wrong thing in the right place, or a strange phenomenon in a familiar setting. Even if something were entirely new, we can comprehend it only in terms that are familiar to us. In that sense, we are constrained by the old and transfer this limitation to our grasp of the new. Meaning can only be built incrementally.

santosh365@gmail.com


Metaphors do not confine themselves to new ideas alone. In a more general sense, they express one idea in terms of another. While it enriches our understanding of concepts in general, when we are able to see the interconnections between seemingly disparate ideas, it also pushes us towards a certain interpretation of a concept by almost invisibly slanting meaning in a particular direction

Docs tell elderly to take jabs as they are most vulnerable


Docs tell elderly to take jabs as they are most vulnerable

55% Of Covid Deaths In Raj Among 60+

Intishab.Ali@timesgroup.com

Jaipur: 03.03.2021 

Vaccination drive for people above 60 years of age has come as a welcome relief as they are most vulnerable when it comes to fatalities from the virus. Acording to the health department, more than 1,500 people above the age of 60 years have died of Covid in the last one year, which comprises 55% of the total fatalities in the state.

Doctors treating elderly Covid patients have advised them to get the jab without delay.

Doctors, who have been treating Covid patients since the first case was reported, say the elderly population require more intensive care than the younger population.

“People aged 60 and above have low immunity to fight against most of the diseases. They also have associated comorbid condition such as high blood pressure, diabetes, heart problems, asthma and cancer and their immunity is compromised. There are statistics which show that over 55% Covid deaths in state are above 60 years. They are more prone to develop severe complication due to Covid, which is why the government also wants to give them protection on priority basis,” said Dr Sudhir Bhandari, head of the expert Covid-19 treatment group constituted by the state government and principal and controller, SMS Medical College.

Among elderly people, course of disease tends to be more severe resulting in higher mortality.

“It is the same disease, but when infected young population, it remains mild to moderate in majority of the cases. The associated comorbid conditions in elderly people is the major reason of complications due to Covid, which is why elderly population should get vaccinated against Covid to have protection,” said Dr Virendra Singh, member of state advisory committee on Covid.

Elderly people, for the past one year, have spent a restricted life following Covid protocol to ward off risk of getting infection. They have not travelled to other cities and other countries to stay safe. The doctors say that the time has come for the elderly to get the jab.

Village council sentences ‘witches’ to death in Jharkhand

Village council sentences ‘witches’ to death in Jharkhand

5 Of A Family Killed, 5-Yr-Old Not Spared

Jaideep Deogharia & KA Gupta TNN

Buruhatu-Amtoli Pahar (Jharkhand):

Mathura Topno had “failed” his village. In four months, Buruhatu-Amtoli Pahar had lost eight people. Cattle were dropping dead. As the village priest and healer, he had not been able to save them. The least he could do now was point them to the source of “evil”. So, on the morning of February 23, dragged to the centre of the Gram Sabha with some 100 people around him, Mathura was asked for names. He gave them random names.

The next morning, an elderly man found the bloodsoaked body of Josfina Topno, 55, just outside her mud house. Inside, on a wooden cot, was the body of her husband, Nikodim, 60. And in the next room, piled on top of one another were three more corpses — that of their son Vincent, 35, their daughter-in-law Silvanti, 30, and their grandson Albin,

5. A bright yellow and pink toy truck and a cart fashioned out of a box lay next to Albin’s lifeless body.

The family had been hacked to death with axes at night about 10 hours after the gram sabha where Mathura had given the names. “It was all done in 3 minutes,” one of the killers, Salim Topno, boasted later.

When TOI visited the village, there was a dreadful silence. Those who did agree to speak said “black magic” had disrupted their lives. “The villagers believed Sarna (the presiding animist deity) has been angered,” Birendra Surin, mukhiapati of Sarita, the panchayat under which the village lies, said. “We knew some action would be taken,” said another man. Rebuked by another in Mundari, the tribal language, he added, “But we didn’t know they would be killed.”

Dotted with Pathalgarhi, or stone slabs, in honour of the dead, Buruhatu-Amtoli Pahar has been home to 80-odd families and their ancestors for over 500 years. Most families practise animism, seven follow Christianity, and some are Hindu. The village has a middle school, the neighbouring Titih village has a high school and the panchayat has five missionary-run schools. But just one family in the village has studied beyond Class X. Most have small patches of land and others were migrant labourers, many of whom are back with limited prospects and little hope.

Among those who returned was Amrit Topno, 30, Nikodim’s nephew. Amrit and his wife Wilmani live in the house across Nikodim’s. When the bodies were taken for autopsy, Amrit offered to accompany and help the police. Days later, he was identified as one of the killers.

Amrit is among eight who have been arrested so far, along with Soma (25), Sunil (30), Philip (55), Phirangi (45), Sawan (34), Daniel (40) and Salim (25). Seven years ago, Salim had been arrested for killing two women after branding them as witches, tying their bodies to a bike, dragging them to the railway tracks that run by the village and leaving the corpses there.

“All of them were inebriated that night,” Suleman said. Barring Daniel and Philip, the rest are distant relatives of one another.

But why were Josfina and her family targeted? In the villages of Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Odisha — the places that record the most “witch-hunt” cases — something as innocuous as taking a bath at night or praying at night can attract accusations. As of now, there seem to be no answers.

Full report on www.toi.in

The family had been hacked to death with axes at night about 10 hours after the gram sabha where the village priest and healer had given the names

கார்த்திகையில் அணைந்த தீபம்!

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