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Showing posts with label September 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label September 2012. Show all posts

Thursday, September 20, 2012

No computers no broadband = e-library


It seems the 'e' in the 'e-library' at Vidhana Soudha — inaugurated two months ago by none other than chief minister Jagadish Shettar — stands for 'empty' rather than 'electronic'. How else can you explain the fact that the library has no computers, not to mention a broadband connection.
The library, also inaugurated by the then governor TN Chaturvedi on March 3, 2006, was established to provide all the information our netas would need to actively participate in the debates in the assembly.
According to sources, the state government has spent more than `1 crore for the renovation and upgradation of the e-library. There is a provision to install 50 computers to enable the legislators to have access to government documents and the proceedings of the assembly. The authorities concerned have made arrangements to put up tables and chairs to accommodate 50 legislators at a time. However, not even a single computer has been installed at the e-library. “We have already sent a proposal for this purpose to the authorities concerned. We are expecting to attend a meeting on September 25 to discuss this issue,’’ said Anasuya Devagiri, chief librarian.
Sources have revealed that the department concerned was not able to install the computers since the e-library has no broadband facility. It has also been said that the department concerned had prepared e-mail addresses of all legislators more than a month ago but only a few had bothered to collect them. “There was a broadband facility but it was damaged while renovating this chamber. Officials from the e-governance department made a few visits but could not able to find a solution till now,’’ said an employee.
As of now, there are around 20 employees at the e-library. They do not have much to do. One can see the chairs meant for visitors always empty. “Not many people visit this library. A few legislators visited the library during the first two weeks of its inauguration. We can expect legislators to visit during the assembly session. We are yet to maintain a visitors register,’’ said another employee.
Om Prakash, secretary, Vidhana Soudha, said that all facilities would be made available as early as possible. “Efforts are being made to install computers and restore the broadband facility at the e-library within a few days,’’ said Prakash.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Kollam public library sings a different success tune

KOLLAM: As many traditional libraries die a slow death in the era of internet, Kollam public library is attracting more youngsters, especially those who are looking for a government job. 

Youngsters sitting in small groups and poring over study material is a common sight on the sprawling library campus. The success of thousands of its members in securing government jobs over a period of time stands testimony to the success of such groups. 

As the knowledge sharing sessions under the shades of large thickets grew in numbers, those who secured government jobs as a result of such combined efforts have decided to help the newcomers. 

"Three years ago we started a collective named Jubilant, to help the newcomers by providing them with books and magazines," says R B Vinodsecretary of Jubilant. "Now the collective has more than 200 members; all government servants. We donate the learning materials to the library to help the youngsters who are preparing for exams and interviews," he said. 

The collective has been contributing books worth lakhs to the library for the past two years. This year too, they have contributed books worth Rs 50,000 to the library. The Jubilant also plans to contribute modern reading aids like Kindle and other such devices to the library in the near future. 

According to Vinod, even students from outside the district visit the library regularly and take part in the learning sessions. 

"It is mostly students from financially poor backgrounds, who are unable to afford huge fees at coaching centers, depends on the library. Mission of this collective is to give a helping hand in the further development of the library and making the members available with all the modern resources," he said. 

Monday, September 17, 2012

Narendra Modi inaugurates e-library for lawyers


Press Trust of India / Ahmedabad September 16, 2012, 22:45
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi today inaugurated an e-library for lawyers which will make accessible various judgements of High Courts and the Supreme Court.
Inaugurating the e-library at a function organised by Bar Council of Gujarat (BCG) and the state government, Modi said the e-library was a major weapon to attain qualitative change in grievance redressal system and a powerful force of democracy.
Chairman of BCG Dilip Patel said the e-library inaugurated today was the first of its kind in the country which has made more than 7 lakh judgements from Supreme Court and various High Courts accessible through specially designed software.
The state government had provided Rs 2.22 crore for the logistics needed for the project, which includes PCs, printers, power back-ups installed in all offices of taluka level bar associations to access judgements and various law books, he said.

Upgraded Bira Memorial library inaugurated in Imphal


Imphal, September 15 2012: 
An upgraded library set-up in the memory of well-known communist leader Thokchom Bira has been inaugurated at Irawat Bhavan today on the occasion of the late communist leader's 86th birth anniversary.

The library inauguration cum birth anniversary celebration was attended by a number of State Communist party figures including ex-MLAs Ph Parijat, N Mangi, Dr M Nara and veteran party leader M Ibohal, and Sahitya Akademi Awardee N Kunjamohan.

The celebration was preceded with the offering of floral tribute at the portraits of Hijam Irabot and Th Bira, fondly referred as Biplabi Bira.

Speakers recounted Bira as a communist leader who dedicated himself and worked for the welfare of the common people.

The library was set-up and subsequently upgraded to fulfil Bira's dream for ensuring the common people had access to thought-provoking literatures.

State CPI leaders also pledged on the occasion to continuously work for the betterment of the society inspite of the party having no representative in the State assembly.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Time to commemorate: Historical facts about Tagore Library (Lucknow University)


Australia’s capital Canberra and Lucknow’s Tagore library (in Lucknow University) have one thing in common -- architectural design.


Walter Burley Griffin, an American, along with his wife Marion Mahony designed Canberra (after winning Canberra’s international design competition in 1911-12 and the Tagore library here.


He moved to Lucknow in 1935 and in February 1937, he succumbed to peritonitis and was buried at Nishatganj cemetery in Lucknow.
Now, on the occasion of Canberra’s centenary, Griffin’s Canberra-Lucknow contribution will be commemorated this month and it is expected that this commemoration ceremony would give this talented couple a rightful place in the history of these two magnificent capital cities.
As part of the commemoration ceremony here, a small delegation is coming to Lucknow from Australia for this purpose, according to an email to Hindustan Times by Dr David Headon, history and heritage adviser for the centenary celebrations of Canberra and adviser to senator Kate Lundy, minister for sports and multicultural affairs, Australia.
Lucknow and Canberra will also celebrate Griffin’s life through a seminar entitled “Capital Vision from the Imagine to the Real” on September 26.
The seminar is being organised by the Institute of Urban Design, India and hosted by the Faculty of Architecture, Gautam Buddh Technical University (GBTU).
As part of the ceremony, water from Lake Walter Burley Griffin will be sprinkled on his grave at Nishatganj cemetery here, says Amrita Dass, director, Institute of Career Studies.
The Lucknow University website mentions that the plan of Tagore library building was prepared by Mr Griffin, a noted architect, and was explained in detail to members of the library committee on December 10, 1935.
The model for the two-storied building was placed in the old library for students and staff to make suggestions for improvement or innovation in the plan.
However, there was inordinate delay in approving the plan. Griffin died in the meantime.
The foundation stone of the new building (present building) was laid by the then chancellor in March 1937 but the start of construction took time.
After the death of Griffin, one Mr Narwekar was assigned the responsibility for the architectural portion and supervision of the work on payment of a sum of Rs. 2,000.
The Griffins also designed the spectacular pavilions of the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh) agricultural exhibition held in Lucknow in 1937.
Other important landscape architecture plans included a new campus for the University of Lucknow and a garden for its library.
The Griffins set up an architectural firm in Lucknow and “produced more than 50 projects between November 1935 and February 1937 ranging from private dwellings, gardens and public edifices to housing projects and suburban communities.”
The Bir Bhan Bhatia house is “one of the finest dwellings the couple produced anywhere.”
According to professor Christopher Vernon of the University of Western Australia, “Walter Burley Griffin grew quickly enchanted with the ‘city of gardens’,” and “likened Lucknow’s skyline to a ‘perfect Arabian night’s dream of white domes and minarets’.”

Pune Varsity students demand wi-fi on campus


PUNE: Several students of the University of Pune took out a protest march to the vice-chancellor's office on Tuesday demanding wi-fi facility on the varsity campus, proper chairs at the Jaykar Library and non-privatisation of the on-campus refectory among others. The students have threatened to go on a fast if their demands were not met.
Amol Saravde, who led the march said, "If the refectory (dining room) is run by a private firm, it will be impossible to afford its rates. Many students come from outside Pune and ideally, the food must be subsidised."
The students demanded that the university must not make it mandatory for students to become members of the refectory. The students also said that the 8 pm deadline for female students at the varsity hostel must also be removed.
Saravde said, "Outstation students do not have a home and their only place for self-study is the Jaykar library. However, the chairs in the library are in a very sorry state. This is a very basic demand and the university must make sure that the chairs are replaced. We are not asking for executive chairs but the university can easily afford decent chairs."
A delegation of this group later met vice-chancellor Wasudev N Gade and apprised him of their problems. Gade assured them that something would be done. "We will study the problems of the students and solve them at the earliest," he said.

Did Madras University overlook lapses in PhD admission to staff?


There seem to be no end to controversies in the University of Madras. The administration of the university is now under fire for overlooking serious lapses in the admission of a library staff to a PhD programme without the concurrence of the academic department concerned.
Repeated flagging of the issue by senior professors, sources claim, have yielded no results and the synopsis submitted by the candidate has been accepted without going into accusation of guidelines violation.
The matter pertains to one S Perumal, a staff of the university library. In 2009, Perumal had allegedly applied for admission to a doctoral programme in Library and Information Science (LIS). While there is a dedicated academic teaching department with a head for this subject, Perumal’s application, senior professors claim, was routed through the library of the university. Curiously, the guide of Perumal for the programme is K Kaliyaperumal, who is now the librarian in-charge.
According to sources, the admission committee that went into Perumal’s application did not have the HoD of LIS as a member, which is mandatory as per statutes.  When the recommendation for admission of the candidate was made, a note sent to the department in March 2010 raised questions on why it was not forwarded through the HoD.
This issue was then taken up with the Board of Research Studies (BoRS) and the varsity Syndicate, which ruled that all applications for doctoral programmes in library science have to go through the department.
But, even after the decision, the administration allegedly failed to act on Perumal’s candidature.
A Syndicate member said a doctoral committee to scrutinise the synopsis of Perumal’s thesis was then formed without having the HoD of the department as member, which was again mandatory.
Documents accessed by Express from the registrar’s office reveal the department had clearly stated that Perumal had neither submitted his application nor had joined the department as a part-time PhD candidate. There was no record of his registration nor of any transaction, including fee payment. Hence, an inquiry was deemed necessary.
“In all other subjects, the fee payment is made through the department only because it has to be audited. How can this case alone be different? Even during the former librarian’s tenure, candidates were processed only through the department and not the library,” said a former senior Senate member.
When contacted, Kaliyaperumal said all norms had been followed in the instance, “The library is a teaching department according to UGC norms. The resolution was passed after the admission of the candidate and so it is not applicable to this case. All rules have been duly followed,” he said.
Source:Indian Express

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Manipur needs more libraries- MALA


IMPHAL, September 10: “Manipur needs more libraries, both private as well as public as libraries play an important role in making a better society,” asserted general secretary, MALA Dr Ch Ibohal Singh.
He was speaking at the Atulchandra Memorial Lecture-2012 in commemoration of the 115th Birth anniversary of Dr H Atulchandra Singh founder of Canchipur High School, one of the oldest schools of the state.
The function was organized by the Manipur Library Association, MALA and the Canchipur High School at the school premises.
Dr H Atulchandra Singh, an educationist had also co-founded the Manipur Club in 1927 which was later changed into the Jubabati Memorial Library in 1933.
In his welcome address, Dr Ch Ibohal continued, “Libraries play an important role in rendering quality education in the state”.
Elaborating on the life of Dr H Atulchandra Singh, he said that Atul is one of the pioneer educationists of the state. Atulchandra was not just an educationist but a champion of woman’s struggle during his lifetime, he said. He had also founded a polytechnic in Manipur for the uplift of women in those days.
A speaker Dr T Tomba Singh lamented that there is no library committee in the state, and there has been no effort from anywhere to establish one.
He continued that 5 percent of a school’s budget should be used in developing the school’s library.
Manipur University, Department of Library and Information Science, HOD, Dr Th Purnima Devi said librarians were once considered as a clerical job, however with the invasion of new technologies, the job of a librarian has managed to escape from the four walls of his library.
She further lauded Dr H Atulchandra Singh for his contribution to the state and in promotion of libraries in the state.
Criticising the current trend of sending children to private tuitions, she said, it has become a fashion statement in the state. She continued that in order to bring an end to this trend, the teachers have an important role. According to a new UGC norm, any candidate for a teacher should have a specific past experience of doing community service, she added.
She concluded her speech with an appeal to cultivate reading habits among the people of the state.
Meanwhile, a book of poems, “Napu Machu gi Kakcheng” written by LC Lalhanba was also released during the function.
In his review of the book, CI College, Bishnupur Principal (retd) and renowned critic Salam Tomba Singh said Lalhanba is a modern poet.
“He has tried to contain all the scenarios of Manipur in his book of poems and did so with success.”
The presentation of the poems in the book is well balanced. The poet has a feel of the poetic pain, he concluded.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Digital Braille library in Mysore soon


A digital Braille library will come up in the city shortly. Talks have been held in this regard with the National Association for the Blind, where the required equipment will be provided by the state and infrastructure by an NGO, said District Minister S A Ramdas.
Digital books will be printed for the visually-impaired and libraries set up on the lines of digital libraries of universities and colleges. He was speaking after distributing aids to 1,128 differently- abled persons of Mysore district at the Karanth Ranga Mandira at Karnataka Exhibition Grounds on Sunday.
 The event was organised by the Pandit Deen Dayal Institute for the Physically Handicapped of New Delhi, in collaboration with the district administration, District Disability Rehabilitation Centre and the Indian Red Cross Society, Mysore.
 Stating that houses will be distributed to 297 differently- abled persons by next year under the housing policy, he added that housing cards will be distributed on September 25. The differently-abled who are residing in rented houses can avail of the benefits.

Mukherjee's priority - to return Rashtrapati Bhavan library to pristine glory


New Delhi: Books, books and more books - over 15,000 of them stacked in wooden and steel almirahs, gathering dust and grime due to disuse and neglect for over 20 years in one of the corners of Rashtrapati Bhavan, the magnificent presidential house. But all that is set to change. 
President Pranab Mukherjee, who assumed charge as the 13th constitutional head July 25, is known to be a bibliophile who reads till late in the night. Now the "dreary" library, which faces the Rashtrapati Bavan forecourt and provides a grand view of both the South and North Blocks, as well as of Raisina Hill and the magnificent boulevard stretching three kilometres to the India Gate martyrs' memorial, is all set for a facelift. 
"The President is very fond of books and loves to read. He wants to visit the library and spend sometime here," Venu Rajamony, the President's press secretary, told a news agency. 
The original library, which started functioning in 1950, had a huge wooden desk at the center, with beautiful paintings adorning its walls. A window on top allowed sunlight inside the room, making the marble floor glisten. Right now, the window is covered with a cloth. 
There are over 15,000 books in the library - some of them from the time the British Viceroy lived in this 340-room red standstone mansion. With cupboards filling up the room and books everywhere, it now looks more like a college library than a library of Rashtrapati Bhavan. 
As books are gifted to the president, the library over the years got crammed with them, making the authorities opt for wooden almirahs to house them. Soon, these were not enough and steel almirahs were added, and began to line up the corridor. But these too filled up. 
Seeing the state of the library, President Mukherjee expressed his wish to restore it to its original pristine glory of the 1950 era.  The librarian now has a huge task ahead. 
To begin with, old photographs were unearthed to see how the original library looked. Now, the effort is to replicate the original one. 
The steel almirahs have already been removed from the corridor, while the wooden ones will be moved out once the books are sorted, documented and stacked properly. 

At the moment, piles of books are lying everywhere. 
"Our aim is simple - first we will clean up the space, assess the books and then decide how best to utilize the library. We haven't decided yet, but we could invite scholars and individuals to the library after it's brought back to its original 1950 look," Rajamony told the agency. 
"Right now, we are clearing the furniture. Documenting the books, separating the historical books. We plan to keep only those that are historically relevant," he added. 

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Hmar Students’ Association to set up libraries in Hmar Hills in Mizoram


Aizawl/Shillong (mizonews.net): The Hmar Students’ Association, General HQ’s Education Board has decided to set up village libraries in Hmar Hills from 2013. a  decision to this effect was taken during the board’s meeting on September 2 herein Shillong. The meeting was led by the board’s chairman Dr. John H. Pulamte and General HQ president Lalthlamuana Hmar also took part in the proceedings.
“HSA libraries will be set up in villages for the benefit of the student community and book lovers. The first such library will come up in Parbung village (in Hmar Hills in Manipur),” HSA statement said.

Literary treasures under threat at India's oldest library


One of India's oldest libraries, which was established by the British in the 19th century and contains several priceless works of literature, is facing closure after the government withdrew funding.
Hardayal Library in Delhi houses one of the country's finest collection of rare antiquarian books, including a 1676 print of Sir Walter Raleigh'sHistory of the World, a series of early British Indian travelogues and hand-written and gold illuminated translations of Hindu and Muslim religious works.
The collection is potentially worth millions, with 8,000 rare books out of a stock of 170,000.
It was established in 1862 as a book club for British officials who brought their own prized editions with them from home, and was kept in the Lawrence Institute in Delhi's town hall. In 1912 it became the Hardinge Library, named after the British viceroy, and was renamed the Hardayal after independence.
Today the building is dilapidated, its books are caked in dust and their musty pages are slowly disintegrating in rooms without air-conditioning.
Old cane office chairs and rusty metal desks are piled high throughout what was once a sweeping verandah. Stray kittens prowl the discoloured marble floor and a domed room on the roof terrace is squatted on by the watchman. Madhukar Rao, the chief librarian, said he was not allowed to discuss the government's decision to withdraw funds, but voiced his concerns for its readers and staff as he gave The Daily Telegraph a tour of his rarest volumes.
For the 300 students who work in its two reading rooms it is a rare sanctuary from Delhi's chaos. Yet the staff who serve them have not been paid for six months. "The cost of living is so high, how will they survive?" asked Mr Rao.
His colleagues nodded in agreement as they displayed their most treasured editions: Relation of Some Years by Travaile Begvenne, printed in 1634, Voyages Around the World by John Francis from 1705, and a series of London Surveys from 1754. There is a Koran written by the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb and a translation of the Mahabharata, a Hindu religious epic, in Persian by the Islamic scholar Abul Faizi. It is illuminated in gold.
Many of the most valuable texts are deteriorating fast, in part because of poor preservation. The pages of Sir Walter Raleigh's history are protected by acetate sheets. "Each of these books could be worth thousands of pounds if they were in decent condition. A wealthy individual or the government should make sure it's preserved," said Peter Harrington, a London antiquarian books dealer.
Meena Agarwal, the mayor of the North Delhi Municipal Corporation, said: "We have limited funds for such activities and the North Delhi Municipal Corporation cannot grant funds on its own. The government has to issue orders."
A campaign to save the library has been launched with the support of some of India's leading writers and scholars, including the critic and author Nilanjana Roy and the academic S Irfan Habib, who used it in the 1980s for research.
The library was set up with donations from Indian royalty, including the Begum Sahiba of Bhopal as a tribute to Lord Hardinge after he survived an assassination attempt when riding an elephant. The attack was led by the freedom fighter Lala Hardayal, after whom the library is now named.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Gauhati Commerce College to get digital library



Rs.10 crore sanctioned for the digital library will allow students to access e-journals and e-books online by just a click of the mouse.

Guwahati: The Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER) has sanctioned Rs. 10 crore for setting up a digital library at the 50-year-old Gauhati Commerce College here. The college had submitted the proposal to set up the digital library to the ministry in 2010 and it received its sanction recently. The state’s public works department is now preparing a detailed project report for developing the infrastructure needed to build the first digital library of a college in the state.

         Gauhati Commerce College librarian Utpal Sarma said that the digital library would incorporate internet gateway connectivity which would allow students and researchers to access e-journals, e-books and other necessary information online. “Setting up of the digital library will have many advantages. First, we will prepare a computer database of all books currently in our library, which will allow students to locate a book by a click of the mouse. Secondly, we will also provide them access to many e-journals which students can use for downloading articles for academic and research purposes,” Mr. Sarma said. He added that the digital infrastructure for the library would include LAN terminals, VSAT server and an open source software.

       “We are planning to incorporate Informatics, an open source software and e-journal provider. Informatics offers access to one billion e-books and e-journals. Students will be able to read e-books, e-journals and download them for use by making an online payment of just $2. It will be different from accessing the articles online as one is normally not able to download articles from journals because of copyright issues,” Mr. Sarma added.  The digital library is also planning to get a membership of The American Library of the Congress which will allow students to browse, surf, download and read any content available through the library, according to other college sources.

     Set up in 1962, Gauhati Commerce College offers courses in business and commerce. It also started a Centre of Management Studies in 2010 and now enrolls students in its BBA and MBA programs as well.

Wiley Author Workshop in collaboration with Central Library, Jawaharlal Nehru University 20th September at 2.00 pm


Dear Colleague,

As you must be aware that there is an overwhelming pressure for academics to publish constantly to further or sustain a career. The competitive environment further imposes increasing pressure to publish their work frequently. 

Wiley in collaboration with Jawaharlal Nehru University is organizing an author Workshop on Scholarly Publishing to be held at Jawaharlal Nehru University Convention Center (Auditorium-II) on 20th September, 2012 at 1.30 P.M

This workshop will help participants gain insight on the types of academic publications available, the processes involved in getting their work published, and understand the expectations, which the editors have from authors and their work. Participants will leave this seminar with an in-depth knowledge of how to pitch and position their papers and identify niche publications best suited to meet their needs. 

We are pleased to invite you to attend this workshop at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Kindly fill in the registration form http://www.jnu.ac.in/Library/workshops.htm and send it back on or before 15th September 2012. 

Workshop Agenda

2:15 PM -2:45 PM: -Welcome Address
Dr. Ramesh C. Gaur - University Librarian, JNU

Inaugural Address-:- Dean- SSS, JNU

Welcome & Introduction to Wiley-Blackwell:- Mr. Vikas Gupta - Managing Director, Wiley India

2:45 PM - 03:00 PM
Why publish? How to choose your journal wisely:-  Gary C. Schoenwolf

3:30 PM – 3:45 PM
TEA

03:45 PM- 4:30 PM
How to write clearly? :-  Kurt H. Albertine

4:30 PM – 5:00 PM
What’s ethical conduct in publishing? :- Gary C. Schoenwolf / Kurt H. Albertine

5:00 PM onwards 
Q&A

For more information write to us at rcgaur66@gmail.com

Registration details are also available on JNU Library URLhttp://www.jnu.ac.in/Library/workshops.htm. 

Please fee free to circulate this to Faculty / Researchers / students in your school.

Regards,

Ramesh

**************************************
Dr. Ramesh C Gaur
PGDCA, MLISc,Ph.D. Fulbright Scholar (Virginia Tech, USA)
University Librarian
Jawaharlal Nehru University(JNU)
New Meharuli Road, New Delhi - 110067
Tele +91-11-26742605, 26704551
Fax : +91-11-26741603
URL: www.jnu.ac.in

Proposal Received From NE States For Archives And Museums


The Minister for Culture and Housing & Urban Poverty Alleviation Kumari Selja has said that State-wise details of proposals received from North East States under the Scheme of “Setting up, Promotion and Strengthening of Regional and Local Museums” and the Scheme of “Financial Assistance to States/UT Archival Repositories, Government Libraries and Museums, 2012-13” are given in the Annexure.

·         State-wise status in respect of proposals received from North-East Region under the scheme of 'Setting up, Promotion and Strengthening of Regional & Local Museums"
                         
·         State-wise status in respect of proposal received from North-East Region under the scheme of “Financial Assistance to States / UT Archival Repositories, Government Libraries and Museums, 2012-13 "
 
Source | www.pib.nic.in

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Schools with no playground and library will not be approved: Congress


AHMEDABAD: Gujarat Congress leaders, announcing their policy on sports in Gujarat. The leaders announced that if the Congress was voted to power, no school will be granted sanction without playgrounds and library.
At present, the Chief Minister of Gujarat is cheating youth of Gujarat under the guise of his stunts labeled with Khel Mahakumbh under the ridiculous slogan "Play Gujarat, Win Gujarat".
GPCC president Arjun Modhwadia said that out of total 80 sportspersons from India participated in London Olympics, 20 were from Haryana State and out of total 6 medals begged by India, 4 were to the Haryana's sportspersons.
Following the Haryana Pattern, centers will be established at particular cities for different sports and world-level sportsmen will be trained through comprehensive training. No sanction will be given to new schools without playground and library.
Sports complexes will be established at Taluka-level for indoor and outdoor games. "Gujarat Olympic Academy" will be established for motivating the youth of Gujarat for participating and competing in national and international sports events. Coaches from abroad and from within the country in addition to the infrastructure facilities would be made
available.
READ MORE NEWS AT: TIMES OF INDIA


XLRI students to upgrade digital library soon

JAMSHEDPUR: Encouraged by the overwhelming response to the digital library in the remote Janumdih village of Potka block in the district, the general management programme (GMP) students of XLRI have announced upgradation of the library.

With near full capacity attendance of the young villagers, who are not only reading the books but also spending quality time surfing internet on the computer donated by the XLRI students, the organizers intend to upgrade the library with an additional collection of books. "We plan to add to the existing collection of books in the library soon," said Himanshu Singh, member of the XLRI team that together with the city-based NGO, Kalamandir opened the library and installed the computer with internet and webcam facility, earlier this month.
Singh said the digital library and the computer system, currently maintained by a local computer literate youth, Satyaji Barui, will be shifted to a nearby location in the same village. It will then be upgraded with new and interesting features. The library boasts of over 500 books in Hindi, English and Bengali.
The NGO and the XLRI team had zeroed in on Janmudih village once they were convinced that this village was most deserving of a proper library. "During our initial interactions with the local villagers, we had come across an elderly man, village pradhan, Manu Singh Sardar, who had shared with us how for several years he had been planning to open a library in the village," a member of the XLRI team said.
Deepak Suri, Devesh Thakur, Gaurav Sharma, Mayank Gupta, Ravjit Kokardekar, Mandar Buddhikot, Tanveer Anwar and Paul Jacob, were part of the team that worked on the successful implementation of the sustainable social project.
"Though this is part of our curriculum but it also gives us immense joy to see the villagers happy. With the use of Internet and books available in the library, they would gain so much knowledge with such ease," Singh said.
READ MORE NEWS AT:  TIMES OF INDIA

E-books, e-library - for your reading pleasure


E-books, e-library - for your reading pleasure
E-books, e-library - for your reading pleasure (Thinkstock photos/Getty Images)
An online library that also offers a pick-up and drop facility for books, getting to browse through various language newspapers at one site, or mastering the intricacies of math and science at the click of a mouse - welcome to the exciting world of e-books that beckons at the Delhi Book Fair. 

The Sep 1-9 Delhi Book Fair is focussing this year on e-books and e-publishing, and visitors at the fair can now purchase books online. 

The online library hookedonbook.com offersreaders thousands of titles to choose from and also provides pickup and drop of the books. 
Another site, readwhere.com, allows readers to browse through their choice of newspapers,comics and magazines and one can also purchase digitized books online. 
Both these e-sites are another innovative venture - meritnation.com - that provides online teaching material to students from Classes 1-12. The online tutorial has simply written texts, videos and cartoons to make the chapters easy, as well as weekly tests and a forum for asking questions. 
Vikram Khosla, the owner of hookedonbook.com, said he has 40,000 titles in his collection. 
"Subscribers can browse through the collection and list their 10 preferred titles. We will get their top favourite book delivered at their doorstep," Khosla told us. 
Once the person has finished reading, a call or a mail to the site will get a man to pick up the book. "While coming to pick up the book our man will bring along the next book in the subscribers' list," added Khosla. 
How will they ensure books remain in good condition? 
"Our books will be checked and the subscriber will be asked to sign on a slip of paper before the book is given to him." 
The rates begin from a starter plan of Rs.200 a month, for two books per month, and goes up to Rs.1,000 per month for unlimited number of books to be rented in a month. 
Khosla said he hit upon the idea when his daughters, who used to frequent libraries in the US, "started buying books after coming to India and realized there are very few libraries here". 
Those living outside Delhi can also subscribe. Their books will be couriered by Fedex, he added. 
Khosla is also planning to set up leisure reading rooms in south Delhi's Saket area soon, equipped "with bean bags, soft music, and light coffee - where people, including kids, can spend hours enjoying the reading experience". 
The online tutorials site, meritnation.com, is a venture by naukri
"We provide all study material online, including through visuals and diagrams," Priti Vajpayee, an official of the site, told us. 
Students can also post their queries online and an expert answers their query. 
"We also host live tests so that students are well prepared," said Vajpayee, adding the site gets "7,000 sign-ins a day". 
The e-tutorials cost Rs.2,200 for a year for two subjects, while a package of all the subjects costs Rs.4,500 a year. Tutorials for attempting the IIT-JEE engineering exams cost Rs.14,000 a year. 
Another interesting site - readwhere.com - offers readers a whole array of vernacular language newspapers, magazines and comics. 
It also allows booksellers to go for e-publishing of their books and has an online bookstore from which readers can order books online. 
"Ours is a free site where readers can access newspapers and magazines," said Arun Nair, an official for the managers of the site. 
"Our focus is getting various language newspapers. We sell e-books too," Nair told us. 
He said the site had developed a software that would prevent copying of paid content. "An e-book can be accessed by the buyer but not downloaded," said Nair. 
The buyer can save the e-book in an app memory, which could be accessed without any internet even while travelling.
Read More News at:  Times of India

Hard times for 19th century library of over 8,000 rare books


NEW DELHI: In the days of the Raj, when the English aristocracy travelled to India in the 18th and 19th centuries, they would often occupy themselves with books during the long sea journeys that could last over a month. Bulky tomes with heavy subjects were, evidently, a popular option. Close to 8,000 such books, donated by the British travelers, are currently housed in a corner of Chandni Chowk at the Hardayal Municipal Public Library, among the oldest in the city.
Called the "rare books collection" they include a 1677 edition of Sir Walter Raleigh's History of the World and a Herodotus volume in the original Greek from 1826. But these books, like the library, are currently facing a threat. It has been four months since the library received salaries for its staff, let alone development funds. (See: 'We will have to shut down the newspaper section if we don't receive funds')

The rare books are kept under lock and key in iron vaults that are neither weather-proof, nor fire-proof. The pages of particularly brittle books are individually laminated. As for gaining access to a catalogue of these books, it necessarily involves a trek to Chandni Chowk and a classic cobwebs-in-your-hair procedure of going through physical records that will most certainly leave you with dusty fingers. The library is yet to see computerization.
Located close to the Chandni Chowk Police Station, the library has close to 1,200 members and gets about 700 visitors a day, library officials say. The library was instituted by the British in 1862, when it was called the Institute Library. In 1916 it was shifted to the current building and renamed Hardinge Municipal Public Library. It was only in 1970 that the "Hardinge" was replaced with "Hardayal". In December 1912, freedom fighter Lala Hardayalhad flung a bomb at Lord Hardinge's elephant procession. Ironically, the present building was built with contributions with influential Indian individuals and institutions of the time to commemorate Lord Hardinge's escape from that attack.
And then, even in the general stacks, history has a way of sneaking up on you. On a recent visit, TOI discovered a dust-laden, moth-eaten, yellowed copy of Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Ishmael. One of the last few pages bore the inscription "Printed for the Author By WilliamClowes & Sons Limited, London and Beccles". It is an 1884 author's edition.
The building, nearly a century old, preserves the tall arches, wooden spiral staircases and tall doors. A precarious, narrow iron staircase leads to the first floor that houses books in Hindi and English. Flooded with natural light during the day, you'd need to watch your step walking on the frail, creaky, plywood floor. British books on Indian and Roman history, or books in Hindi about homoeopathy, the library has most things covered in the 1,70,000 books it houses.
The reading rooms of the library underwent a renovation two years ago. Open to all from 8 am to 10 pm, it is particularly popular for its newspapers. During the day, it is invariably populated with young students consulting their books, punching away at their calculators and scribbling in their notebooks. "This is where I prepared for my M.A. and B.Ed exams. When I became a teacher, I would send my students here," says Yashpal Arya, the honorary secretary of the library. Currently it is difficult to say whether the library will survive. Even the various memos and letters submitted to government offices by the staff bear an ominous title enquiring for the "fate" of the library. There's hardly any going by the book right now.
'We will have to shut down the newspaper section if we don't receive funds'

It has been four months since the staff of the Hardayal Municipal Public Librarywas paid its salary. With the trifurcation of the MCD earlier this year, there was initially some confusion over the jurisdiction of this library with 31 branches across the city. The Chandni Chowk region, where the central library and the head office are, falls under the North Delhi Municipal Corporation. The official NDMC budget estimate lists "Grant-in-aid toHardayal Mpl. Public Library" as Rs. 3 crore for 2012-13.

Honorary Secretary of the library Yashpal Arya says he will have to shut down the newspapers section of the library by next month if he does not receive funds. The HMPL's newspapers section that subscribes to 31 newspapers from the English, Hindi and Urdu press, is gratis and open to all. "There are so many students who have done their PhDs from here. I only have hope until the end of August. I don't know how things will function beyond that," says Arya.
The library staff submitted a memo to Chief Minister Sheila Dixit on August 3 asking for release of provisional funds for salaries and other expenses. A copy of the memo, bearing the CM's handwritten note to NDMC commissioner PK Gupta is with the TOI.
"There are some audit problems. We are looking into it," said Gupta when last contacted. Meanwhile, the staff continues to scratch their wallets. "My son just joined college. I had to take a loan to submit his fees. It has been four months! How will we run our homes?" says a senior library official from Chandni Chowk.
Read More News at:  Times of India