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Music all the way
Go East
Fusion: British cooking style
Cup that cheers
Taslima releases 'The Reporter' at book fair
Jazz and Salsa together
Folk opera on London blasts to rock rural Bengal
Bula-di bends it like Beckham to fight AIDS
Wales University accreditated B-school opens campus in Kolkata
Olympic historian hopes an Indian turnaround in 2010 Commonwealth Games
Buildings as living heritage

Folk opera on London blasts to rock rural Bengal

London bombings are not just big time TV spectacles. Now Bengal's traditional folk drama performers would take the events in the form of an explosive new open air opera to the far-flung rural areas. Prompted by the recent bombings of London, Digbijojee Opera, a yatra (Bengal's famous open air folk drama) company of Kolkata is scripting a new play titled "Bisphorone Jolche London" (Explosion Scalds London) which would begin its tour of the rural heartland in October this year.

Yatra or high-decibel Bengali folk drama forms performed in the open grounds in the villages of Bengal since centuries are immensely popular in rural areas despite the growing reach of satellite television and cinema.

"We have conceptualised the play drawn by the recent London bombings because current affairs are a big draw in rural belts despite penetration of television," Digbijoee Opera playwright Haradhan Roy said. "Tony Blair, George Bush and al-Qaida terrorists are naturally the characters of this play rehearsal for which will begin on August 15. We will hold our first show in Gangajalghati in Bankura district on October `3," said Roy.

"The play would be exciting for its great special effects by artisans and lightmen from Chennai and Orissa. Audience would witness four stages and gasp at the sight of trains and double decker buses blowing up before their eyes," Roy boasted. "We are getting the bookings now and going by the trend it is going to be a big hit in rural Bengal," said Roy.

"If there are new developments in the investigation of the London bombings we will introduce new characters in the play and make it most current," he said.

Digbijoee Opera, which also coming up with a play on the tsunami disasters, had earlier produced plays on the World Trade Center bombings, the hanging of rape and murder convict Dhanonjoy Chatterjee, et al.

Bula-di bends it like Beckham to fight AIDS

Buladi, the animated middleclass housewife icon of HIV/AIDS awareness in West Bengal, is the new brand ambassador of community soccer. Soccer is the new weapon to raise awareness against the AIDS menace in Kolkata.

The governing body of soccer in the state – Indian Football Association – and the West Bengal State AIDS Prevention and Control Society (WBSACS)have got together in organising the `` Buladi Pada (locality) Football Tournament" that will be played among teams representing different localities of the metropolis.

The tournament, aimed at spreading the message of AIDS, starts on August 6 and will be concluding later in October. "The popularity of the sport in the state has inspired us to dovetail the AIDS awareness project with it,'' Suresh Kumar, WBSACS chief, told reporters. Trained counsellors appointed by the government body will be interacting with the spectators and the participants before every match. "By doing this we hope to involve a greater part of the society,'' said Mr. Kumar.

The tournament has named after the animated character ``Buladi'', who personifies the ongoing campaign in the state against AIDS.

The sate has 8400 known cases of AIDS, 35 per cent of which is in the city. "These figures we feel indicate the tip of the iceberg. There are many more undisclosed cases and that is why we want to make people aware of the disease,'' said Kumar.

IFA will be lending its technical support by designing the fixtures and appointing officials to conduct the matches, informed its secretary Subrata Dutta. The tournament will be held in two stages.

Wales University accreditated B-school opens campus in Kolkata

A British management degree validated by the second largest university of United Kingdom is now pepping up the B-school scene in this resurgent eastern metropolis of Kolkata.

Renowned British management school TASMAC (Training and Advanced Studies in Management and Communications Ltd.) announced the launch its Kolkata campus at Salt Lake offering aspiring students a validation of the course by the University of Wales, the second largest and one of the four federal universities (others being Oxford, Cambridge and London varsities) in the UK.

TASMAC is validated by the University of Wales to offer MBA programmes in Kolkata besides BA (Hons) in Business Administration.

"The degree certificate that a student receives after having studied in TASMAC, India is the same as that received by students studying within the University of Wales, UK," said TASMAC India managing director Dr. Giri Dua. "The course content of the programme is tailored for Indian needs and has been put together jointly by the University of Wales and TASMAC," said Dua. TASMAC began its Indian chapter in Mumbai in 1990 followed by Pune and Bangalore.

The one-year MBA course would be offered at 3000 pounds while for the BA course the cost of a student for three years is 4950 pounds.
"The price at which you attain the degrees is one sixth of what it would have cost a student who would travel to UK to take admission," Dua said.

"Most of our students go to the UK to pursue a Ph.D programme or go back to their family business. The rest get good placements here," Dua said.
"While we are starting the Kolkata campus with only 15 students now, we will enroll candidates who can demonstrate an ability to work well in a group setting. Our faculty would include visiting lecturers from the UK and the classes would be intensely interactive,"Dua said.

Olympic historian hopes an Indian turnaround in 2010 Commonwealth Games

The hosting of the 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi could be a turning point for India which fares miserably in the Olympics and sends more officials than sportspersons to this world sports carnival.

"The 2010 Commonwealth Games can be of historic significance for India which has chosen to ignore the Olympic movement while its neighbour China rose as one of the largest sports power in the Games in just two decades," said Olympic historian Prof. John MacAloon in Kolkata.

"Indian delegation to the Olympics is sizeable but not in proportion to the population. There are more officials than athletes," said John speaking at a panel discussion on "Good Governance in Sports" at the American Center.

"India's sports development is interwined with its political posturing since the days of Jawaharlal Nehru and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) and perhaps that is the reason why India is so unaccomplished and relatively disinterested in Olympics," said John.

Major Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore won the country's first individual Olympic silver medal at Athens in 2004 as the 34-year-old bettered the three individual bronze medals won for India by wrestler Khashaba Jadhav in 1952; tennis player Leander Paes in 1996; and women's weightlifter Karnam Malleswari in 2000. India's eight Olympic golds have all come in field hockey, the last at the western-boycotted Moscow Games in 1980.

Speaking as a panelist, former union minister and current chairman of Sports Commission, Indian Olympic Association (IOA), said India's allocation for sports development annually is not even Rs 500 crore as against two billion USD spent by China.

"Sports is a way of life in a country like Australia but it is no so in India. In India there is no professional management. It is a bureaucratic management in India and so professional management is a dark area," Deo said.

"What we have now is authority without responsibility and this won't do," said Deo who also offered hope of a better insurance policy for the sportspersons covering them when they are not in any competition or national coaching camps.

"We have governance by government and governance by sports bodies like IOA. But professional management should be universal," he opined.

Prof. Brian Stoddar, a sports researcher from Australia's la Trobe University said the sports commission in his country only increases the budget every year unlike India and when in the 1960s and 1970s the country fared poorly in Olympics they started making meaningful investment in sports.

Journalist and Star-Ananda executive producer Suman Chattopadhyay said the bane of Indian sports is the intrusion of politicians of every hue in the system as sports administrators.

"Good governance is not even an election issue in India. How come you expect it in sports? Politics, politicians and politicking are at the roots of the evil," he said


 

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