02/KWD /OFLN of 2020 - 21 for for Preparation for Intending Bidders Preparation of Formal Aggrement Only
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Table of Contents
Table of Contents 01. INTERNATIONAL NEWS 02. NATIONAL NEWS 03. SPORTS 04. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 05. OBITUARY 06. APPOINTMENTS AND RESIGNATIONS 07. IMPORTANT DAYS 08. SUMMITS AND MOU’S 09. AWARDS AND RECOGNITION 10. RANKING 11. BOOKS AND AUTHORS 12. BANKING AND ECONOMY 64, Kingsway Camp (Mall Road) Near GTB Nagar Metro Station. Gate No. 3 Delhi-9 1 Ph.: 011-45210004, 9555695557 INTERNATIONAL NEWS Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte resigns Italian Prime Minister, Giuseppe Conte resigned after losing his Senate majority, plunging the country into political uncertainty just as it’s battling the pandemic and a recession. He tendered his resignation to President Sergio Mattarella, the ultimate arbiter of Italian political crises, who invited him to stay on in a caretaker capacity pending discussions on what happens next. Italy was the first European country to face the full force of the Covid-19 pandemic and has since suffered badly, with the economy plunged into recession and deaths still rising by around 400 a day. Parts of the country remain under partial lockdown, the vaccination programme has slowed and a deadline is looming to agree on plans to spend billions of euros in European Union recovery funds. Kaja Kallas to become Estonia’s first female prime minister Kaja Kallas, the leader of the Reform Party will become Estonia’s first female prime minister. The Reform Party, led by Kallas, won the 2019 parliamentary election in Estonia with 34 MPs in the country’s 101-seat parliament, Riigikogu. Estonia would thus currently become the only country in the world where both the president Kersti Kaljulaid and the prime minister are women. -
Hindi Theater Is Not Seen in Any Other Theatre
NATYA SHODH SANSTHAN DISCUSSION ON HINDI THEATRE FROM THE COLLECTIONS OF NATYA SHODH SANSTHAN AUDIO LIBRARY THE PRESENT SCENARIO OF HINDI THEATRE IN CALCUTTA ON th 15 May 1983 AT NATYA SHODH SANSTHAN PARTICIPANTS PRATIBHA AGRAWAL, SAMIK BANDYOPADHYAY, SHIV KUMAR JOSHI, SHYAMANAND JALAN, MANAMOHON THAKORE SHEO KUMAR JHUNJHUNWALA, SWRAN CHOWDHURY, TAPAS SEN, BIMAL LATH, GAYANWATI LATH, SURESH DUTT, PRAMOD SHROFF NATYA SHODH SANSTHAN EE 8, SECTOR 2, SALT LAKE, KOLKATA 91 MAIL : [email protected] Phone (033)23217667 1 NATYA SHODH SANSTHAN Pratibha Agrawal We are recording the discussion on “The present scenario of the Hindi Theatre in Calcutta”. The participants include – Kishen Kumar, Shymanand Jalan, Shiv Kumar Joshi, Shiv Kumar Jhunjhunwala, Manamohan Thakore1, Samik Banerjee, Dharani Ghosh, Usha Ganguly2 and Bimal Lath. We welcome all of you on behalf of Natya Shodh Sansthan. For quite some time we, the actors, directors, critics and the members of the audience have been appreciating and at the same time complaining about the plays that are being staged in Calcutta in the languages that are being practiced in Calcutta, be it in Hindi, English, Bangla or any other language. We felt that if we, the practitioners should sit down and talk about the various issues that are bothering us, we may be able to solve some of the problems and several issues may be resolved. Often it so happens that the artists take one side and the critics-audience occupies the other. There is a clear division – one group which creates and the other who criticizes. Many a time this proves to be useful and necessary as well. -
Setting the Stage: a Materialist Semiotic Analysis Of
SETTING THE STAGE: A MATERIALIST SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY BENGALI GROUP THEATRE FROM KOLKATA, INDIA by ARNAB BANERJI (Under the Direction of Farley Richmond) ABSTRACT This dissertation studies select performance examples from various group theatre companies in Kolkata, India during a fieldwork conducted in Kolkata between August 2012 and July 2013 using the materialist semiotic performance analysis. Research into Bengali group theatre has overlooked the effect of the conditions of production and reception on meaning making in theatre. Extant research focuses on the history of the group theatre, individuals, groups, and the socially conscious and political nature of this theatre. The unique nature of this theatre culture (or any other theatre culture) can only be understood fully if the conditions within which such theatre is produced and received studied along with the performance event itself. This dissertation is an attempt to fill this lacuna in Bengali group theatre scholarship. Materialist semiotic performance analysis serves as the theoretical framework for this study. The materialist semiotic performance analysis is a theoretical tool that examines the theatre event by locating it within definite material conditions of production and reception like organization, funding, training, availability of spaces and the public discourse on theatre. The data presented in this dissertation was gathered in Kolkata using: auto-ethnography, participant observation, sample survey, and archival research. The conditions of production and reception are each examined and presented in isolation followed by case studies. The case studies bring the elements studied in the preceding section together to demonstrate how they function together in a performance event. The studies represent the vast array of theatre in Kolkata and allow the findings from the second part of the dissertation to be tested across a variety of conditions of production and reception. -
SEAGULL Theatre QUARTERLY 244 Theatrelog Issue 29/30 Jun 2001 Acknowledgements
2 Acknowledgements 3 Introduction 7 ‘My kind of theatre is for the people’ KUMAR ROY 37 ‘And through the poetry we found a new direction’ SHYAMAL GHO S H 59 Minority Culture, Universal Voice RUDRAPRA S AD SEN G UPTA 81 ‘A different kind of confidence and strength’ Editor AS IT MU K HERJEE Anjum Katyal Editorial Consultant Samik Bandyopadhyay 99 Assistants Falling in Love with Theatre Paramita Banerjee ARUN MU K HERJEE Sumita Banerjee Sudeshna Banerjee Sunandini Banerjee 109 Padmini Ray Chaudhury ‘Your own language, your own style’ Vikram Iyengar BI B HA S H CHA K RA B ORTY Design Sunandini Banerjee 149 Photograph used on cover © Nemai Ghosh ‘That tiny cube of space’ MANOJ MITRA 175 ‘A theatre idiom of my own’ AS IT BO S E 197 The Totality of Theatre NIL K ANTHA SEN G UPTA 223 Conversations Published by Naveen Kishore 232 for The Seagull Foundation for the Arts, Appendix I 26 Circus Avenue, Calcutta 700017 Notes on Classic Playtexts Printed at Laurens & Co. 9 Crooked Lane, Calcutta 700 069 234 Appendix II Notes on major Bengali Productions 1944 –-2000 S T Q SEAGULL THeatRE QUARTERLY 244 Theatrelog Issue 29/30 Jun 2001 Acknowledgements Most of the material collected for documentation in this issue of STQ, had already been gathered when work for STQ 27/28 was in progress. We would like to acknowledge with deep gratitude the cooperation we have received from all the theatre directors featured in this issue. We would especially like to thank Shyamal Ghosh and Nilkantha Sengupta for providing a very interesting and rare set of photographs; Mohit Chattopadhyay, Bibhash Chakraborty and Asit Bose for patiently answering our queries; Alok Deb of Pratikriti for providing us the production details of Kenaram Becharam; Abhijit Kar Gupta of Chokh, who has readily answered/ provided the correct sources. -
F O R E W O R D This Publication Contains the Details of Departmental
F O R E W O R D This publication contains the details of Departmental Non-Plan (including Developmental and Committed) and State Plan Schemes included in the Demands for Grants for the financial year 2014-2015. H. K. DWIVEDI Kolkata Principal Secretary to the The 17th February, 2014 Government of W est Bengal Finance Department DETAILS OF DEPARTMENTAL NON-PLAN [including Developmental and Committed] AND PLAN [State Plan, Centrally Sponsored and Central Sector] SCHEMES included in the DEMAND FOR GRANTS 2014-2015 . Sl. No. Department Pages . 1. Agricultural Marketing ............................................................................... 1-2 2. Agriculture ............................................................................... 3-10 3. Animal Resources Development ............................................................................... 11-19 4. Backward Classes Welfare ............................................................................... 20-25 5. Bio-Technology ............................................................................... 26 6. Chief Minister Secretariat ............................................................................... 27 7. Chief Minister"s Office ............................................................................... 28 8. Child Development ............................................................................... 29-32 9. Civil Defence ............................................................................... 33-34 10. Co-Operation .............................................................................. -
Macron Vows to Heal After Divisive Campaign
millenniumpost.in RNI NO.: WBENG/2015/65962 PUBLISHED FROM DELHI & KOLKATA VOL. 3, ISSUE 124 | Tuesday, 9 May 2017 | Kolkata | Pages 16 | Rs 3.00 NO HALF TRUTHS pNIFTY 9314.05 (-28.75) pSENSEX 29,926.15 (-67.35) qDOW JONES 20,975.81 (-31.13) qNASDAQ 6,093.73 (-7.03) pRUPEE/DOLLAR 64.31 (+0.07) qRUPEE/EURO 70.40 (+0.33) qGOLD/10GM 28,550.00 (-175.00) qSILVER/K 38,350.00 (--225.00) TOUGHER BENGALI MP RIOTS OVER COW: 11 MIGRANTS DEAD, NEVER READ A NEET PAPER: MAMATA SC PULLS UP POLICE 200 MISSING IN CHETAN BHAGAT ‘HURT’, STATE TO FOR NOT EXAMINING MEDITERRANEAN BOOK: ARJUN WRITE TO CENTRE’ PG3 VIDEOS PG7 SINKINGS PG11 KAPOOR PG16 SC BLOW FOR LALU YOUNGEST EVER FRENCH PRESIDENT Rajnath calls for ‘unity of Bihar Grand Alliance will remain intact: JD(U) Macron vows to heal purpose’ to tackle Naxals DHIRENDRA KUMAR MPOST BUREAU vehicles (UAVs) would be pressed into service NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court’s verdict NEW DELHI: Calling to bust their hideouts. to revive conspiracy charges against Rashtriya for “unity of purpose” “I am sure that the Janata Dal (RJD) supremo Lalu Prasad Yadav after divisive campaign amongst all Naxal- attempts to stall devel- and others in multi-crore fodder scam cases will affected states, Union opment and throttle not create any political crisis in Bihar, political PARIS: Pro-European centrist gramme has been defeated. Home Minister Rajnath democracy at gunpoint experts said. Emmanuel Macron promised on I will fight with all my German Chancellor Angela Singh on Monday advocated the will not be successful ever,” the According to them, the Grand Alliance Monday to heal France’s divisions Merkel’s spokesman said it was a formation of a strategic and uni- home minister said at the meet- would remain unscathed as the verdict is part after crushing far- right leader strength against the divisions “victory for a strong and united fied command to foil attempts to ing, being held two weeks after of the ongoing trial of the cases. -
Bengal's Changing Cultural Scenario
Bengal's Changing Cultural Scenario Swapan Mullick Fluctuations on the Bengali cultural scene can be bewildering. Tollygunge seemed irretrievably doomed even in the last years of Uttam Kumar. But one smash hit caused a freak revival and Calcutta's little Tollywood is now roaring with activity. As were the theatre groups-but fifteen years ago. Today, they look back on their glorious past or on stalwarts who have either left the scene or have lost their old charisma. The jatra-the open-air opera-has. on the other hand. turned into a thriving industry and drawn away talent from films and theatre. There was a time when the recording companies flourished. Now Bengali music. both as an art and industry, has fallen on hard times. The total picture is more confusing than is good for the cultural scene which once prided itself on its vitality. The confusion promises to persist as long as some crucial questions remain unanswered. How are good films to be made now that the State Government has withdrawn from direct production of feature films? (Its experiment proved too expensive; it yielded awards but fetched few other satisfying results). Why have theatre groups failed singularly in offering original plays or even pleasing audiences with their new productions? Is the two-way traffic between films and theatre a means of cross-fertilisation or simply a very practical method of individual survival? Why has fresh musical talent failed to appear on the horizon now that the ageing stars of the disc are beginning to look-and sound-a tired lot? The answers are not easy to find partly because public taste seems so difficult to assess. -
January Current Affairs
EVERY INFORMATION YOU NEED RELATED TO YOUR EXAMS CURRENT AFFAIRS 100 PRACTICE QUESTIONS INCLUDED JANUARY 2021 VASHISHTH ACADEMY VASHISHTH ACADEMY www.vashishthacademy.com PREFACE This is our special edition of Current Affairs Magazine for UPSC Civil Services Examination & Other Central & State Government Job Examinations, released for the month of January 2021. The Magazine is divided into three sections: Section 1: Topic Wise Current Affairs in Short ………………………….Page 2 to Page 132 The first section is dedicated for Topic Wise 1 Liner Current Affairs to provide information about all major happenings in this month. Section 2: Detailed Analysis of important events …………………Page 133 to Page 171 The Second Section is dedicated to Civil Services Aspirants and covers some major happenings in this month along with analysis. The Content part has been created as per the present shift in the examination pattern of the Civil Services Examination. The magazine will cover your syllabus of ‘General Studies - II & General Studies – III. The content has been covered from various online & offline sources including reputed newspapers like The Hindu, Indian Express etc. All the news topics have been explained keeping in mind their underlying issues. Every issue has been covered comprehensively. Some of the information provided may not be directly relevant for the examination. As the content is very wide, we have only covered a limited set of issues. You can utilize it smarty along with the Daily Study of News Papers as well as your other sources. Section 3: Practice Questions………………………………………………Page 172 to Page 209 The Third Section contains 100 Multiple Choice Questions based on daily current affairs. -
Current Affairs
Feb 21' | Issue :01 Current Affairs TOPICS with COVERED National Static gk International State January - 2021 Banking Economy Defence Your Schedule Science-Tech Our Assistance Appointments Agreements Awards Recognitions Ranks Important Days Books & Authors For more update and free materials Obituaries Join our social media handles Selfxpert_Official Most Important Selfxpert Current Affairs FOR ALL COMPETITIVE EXAMS special focous on west Bengal Civil Service Current Affairs Jan| 2021 NATIONAL 8. India has been chosen as the co-chair of the IUCN- 1. PM Modi lays foundation stone of LIGHT HOUSE supported ASIA PROTECTED AREAS PARTNERSHIP (APAP) . PROJECTS (LHPS). ● Implemented at Indore (Madhya Pradesh), ● for a period of three years till November Rajkot (Gujarat), Chennai (Tamil Nadu), 2023. Ranchi (Jharkhand), Agartala (Tripura) and ● India will replace South Korea, which held the Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh). post for 3 years until November 2020 ● Conceptualised by the Union Ministry of 9. The Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) has Housing and Urban Affairs. formally announced the final approval for Oxford- ● Constructed under the Global Housing AstraZeneca “COVISHIELD” and bharat Technology Challenge (GHTC)-India. biotech “COVAXIN” vaccines against the coronavirus ● Under the programm, over 1,000 disease (Covid-19) for emergency use. houses would be built in each of the six cities in 12 months along with allied infrastructure ● Oxford-AstraZeneca’s vaccine, is being facilities. manufactured by the Serum Institute of India (SII) as Covishield, for emergency use and 2. ADB to provide $231 mn loan to enhance POWER Covaxin for restricted use. GENERATION CAPACITY IN ASSAM. ● Covaxin is the indigenous vaccine being ● Under the project, 120 megawatts (MW) developed by Bharat Biotech in collaboration hydroelectric power plant would be with the Indian Council of Medical Research constructed. -
Padma Shri Niranjan Goswami Bio-Data
Padma Shri Niranjan Goswami Bio-data FIELD :MUKABHINAYA [MIME / PANTOMIME] Sl. No. 1. NAME IN FULL (Block Letters) a) In Roman Script GOSWAMI NIRANJAN (Surname) (First Name) (Middle Name) गोवामी निरंजि b) In Devanagari (Surname) (Middle Name) (First Name) 2. Date of Birth 1949 03 10 (Year) (Month) (Date) 3. Place of Birth a) Village : Shollopara / Town : Sonargaon b) State/Region : Dhaka, c) Country : BanglaDesh 4. Parent's Name : Late Nagendra Chandra Goswami – Father Late Kamala Goswami - Mother 5. Mother Tongue : Bengali 7. Marital Status : Married {} Single { } Name(s) of the Spouse, Children Spouse' s Name : Smt. Mukti Goswami -Wife Child's Name : Miss Madhurima Goswami – Daughter 8. Nationality Indian 9. Present Address 20/6, Seal Lane, Kolkata, West Bengal Phone PIN : 700 015 Mobile : +91 94 33 32 76 57 and +91 913667748 [email protected] E-mail [email protected] www.mimeindia.in Website www.nationalmimeinstitute.in www.theworldofmimetheatre 10. Permanent Address As above. 11. Training received in the (a) Guru(s) Name(s) Year(s) field of specialization Shri Jogesh Dutta 1966 to 1969 (Give names/details): (b) Institution(s): PADABOLI 12. Gharana/Sampradaya NIL 13. Training in other Theatre under Late Shambhu Mitra at performing arts Bohurupee during 1970-1975. Dance under Shri Suresh Dutta during 1970 Learnt Tala, Laya and Chhanda with Shri Gopal Chatterjee. 14. Prominent Students a. Late ManikMajumdar b. Shri KalpataruGuha - President Award winner as a creative hearing challenged persons. A national scholarship and Juniorfellowship recipient from Department of Culture, Govt. of India. c. Dr. Tarun Pradhan- A national scholarship and Junior &Senior fellowship recipient from the Department of Culture, Govt. -
Bio-Data Contact No.09433237353 Mail Id. [email protected]
Bio-Data Contact No.09433237353 Mail id. [email protected] PROF.Kaberi Kar M.A in HINDUSTANI CLASSICAL MUSIC (Gold Medalist) PROF.KABERI KAR was born in Kolkata in 1957 .She had the priviledge of training under one of the leading Dhrupad Maestro padmabhusan Ustad Rahim Fahimuddin Khan Dagar . In early childhood she also trained herself in Kheyal of the famous patiyala gharana from Smt Meera Bandopadhaya .From 1976 Kaberi Kar has been a regular artist Of All India Radio for both Dhrupad and Kheyal form of Hindustani Classical Music. Kaberi was attached to Rabindrabharati University as an Adhyapika.Now She is Professor of Sangeet Bhavana Visva-bharati with whom She has been associated since 1986. Achievements in the field of education : B.A in Music (gold medalist). Topped in the Rabindra Bharati University in 1971 and M.A in music with first class first from Rabindra Bharati University in 1976. She also hold the National Scholarship in Hindustani classical Music from Ministry of Education in 1978. Awarded Ph.D from Visva-bharati University. Special Radio programme : 1. Tuesday night concert from Delhi 1978. 2. Sunday morning recital Dhrupad o kheyal from Akashvani Kolkata 1980. 3. Akashvani sangit sanmilan from Baroda.2003. Intensive training in music from Gurus : .Padmabhusan Ustad Rahim Fahimuddin Khan Dagar.(Dhrupad). .Ustad Asad Ali Khan (Beenkar). Smt Meera Bandopadhaya of Patiyala gharana Eminent student of Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan.(kheyal). .Achievements for the University and college : Invited as a member in the meeting of NAAC at Bangalore Invited for NAAC visit at Netaji Subhas Mahavidyalaya under Tripura University. -
Higher Education in West Bengal
ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HIGHER EDUCATION 2009-2010 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2009-2010 June, 2010 C Government of West Bengal Edited & Published by Shri Satish Chandra Tewary, IAS, Principal Secretary Department of Higher Education Government of West Bengal Bikash Bhavan, Salt Lake City Kolkata - 700 091 Printed at Hooghly Printing Co. Ltd. (A Govt. Company) 41, Chowringhee Road, Kolkata - 700 071. FOREWORD The present volume of Annual Report for 2009-10 of the Department of Higher Education gives an account of the activities carried out in the Deptt. along with those undertaken in different wings of the Deptt. and various autonomous organizations associated with it. The Report also presents, in brief, the facilities of the higher education available in the State. The Govt., despite its various limitations, has been taking conscious measures to uplift the status of higher education in the State, both in terms of quality and access. While making sincere efforts towards increasing Gross Enrolment Ratio in higher education across the State, we have focused the backward areas of the State. We are also in the process of updating the education map of the State to priorities the need of various regions for setting up new colleges, creating new faculty positions or providing development grants. During the year 2009-10, 12 colleges of the State have been declared as “Centres with potential for excellence” by UGC. It is indeed a significant achievement for the State to have 16 such centres as on date in State Universities. Number of NAAC accredited colleges in the State has also gone up during the year.