11/20/11

GIRISH CHANDRA BOSE



Acharya Girish Chandra founded Bangabasi School in 1885. The school started in a rented house in Bowbazar Street with six teachers and twelve students. The school was upgraded into a college in 1887. Girish Chandra had served the college as its Principal from 1887 to 1933, before he was nominated as Rector of the college in 1935. The College got affiliation for B.A, B.L. and M.A. courses to meet the requirement of the students. In the year 1903, the college moved to its present premises at 19, Scott Lane. After that there was a steady growth of the college with the introduction of the Honors courses in various subjects.

SE KALER DAROGA KAHINI

                                                               

UTPAL DUTTA



Utpal Dutt  (29 March 1929 – 19 August 1993) was an Indian actor, director, and writer-playwright. He was primarily an actor in Bengali Theatre, where he became a pioneering figure in Modern Indian theatre, when he founded the 'Little Theater Group' in 1947, which enacted many English, Shakespearean and Brecht plays, in a period now known as the 'Epic theater' period, before emerging itself completely in highly political and radical theatre. His plays became apt vehicle of the expression for his Marxist ideologies, visible in socio-political plays like, Kallol (1965), Manusher Adhikar, Louha Manob (1964), Tiner Toloar and Maha-Bidroha. He also acted over 100 Bengali and Hindi films in his career spanning 40 years, and remains most known for his roles in films like Mrinal Sen’s Bhuvan Shome (1969), Satyajit Ray’s Agantuk (1991), Gautam Ghose’s Padma Nadir Majhi (1993) and Hrishikesh Mukherjee's breezy comedies such as Gol Maal (1980) and Rang Birangi (1983).[1][2][3][4]
He received National Film Award for Best Actor in 1970 and three Filmfare Best Comedian Awards. In 1990, the Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy of Music, Dance and Theatre, awarded him its highest award the Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship for lifetime contribution to theatre.


CHAYANOT




                                                                                 



















TINER TALOWAR


                                                                                   






















AEI OFURAN


                                                                                       

ARUP KUMAR DUTTA


Born in 1946 at Jorhat, he completed Senior Cambridge from Lawrence School, Sanawar, and completed his BA (English honours) as well as MA from Delhi University. Though spent most of the early phase of his life outside Assam, he returned to his birthplace because of his attachment and desire to become a writer. Before becoming a full-time professional writer in English for both children and adults, he served as a professor in English for many years at JB College, Jorhat.
The Kaziranga Trail being his first published work in 1978. His novels for the juvenile have proved best sellers and have been translated into many foreign languages such as German, Russian, Japanese, Czech, Hungarian, Italian etc. He won the prestigious Shankar’s Award in 1979 (instituted to mark the International Year of the child) and a Journalist Welfare Foundation Award in 1982 which took him to Europe and UK. Three of his novels have been made into feature films — The Kaziranga Trail into Rhino, The Blind Witness into Netrahin Sakshi and Revenge into Pratishodh. His book The Lure of Zangrila was given the NCERT most outstanding book award in English in 1998. Arup Dutta’s latest book The Brahmaputra, published by the National Book Trust of India, was released in New Delhi on 13th September, 2001 by Sri Atal Behari Vajpayee, Prime Minister of India and has received commendable reviews.
Author of 7 non-fiction books for adults and 15 novels for the young. He is the first author to write about Sankardeva and Lachit Barphukan in 1970. During his conversation with me, he lamented that Shivaji, the great Maratha warrior is recognised as a national icon but Lachit Barphukan, the great Ahom general who defeated the Mughals not less than three times is still unknown to the people outside Assam. His mission is therefore to expose and acquaint our culture and literature to the people outside Assam and he has been successfully doing so through his powerful and captivating writings.
Arup Dutta’s immortal creation Cha Garam – The Tea Story has created a sensation by dint of his wonderful capacity for narration, devoid of any digression or overlapping of the basic foundation of the story. The story is an endeavour to present to the lay-readers a glimpse into the fascinating history of this beverage. The book traces the genesis of tea among aboriginal tribes, its evolution in China and its spread around the globe. It relates the equally compelling story of how British ingenuity and enterprise succeeded in establishing the Indian tea industry. While briefly touching upon the growing, manufacturing and marketing of tea, the book also attempts to acquaint the readers with the gradual changes in tea craft successfully.
A freelance columnist and journalist, his short-stories and articles have appeared in many of India’s leading Born in 1946 at Jorhat, he completed Senior Cambridge from Lawrence School, Sanawar, and completed his BA (English honours) as well as MA from Delhi University. Though spent most of the early phase of his life outside Assam, he returned to his birthplace because of his attachment and desire to become a writer. Before becoming a full-time professional writer in English for both children and adults, he served as a professor in English for many years at JB College, Jorhat.
The Kaziranga Trail being his first published work in 1978. His novels for the juvenile have proved best sellers and have been translated into many foreign languages such as German, Russian, Japanese, Czech, Hungarian, Italian etc. He won the prestigious Shankar’s Award in 1979 (instituted to mark the International Year of the child) and a Journalist Welfare Foundation Award in 1982 which took him to Europe and UK. Three of his novels have been made into feature films — The Kaziranga Trail into Rhino, The Blind Witness into Netrahin Sakshi and Revenge into Pratishodh. His book The Lure of Zangrila was given the NCERT most outstanding book award in English in 1998. Arup Dutta’s latest book The Brahmaputra, published by the National Book Trust of India, was released in New Delhi on 13th September, 2001 by Sri Atal Behari Vajpayee, Prime Minister of India and has received commendable reviews.
Author of 7 non-fiction books for adults and 15 novels for the young. He is the first author to write about Sankardeva and Lachit Barphukan in 1970. During his conversation with me, he lamented that Shivaji, the great Maratha warrior is recognised as a national icon but Lachit Barphukan, the great Ahom general who defeated the Mughals not less than three times is still unknown to the people outside Assam. His mission is therefore to expose and acquaint our culture and literature to the people outside Assam and he has been successfully doing so through his powerful and captivating writings.
Arup Dutta’s immortal creation Cha Garam – The Tea Story has created a sensation by dint of his wonderful capacity for narration, devoid of any digression or overlapping of the basic foundation of the story. The story is an endeavour to present to the lay-readers a glimpse into the fascinating history of this beverage. The book traces the genesis of tea among aboriginal tribes, its evolution in China and its spread around the globe. It relates the equally compelling story of how British ingenuity and enterprise succeeded in establishing the Indian tea industry. While briefly touching upon the growing, manufacturing and marketing of tea, the book also attempts to acquaint the readers with the gradual changes in tea craft successfully.
A freelance columnist and journalist, his short-stories and articles have appeared in many of India’s leading journals and newspapers. The Kaziranga Trail and The Blind Witness have been brought out in Japanese Braille for blind readers. An astute short-story writer with encyclopaedic knowledge, his art of telling his story is simple. He manages to draw the immediate attention of his readers by the simplicity of his, making even a serious subject of study truly engaging. In his engrossing and thought-provoking book The Brahmaputra he has attempted to sketch a profile of this fascinating river and has at the same time enlightened the readers with the society which evolved on it banks and the heights of civilisation it attained. Starting with the origin of the river from mythical times, The Brahmaputra which has been a silent observer of the metamorphosis and transformation of Assam and the north-eastern region over the centuries, from a once inaccessible area to its present state. The writer very vividly traces in his book the Mughal invasion of Assam, the coming of the British, the opening of tea gardens, the Saraighat Bridge and even the hydro-electric potentiality of the river Brahmaputra.journals and newspapers. The Kaziranga Trail and The Blind Witness have been brought out in Japanese Braille for blind readers. An astute short-story writer with encyclopaedic knowledge, his art of telling his story is simple. He manages to draw the immediate attention of his readers by the simplicity of his, making even a serious subject of study truly engaging. In his engrossing and thought-provoking book The Brahmaputra he has attempted to sketch a profile of this fascinating river and has at the same time enlightened the readers with the society which evolved on it banks and the heights of civilisation it attained. Starting with the origin of the river from mythical times, The Brahmaputra which has been a silent observer of the metamorphosis and transformation of Assam and the north-eastern region over the centuries, from a once inaccessible area to its present state. The writer very vividly traces in his book the Mughal invasion of Assam, the coming of the British, the opening of tea gardens, the Saraighat Bridge and even the hydro-electric potentiality of the river Brahmaputra.


CHA NEIY HOI CHOI


                                                                                              

11/13/11

GIRINDRASHEKHAR BASU


  Girindrasekhar Basu (1887-1953)

"Girindrasekhar Basu [or Bose] (30 January 1887-3 June 1953), the youngest son of Chandrasekhar and Lakshimoni, began his schooling at Darbhanga, where his father was the Dewan of the Maharaja. He went on to study Science at Presidency College, Calcutta and stood first at the Bachelor's level in Chemistry and Physiology. He later went on to found the Indian Psychoanalytical Society in 1922. He is perhaps better known for his contributions in the field of psychology - both Experimental and Abnormal, and as the founder of psychological clinics and asylums. As a student of Calcutta Medical College, he was also keenly interested in Magic and Hypnotism. In fact, under the name of 'Yogi Girindrasekhar', he displayed his magic and his hypnotic powers frequently


LAL KALO