Sunday, August 26, 2007

Early Days in Bean Town (1)


Bangalore is referred to as the Bean Town by parts of the English Press. The legend is that a king called it by that name when he strayed into a village selling boiled beans. While this name is basically a fun name . some of the sobriquets it has acquired do no justice to either the mood or the history of the city. Some journalist with an overdose of imagination saw some retired people going for a walk in a leafy suburb and termed it a pensioner's paradise. Several IT spokesmen, who like to believe that it all started with them, describe the city of those days as a sleepy city. These sobriquets were actually misnomers even in the fifties and sixties when the city was vibrant with the aspirations of a new nation. It was a big city even then being ranked variously between 5 and 7 . Its competitors were Hyderabad and Ahmedabad even then (Some of the big cities are shown in the map below)



Around 1960 it had a population of about 11lakhs. It had more public sector factories than even the bigger cities. Even in the pre independence days , there was the Hindusthan Aircrafts Ltd (HAL) . It was soon to be joined by the other big public sector units like the ITI (telephones), HMT (machine tools), BEL (electronics ) etc. And there were numerous smaller factories. Thee were big cotton mills like the Binny Mill, the Rajah Mill etc . In the early mornings once could see the buses of all these factories plying all over the town.

The City’s limits :

The northernmost limit was the Indian Inst of Science in the Malleshwaram area, In the south, the limit was defined by the aptly called the South End in Basavanagudi. In the eastern part it was the Wilson Garden area and the Mental Hospital (the present NIMHANS) . Mysore Road provided the eastern borders of the town. The suburbs like Jayanagar were beginning to be populated. From the south to the north it was about 10 kilometers.

Some other things have not changed much. South Parade (the present MG Road) was even then the most sought after destination of most college students. We also used to call it Cant, the cantonment area. One would never advertise it at home since the name meant the den of sin for some older people . Since we had yet to acquire our vices, what attracted us more were really the English movie theatres. The Parade Cafe (the present Koshys) was very popular even then. I remember that one of our classmates in the college started gong to Cant very often. He was preparing to go abroad and felt that Cant was one place where you could learn to use fork and knife ! Kannada was rarely spoken in the Cant area. We would try our English with waiters etc who themselves were not necessarily comfortable with the language.

The Transport


The means of private transport was the Jutka , a horse drawn vehicle . Jutka was a crude version of the elegant tonga . For some reason it was only Mysore which had these nice tongas. Jutka was actually more suited to trasnsport cargo ! The hind portion of the Jutka was way above the ground and it was usual for women to get in first. Since the front portion would naturally go up, the younger people would climb in from the front and sit there in the front along with the driver with the feet resting on grass. However, the jutkas were already slowly giving way to the auto rickshaws. Earlier there were 4 seater rickshaws but they disappeared. There were only few taxis in the whole city. The taxi drivers were content driving from point to point and catered to relatively wealthy customers. Taxis never became popular with the people of Bangalore.
Public transport has never been good in Bangalore . It was a problem then and it is so even now. It was called the BTC in the early days (Bangalore Transport Company - niknamed Beppu Takkadi company - essentially a deriding term). Those days Route 1 would start from South end, go via Gandhi Bazar - on to Yashwantpur . The glamorous route was Route 11 - from Gandhi Bazar to Malleshwaram via Majestic- more importantly via Maharani's college ! The bus used to transport girl students from south (Basavanagudi) and north (Malleshwaram ) to Maharani's College, one of the 2 girl's colleges in the city (The other college was Mount Carmel e with reputation of being a smart institution). Natuarlly it attracted lot of attention. Long queues were common at the Route 11 starting point in Gandhi Bazar ( near the present co-optex) . Some admirers were known to stand in the queue but never get into the bus ! . The fare from Gandhi Bazar to Majestic was about 13 or 17 paise in the very early ' 60s ! Another Route which was prominent was route 15 from City Market to Russel Market. In the mid 70s some of these routes used to have double decked buses)

Food, Sports, entertainment etc

As for eateries, the well known Mavalli Tiffin Rooms (MTR) was just then becoming famous but our eating was mostly in restaurants around Gandhi Bazar, especially Vidyarthi Bhavan , This restaurant which has become kind of a heritage place is very popular even now. The cost of a plain dosa was about 20 paise and Masala dosa costed 25 paise. There were also local hot spots – small restaurants known only for dosa or idli or vada etc. As students we used to keep track of such things and we did walk quite often few kilometers for just a dosa. However, our eating habits were very Desi and we were ignorant about fancy restaurants and hotels. There were very few hotels which served Punjabi dishes.

Since its early days Bangalore had a virbrant sports life. As everywhere else cricket was a popular sport. The Ranji team for the state consisted mostly of players from the city. There were many cricket teams like the Bangalore Cricketeers, the City cricketers etc. Next to studies cricket was one of the most important activities for us as students. The fields used to play hosts to many cricket matches on weekends. But Banglaore never had a huge field like Azad maidan of Mumbai where one could see umpteen matches happening at the same time.

Bangalore had more theatres per capita than any other Indian city (not to mention bars). The two hubs were Kempegowda Road (Majestic) which had Indian films and Cantonement which mostly showed English films. Kempegowda road had probably the largest number of cinema theatres per given area . Given the cosmopolitan nature of its people, the theatre screened Kannada, Tamil , Telugu , Hindi an English movies. Some morning shows were there of film of other languages like Bengali, Malayalam etc.

The Intellectual Life:

Bangalore had very good educational institutions even in those days. The Indian Institute of Science was the most prestigious institution in the city. It trained scientists and engineers in many fields. The Central College was one of the oldest colleges for sciences in the country. Bangalore produced more than its share of engineers. There were two engineering colleges when most cities had none. There were other famous colleges like the National COllege,St. Joseph's college, Mount Carmenl college etc.
The city had several newspapers in Kannada - the older dailies like Tainadu, Vishwakarnataka , Janavani and the new daily Prajavani. The only English newspaper was the Deccan Herald (An earlier English paper called the Daily News a run of nearly 15 years and had stopped). Deccan Herald had the venerable Potan Joseph as the editor. Several Taml and Urdu papers were also to be seen on the newsstands.

Bangalore South, and especially Gandhi Bazar (our residential area), was a major intellectual hub of Bangalore . The journalist YNK( who influenced various writers and theatre/film movement in Kannada) and H . Narasimhayya , the educationist were very influential with youth. There were also eminent writers like Masti Venakatesha Iyengar, Gopalakrishna Adiga , D.V,Gundappa , G.P.Rajaratnam etc in Bangalore . But our horizons were very limited and we were not able to appreciate some of these writers who were also great thinkers. Our reading in Kannada was limited to novels . The popular novelists of those days were .A. N. Krishna Rao, T.R.Subba Rao , Niranjana, Triveni etc. The Kannada paperback industry (hottige)had just then started and books were available for about Two rupees !

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(clock wise from top left)

(1) Central college (The pik does not do justice to this nice redcoloured building. In those days the only university was the Mysore University. The post graduate sections were in Mysore (humanities and social sciences) and Bangalore ( natural sciences). Central College used to house the science departments. (2) Prof C.V.Raman (3) The Maharaja of Mysore (4)) Town hall- This was built in mid 1930s. Even today (2007) this place hosts many events (5) Mahatma Gandhi Road- This is the most famous road in Bangalore. In the earlier days it was called South Parade. (6) Vidhana soudha (being built)- This houses the state ministerial offices as well as the halls for holding legislative meetings. This is a magnificient structure( thought to be a little too luxurious for this nation, at least at that time) The builidng was built in the reign of Sri K. Hanumanthaiya. He (the Chief Minister ) got lot of flak for this building (7) Dr. K.V.Puttappa (kuvempu) possible the most famous kannada writer of the last century (also the first jnanapeeth award winner for Kannada) (8) Sri M.Vishweshwarayya (9) ) In the centre is the masthead in kannada of the newspaper Tainadu


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Some important people
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The two Bangaloreans whom everybody respected were Prof C.V.Raman and Sir M.Vishweshwarayya. Both were given Bharat Ratna ,the highest civilian award of the Govt. of India, within the first 3 years of the institution of the awards.
Prof Raman, who discovered the Raman effect in Optics, was awarded the Nobel Prize and was probably the greatest Indian scientist of the time. Dr Mokshangundam Vishwesharayya was trained as an engineer and was responsible for the technological progress of the state.
He was the brain behind the KRS dam on the river Cauvery ( called an engineering wonder), the Iron and Steel MIlls in Bhadrawati, the sugar mills in Mandya etc. The irrigation projects in the state , the Power stations in Shivanasamudram etc. He was also the Dewan of Mysore for a long time. Another person who commanded lot of respect was Sri Jayachamaraja Wodeyar, the ex Maharaja of Mysore who was a great Sanskrit scholar. He was also probably the only Maharaja of those days who was treated with respect by people like Nehru.





(Pl see web site of Mr Ron BangaloreWala for many good pictures of the past; the present piks from various web sites, and from old newspapers)
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Saturday, August 25, 2007

Bangalore - The early days

Places :Some Piks - clockwise from top left



(1) Central college (The pik does not do justice to this nice redcoloured building. In those days the only university was the Mysore University. The post graduate sections were in Mysore (humanities and social sciences) and Bangalore ( natural sciences). Central College used to house the science departments.
(2) Town hall- This was built in mid 1930s. Even today (2007) this place hosts many events
(3) Vidhana soudha (being built)- This houses the state ministerial offices as well as the halls for holding legislative meetings. This is a magnificient structure(may be little too luxurious for this nation, at least at that time) The builidng was built in the reign of Sri K.Hanumanthaiya. He (the Chief Minister ) got lot of flak for this building
(4),Basavangudi temple - Probably the oldest temple in the city - It has a huge stone Bull( Nandi). It is very near our house in Kalappa Block
(5) Public library in Cubbonpark. An old red building
(6) Kempegowda tower- built by the erstwhle ruler Kempe Gowda in the 16th century. He is credited with founding Bangalore. 4 such towers were built by him around the city.
(7) Lal bagh - The Botanical garden. These beautiful gardens were founded by Haider Ali inthe late 18th century. What is seen here is part of the Glass House based on a famous structure in London 9Kew Gardens?)
(8) Mahatma Gandhi Road- This is the most famous road in Bangalore. In the earlier days it was called South Parade.
(9) In the centre is the old Government building called Atara Kacheri


Friday, June 15, 2007

ASTRONOMY (KANNADA) - P.R.VISHWANATH - BHOOMIYINDA BANINATTA

Hi
Recently I have written a book on astronomy in Kannada. This s a collection of articles and is an informal history of the subject. It is published by Navakarnataka Publications, Bangalore. The book was released 3 weeks ago in Mysore

Saturday, April 14, 2007

AUTUMN of 1942 – Father in Jail

My father was a pioneering journalist in Kannada and published a newspaper called TAINADU ( Motherland) from Bangalore. It was the foremost newspaper of the erstwhile Mysore state during the freedom struggle. He also published an English newspaper called The Daily News. The newspapers faced the wrath of the rulers on several occasions.

He kept track of what was happening in the world and made note of these events in his diary. The remarks were very brief, just a sentence long. Sometimes just a phrase. 1942 was a tumultuous year in the country. This was the year of Quit India. And the year when my the newspapers were suspended for writing against the government and when he had to spend some time in jail.

Following are scanned piks of the pages of his diary:


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7TH Aug 1942:

AICC MEETING IN BOMBAY. GANDHI’S ADDRESS TO AICC









9th Aug 1942:

Gandhi ,Nehru , Azad and W.C members arrested this morning at Bombay and taken to Poona





lllll





Aug 17, 1942:

TAINADU and DAILY NEWS suspended publication : Police firing in Bangalore









8th Sep 1942 : Arrested at midnight





18th Sep 1942 : Bail granted by high court ; Released from central jail at about 10 p.m.



Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Buddha and the Crab nebula (1b - Unabridged) - 25 and a half - P.R.Vishwanath

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Life is a journey towards either the Buddha or the Crab nebula


and sometimes both

(Acc to Webster's dictionary , To catch a crab means ' to drift' ! )
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(
Two versions - long and short - may exist. Also Pl bear with me since Piks getting lost occasionally
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(If interested , Pl see Tainadu.blogspot.com for more info/photos about my family)
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I . INDIA (1942-1967)
(A) Bangalore (1942-62)
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Top left : 25 July 1942 my birth (my father's diary)
(the Indian leader Dr B.R.Ambedkar was the
guest of honor at the Ripon Club.
Bombay on that night)







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INDIA:
This is the India I was born into. There were esentially two divisions : (a) British India and (b) Princely States. The well known cities of those days were all in British India. There were about 550 Princely states with the smallest having few squarekilometer area where as the Bigger ones were the size of countries in Europe. Examples were Hyderabad, Mysore, Kashmir etc.

(1) Quit India movement (one of the most turbulent times in India) starts Aug 1942




My father's (Sri P.R.Ramaiya)diary
(a) Nehru and Gandhi (b) The movement
(c) My father's diary - Aug 7: AICC meeting inBomayGandhi's address to Cong CC
(d)Aug 9: Gandhi, Nehru, Azad and WC(working committe ) members arrested this morning at Bombay and taken to Poona----------




(2)1947 Aug 15 : India becomes independent
1948 Jan 30:Mahatma Gandhi assasinated
(in Kannada newspaper Tainadu run by my father)
India becomes a republic 1950 Jan 1:











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THE WORLD:

1945 August 6 : America drops atomic bomb on Hiroshima






The II World war ends




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1950s

HOME:

Home was 12, Kalappa Block in Basavanagudi, a southern extension in Bangalore. As we will see later Bangalore was still a small city in 1950. Our home was/is about 5 km away from the Railway station. It was built in 1946 when I was 4 years old. Earlier the family lived in Chamarajpet on 2nd main road. Chamarajpet was nearer the city centre and getting crowded.
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1946 : Our Basavanagudi home built; The following pik from
1972 when it housed a primary and middle shool
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We were a joint family with my father, the eldest brother , donning the role of the patriarch. He had 4 younger brothers. Apart from the families of some of these brothers, some members from his sister's family also lived inthe same house. Some young men who came from smaller places to study in Bangalore also lived with us. In early 50s' we had about 30 people living all the time there and there was also some amount of floating population. Apart from this there were some poor students who came only to have lunch and dinner. Thus there were a total of ~35/40 people in our home. Each generation had its own friends and they would also congregate at home.The home was/is on a small street in Basavangudi and owes its name to the person who owned a mango grove which was later converted to sites.
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(This was the masthead of Tainadu - the Kannada paper founded by my father P.R.Ramaiya) Probably the most important and influential newspaper during the freedom struggle . It is important to remember that newspapers played their role in improving literacy in the country

1952 The first ever general elections in India-Father
wins the elections and becomes a member of the Mysore state assembly
1957 : Mother (P.R.Jayalakshamma) becomes a Corporator of the city of Bangalore;also involved in various social welfare activities
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1955 :
Brother P .R. Brahmananda
writes ' The Planning for for an expanding
Economy ' an important book in Indian economic thinking

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School :

I did my primary and middle in New Model Middle school( known as Gurukula) in gandhi Bazar area. We used to sit on narrow and long flat wooden planks. The teaching was in Kannada. English was taught as one of the subjects. The Head Master was a terror . He used to cane children seen as lazy . The other teachers one remembers were Sri Narayana Rao ( reputedly a double graduate, though we did not know what it meant) , Rama Shastry etc.

I joined the National High School in 1952. It was a very famous school with many of its earlier. teachers playing important roles in the freedom movement. We had to wear white Gandhi caps. There used to be chanting of shlokas in the morning. Sri H.S.Shivram, one of the senior teachers , would preside over the session . Interesting Students would join. Nobody was forced or asked to participate. There were 4 sections in each standard- Two in Kannada medium and two in English . I was in Section C, one of the English medium sections. The principals during those 3 years were Sri H.S.RamaRao and K.Nanjundayya. The teachers, in general, taught more than one subject. For eg one person would teach English to one class and mathematics to another. Some of our class teachers were KS, HSM etc. The latter taught us algebra , geometry etc. Shri Chaluvayya, a smart looking man with a great voice, was in charge of PT. Three mornings in a week we had to attend PT classes.
One started making friendships which would eventually last for a long time

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Bangalore of ~ 50s:

(Pl see web site of Mr
Ron BangaloreWala for many piks)

Bangalore in the mid 1950s had a population of about 7 lakhs. The prominent ' factories' were the Binny Mill, Hindusthan Aircrafts Ltd (HAL) etc. They were soon to be joined by the big public sector units like the ITI (telephones), HMT (machine tools), BEL (electronics ) etc, Early mornings were witnesses to buses of all these factories plying all over the town. The famous Indian Institute of Science was the most prestigious institution in the city. The northernmost limit was the Indian Inst of Science and the southernmost limit was the South end in Basavanagudi.
The suburbs like Jayanagar were just then starting to be populated

Those days Route 1 would start from South end, go via the present DVG Road , Gandhi Bazar - on to Yashwant pur . The glamorous route was Route 11 - from gandhi Bazar to Malleshwaram via Majestic- more importantly via Maharani's college ! The bus used to transport girl students from south (Basavanagudi) and north (Malleshwaram ) to Maharani's College, one of the 2 girl's colleges in the city (The other college was Mount Carmel e with reputation of being a smart institution). Natuarlly it attracted lot of attention. Long queues were common at the Rout 11 starting point in Gandhi Bazar ( near the present co-optex) . Some admirers were known to stand in the queue but never get into the bus ! . The fare from Gandhi Bazar to Majestic was about 13 or 17 paise in 1960-1962 when I studied at Central Colllege ! In the early 50s it was called BTC (Bangalore Transport Company - we used to call it the Beppu Takkadi Company (no sense really) ) . Another Route which was prominent was route 15 from City Market to Russel Market. In the mid 70s some of these routes used to have double decked buses)
.
The city had several newspapers in Kannada - the older dailies like Tainadu, Vishwakarnataka , Janavani and the new daily Prajavani.
The only English newspaper was the Deccan Herald (An earlier English paper called the Daily News founded by my father had had a run of nearly 10 years and had stopped)Gandhi Bazar (our residential area) was a major intellectual hub of Bangalore with the journalist YNK( who influenced various writers and theatre/film movement in Kannada) as one of the presiding deities.

Mavalli Tiffin Rooms was becoming famous but our eating was mostly in restaurants around Gandhi Bazar, espescially Vidyarthi Bhavan (The cost of a plain dosa was about 20 paise in 1955 and Masala dosa costed 25 paise)

Some other things have not changed much. South Parade (the present MG Road) was even then themost sought after destination of most college students. We also used to call it the cantonement area. One would never advertise it at home since the name meant the den of sin for some older people at home . Since we had yet to acquire our vices, what attracted us were really the English movie theatres. The Parade Cafe (The present Koshys) was very popular even then. I remember that one of our classmates in the college started gong to Cant very often. He was preparing to go abroad and felt that Cant was one place where you could learn to use fork and knife ! Kannada was rarely spoken in the Cant area. We would try our English with waiters etc who themselves were not necessarily comfortable with the language.

Places :Some Piks - clockwise from top left



(1) Central college (The pik does not do justice to this nice redcoloured building. In those days the only university was the Mysore University. The post graduate sections were in Mysore (humanities and social sciences) and Bangalore ( natural sciences). Central College used to house the science departments.
(2) Town hall- This was built in mid 1930s. Even today (2007) this place hosts many events
(3) Vidhana soudha (being built)- This houses the state ministerial offices as well as the halls for holding legislative meetings. This is a magnificient structure(may be little too luxurious for this nation, at least at that time) The builidng was built in the reign of Sri K.Hanumanthaiya. He (the Chief Minister ) got lot of flak for this building
(4),Basavangudi temple - Probably the oldest temple in the city - It has a huge stone Bull( Nandi). It is very near our house in Kalappa Block
(5) Public library in Cubbonpark. An old red building
(6) Kempegowda tower- built by the erstwhle ruler Kempe Gowda in the 16th century. He is credited with founding Bangalore. 4 such towers were built by him around the city.
(7) Lal bagh - The Botanical garden. These beautiful gardens were founded by Haider Ali inthe late 18th century. What is seen here is part of the Glass House based on a famous structure in London 9Kew Gardens?)
(8) Mahatma Gandhi Road- This is the most famous road in Bangalore. In the earlier days it was called South Parade.
(9) In the centre is the old Government building called Atara Kacheri

Bangalore '50s people -

The two greatest people undoubtedly were Prof C.V.Raman and Sir M.Vishweshwarayya. Both were given Bharat Ratna ,the highest civilian award of the govt of India, within the first 3 years of the institution of the awards.
Prof Raman, who discovered the Raman effect in Optics, was awarded theNobel Prize and arguably the greatest Indian scientist of the time. Shri Vishwesharayya was trained as an engineer and was responsible for the technological progress of the state.
He was responsible for the KRS dam on the river Cauvery ( called an engineering wonder), the Iron and Steel MIlls in Bhadrawati, The irrigation projects in the state , the Sugar factory , the Power stations in Shivanasamudram etc. He was also the Dewan of Mysore for a long time.




Jayachamaraja Wodeyar (Maharaja of Mysore and later Governor of the state. He was a great Sanskrit scholar also );



Kannada Writers/poets
(1) ShriK.V.Puttappa , known as KUVEMPU, was probably the greatest Kannada writer of the last century (2) Sri Masti Venkatesha Iyengar -Masti - excelled in writing short stories and reviews These two got theJananpith award-the highest literary award in India (3) Sri D.V.Gundappa- Writer, Journalist etc. he also should have gotten the Jnanapith. Masti and DVG lived in Basavanagudi not very far from our home . There were also Shivaram Karanth, D.R.Bendre and others. But the fact was that in those days we were not able to read and understand all these writers who were also great thinkers. Thus Our reading in Kannada was limited to novels . The popular novelists of those days were A.N.KrishnaRao, T.R.Subba Rao , Niranjana, Triveni etc. The Kannada paperback industry (hottige)had just then started and books were available for about Two rupees ! Photos - Kuvempu, Masti, DVG








Dr H.Narasimhayya , our physics teacher in National College, Bangalore was a very popular teacher. With time he became the Vice Chanceloor of the university. He was also well known for his rationalist views. He was an icon of Bangalore in the latter half of the last century

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Now for a larger picture , Nehru's India:


Map shows Big cities ( During Nehru's time, the names of the cities were what the British had given us. Later Bombay became Mumbai, Madras became Chennai, Calcutta became Kolkata etc)

(1) Politics:

While Gandhi was the mentor for my father's generation , Nehru started appealing to younger people and thus both Gandhi and Nehru became ideals for my elder brother's generation. However, Gandhi seemed distant for us in our youth and Nehru was the sole mentor for most of my generation. Only later in our lives did Gandhi become important for us. The most important lessons we learnt from Nehru : (a) belief inDemocracy (b) Need for secularism in a pluralistic society. Socialism was also a concept he instilled in us ( Congress adopted the socialistc pattern for the country in 1955 Avadi resolution) but today it seems to have not been the correct path for a young nation. But most of my generation has a soft corner for socialistic ideals. Whatever his faults may be he remains an ideal for me and most of us.


Nehru is also remembered today as the person for his vision regarding science and technology. Pik shows him with Homi Bhabha , the father of atomic energy in India and builder of major scientific institutions


Many World leaders visited India in the ' 50s and quite a few of them included Bangalore in their itinerary. Since my father and two of my uncles were journalists we got opportunity to see some of the leaders quite close.The leaders I remember seeing : Kruschev and Bulganin from USSR, Chou En Lai from China, Queen Elizabeth II from England ( she spent a day or two in Nandi Hills near Bangalore), Sukarno from Indonesia etc. Apart from this, we were also lucky that we got to see great Indian leaders including Pandit Nehru and Sardar Patel. I rmember seeing Nehru very close in the Carlton House in Bangalore
This is a pik of Nehru (front row center) with the journalists of Bangalore (Pik has also 2 Chief Ministers of Mysore- The last person on the right is my father) in the early 1950s


Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru , the Prime minister of India. led the non aligned movement steering away from both the capitalist USA and the communist USSR. The other major members of the Non-aligned movement were Nasser of Egypt, Tito of Yougoslavia etc. He tried to bring China (seen with Chinese premier Chou en Lai in the pik) nearer to India but it proved costly ! Nehru was very close to many important people in the west (seen with Martin Luther King Jr and wife in the pik)











(2) Cricket:

Apart from our studies, Cricket was the major activity of our days. Played tennis ball cricket for a long time and later graduated to an occasional game with real cricket ball. Some friends really made it big later like M.R.Jayaram, K.R.Guru etc

The first big match seen/remembered : Probably 1951-1952 (I was around 9-10) when Bombay defeated Mysore in Ranji Trophy. On a wet afternoon , Dattu Phadkar(fast bowler) from one end and Vinoo Mankad (spinner ) from the other end bundled out Mysore for a very small score (less than 30) . The match took place in Parade grounds (Later matches were shifted to Central College grounds) ,I remember the Bombay team stayed in a big house (called the Bombay House) opposite Krishanrao Park in Basavangudi . All of us kids stayed put for hours on the footpath opposite to the house cheering every face which looked out

Few years later the all India University matches were played in Bangalore. Some of the players in those teams became a part of the national team later. Sister Rameshwari and her friends called some of the cricketers home for lunch/dinner. The names one remembers : Narendra Tamhane (who kept wickets for India ), R.B.Kenny ( got out many times for 99) , C.T.Patankar, .Also N.K.Raman from Delhi and A.S.Krishnaswamy from the Mysore team. The Mysore Ranji team had sme fine cricketeers but almost none made it to the national scene. The names that come to mind are : Salus Nazareth, T.D.Krishna, L.T.Adishesh, L.T.Subbu, Kasturirangan, Balaji etc. The two major cricketing teams of the city were the Bangalore Cricketeers who played in the National Sachool Grounds and City Cricketers who played near the Scout Headquarters.

Pik shows Vinoo Mankad and Polly Umrigar, two of our favourites. Umrigar was the man who wouldhit sixers and Mankad was the all rounder par excellence. Others who caught our fancies were Hazare, Manjrekar etc. Vijay Merchant, Mushtaq Ali, Amarnath etc were before our times and did not mean much for us.


Bangalore was not a TEST venue those days. That honor was reserved for Madras . Bangalore used to host either a south zone match vs the visitors or a combined university team vs the visitors. One of the first big matches seen ( 1955 ?) was vs Pakistan with the young Hanif as the cynosure of all eyes. The team was led byAbdul Hafeez Kardar and had people like fast bowler Fazal Mahomed, Wazir (?) etc. In later matches I remember fast bowlers like Hall, Gilchrist, Sobers, Kanhai , Butcher (from West Indies), Harvey, Benaud, Oneill, (from Australia), Graveny, May , Statham (from England) etc.

For the first time ( 1952 ) India won a Cricket test against England in Chepauk (Madras) .

(3) Films :

Next to cricket , films were the most important part of our lives. Bangalore of those days used to show films in Hindi , English and in at least 3 Dravidian languages with the number of Kannada films the least among them. In that sense Bangalore was probably the most cosmopolitan town since Madras or Hydrabad rarely showed other regional films. Bombay also showed Dravidian Language movies very rarely . One of course did not know what the theatres in Delhi or Calcutta did but it is probably safe to assume that the majrity did not know even the names of all south Indian languages. May be this was the foundation neceasary for a Pan Indian city and Bangalore did flourish with the tolerant attitude of the natives.
The earliest films one saw were all in bits. Our car used to drop off adults at theatres for films and later pick them up . The children used to go along with the driver to bring them back in the night. At times as children we got to see part of the action at the very end. The films I remember seeing that way were Anandamath, Baadban , Dr Kotnis etc. Mostly they were in the Prabhat theatre or the States theatre on Kempe Gowda Road. I remember going to Prabhat theatre once when the film was over and my sister and her friends were waiting in the manager's room to see actor Dev Anand.
In the early days most of the family members used to go for night shows in the nearby Minerva theatre where it would be invariably a movie in Telugu, Tamil or Kannada. The major Hindi language theatres were Prabhat, States (which shifted to Tamil/Telugu movies later), Majestic. The Kempe Gowda road housed Prabhat, States , Sagar , Menaka (later). Kempe Gowda, Himalaya, Geeta , Majestic and Movieland on Subedar chatram Road. Theatres in Cantonement area showed mostly English films except for New Opera and Empire. The English language film theatres were Liberty (Globe in an earlier avatar), Plaza, Rex and Imperial. Two theatres in the city area used to show older (second run ) English films - Vijayalakshmi in Chikpet (used to also give student disocunts - 50 naya paise for a decent seat at the back) and Bharat Talkies on JC Road. Cantonement was almost OFF Limits to us in our childhood. Even later I do not remember going to Cantonement alone (or with friends) till college days.

Some films one remembers :
Hindi :
Idealistic : Sadhana, Do Ankhe Bara Hath, Naya Daur , Sujata, Bandini, Jagte Raho etc
Romantic: Madhumati, Jhanak Jhanak Payal Baje, Chalti ka nam Gadi,
Classic : Kagaz ke Phool , Pather Panchal (saw much later )
Kannada :
School Master, Bedara Kannappa (Raj Kumar's debut film), Jaldurga ( Kemparaj urs in an adaptation of Count of Monte Cristo) , Nandi etc
In Telugu, Akkineni Nageshwara Rao and Ranga Rao impressed us. As also Bhanumathi and Savitri. Films like Maya Bazar etc were big hits.

There were very few films in Kannada in the earlier years. But with Raj Kumar's entry there were more films in Kannada.











Some of the heroes and heroines of the day - Ashok Kumar, Dilip Kumar
Vyjayantimala, Nutan , Raj Kapoor and Nargis, Raj Kumar (Kannada)





















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1950s - The World:

One did not know much about the world at large except the cricketing nations. We of course knew about England quite a lot since we used to follow the fortunes of the Indian Cricket team as it went from county to county. We even knew that London had two cricketing grounds - Lords (M.C.C) and Oval (Surrey) . Otherwise our knowledge of the outside world was very limited. One did not even think much about it those days. However:

What Things Cost in 1950:
Car: $1,750; Gasoline: 27 cents/gal;Bread: 14 cent;
Milk: 82 cents/gal; Average Annual Salary: $3,800
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TV enters American households
1953 : Tenzing and Hillary climb Mount Everest
1955 : Death of Einstein; 1956 Problems in Mid East- nasser nationalises suez canal
1957 - Space era opens:sputnik and Leica ;
Popular author during college days : P.G.Wodehouse










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Home:
1957 : Father sells off Tainadu newspaper; starts A weekly called CHETANA ' This is published from home; All of us pitch in
1955-1959 I was a Student in National College .
1960- 1962 :Student of MSc in Central College Bangalore
1962 Dec; Joined TIFR in Bombay
1963-1964 : Mother (P.R.Jayalakshamma)elected Deputy Mayor of Bangalore
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Friends from School/College:(To be expanded)

There were some interesting kids in the school. M.S.Gundu Rao was the monitor. He was undoubtedly leadership material. Most of use were in awe of him. He was a good friend of Shaila Kumar ( Babu , my first cousin (son of my mother's brother Prof Ramakrishnan who )) studied with me for few years in Gurukula and in National High School. He studied with me for more than 5-6 years.) . This group also contained an orthodox looking but a rebellious boy who becme notorious for throwing a stone from a window at the Sanskrit teacher ( He did become a respectable doctor later !) .They were all slightly older and bigger than some of us and did bully us occasionally ( However Gundu Rao did become a friend much later in life). Gundu Rao was also a good cricketeer and a good actor. When most of us joined the nearby National College after school, he went away to the Govt College. His ambition was to join the army and so he wanted NCC training which was not available in our school. He did join the army and I met him oaccasionally afterwards. However, he met a tragic death in 1965 after the Indo -Pak war in Kutch. He met his end while inspecting the mine fields . He was a captain at that time. He certainly would have been famous if he had lived longer.
(Another freind , who went into the armed forces but who was not in our school, was Suresh (Kukke Suresh). His grandfather, Sri M.P.Somasekhara Rao, a famous advocate of Bangalore used to live on Puttanna Road, a street next to ours. Suresh was a big handsome boy with a very fair complexion. He used to drive a motorbike and told me he would teach me driving . Double Road, a new road at that time (late '50s) and which hardly saw any traffic, was essentially meant for such purposes those days. I was scared and did not take his offer. However, he got his friend ( I think a lady called Zarina Irani) to take me in a double seater plane from Jakkur airodrome. Due to her and his generosity I flew over Bangalore for ~45 minutes ( I was around 16 that time . We used to be close during our B.Sc days since he used to spend a lot of time in his grandfather's house. He joined air force and became a pilot. I lost touch with him later in his life but did see him few days before his death at the end of 2003). M.R.Jayaram, who also did become a good friend later (also of my family ) , started out as a good school cricketeer. I remember going to the YMCA grounds when our school created some type of a record - Jayaram and Gundu rao had mad lot of runs ! Jayaram later played Ranji for Mysore/Karnataka. He also joined Air Force(as an engineer, not a pilot). Though he did hit many centuries , M.R. Jayaram was not able to reach even 65 in his life. He passed away in May of 2003 - out in the early 60s.
Some other friends from both School and College ( 5-7 years of friendship were : Our Basavanagudi gang - A.J.Ashok Kumar (He went away to Tatanagar later. He was very tall and good in basketball. at times we would walk around Basavangudi - He with his cycle and I on foot - He very tall and I rather short.He is trying hard now a days to unite all of us ), R.Gauthama (who went away to the states in early ' 70s and passed away in Chicago in the early ' 90s), K.S.Chandrashekharan (now in States), R.VijayaKumar (now in Mysore ?), N.Sheshagiri ( a very bright student who has done well throughout life. He was the Secretary of Dept of Electronics. He was referred to as the Information Czar. He got the Padmabhooshan award), K.Srinivasan (There were 2 of the same name. Therefore he was referred to as V.K.Srinivasan. He used to play Cricket with us. He was studying in the Dept of Mathematics when I was in Physics. He had a distinguished career and retired as the IG of Police in Karnataka) and his brother K.Ranganathan ( was the head of eastern (?) Telecom when he retired, they lived in a house on Nagasandra Road , N.S. Shashidhara ( who is in States now and we continue to be in touch ) , M.Satyanarayana ( who became an engineer and who is now is Chennai - continues to be a close and dear friend ) etc
When we joined College (1955) a different stream of people came in. Most of our class in The National High School was from Basavangudi. But in college we were joined by people from areas as far as Malleshwaram and also from out of town.
We all were admirers of P.G.Wodehouse and tried to speak like his characters (It is sad that one never learnt to write like Wodehouse - no where near !) .

First Phase of bangalore life comes to an end
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1960s
Bombay (1962-1967): KGF(64-67)





(a)Trams had almost disapeeared from Bombay in the early 60s (b)The famous Victoria terminus
(c) One of the mining shafts in KGF
(d) The TIFR and the Durham group in KGF
(e)My Reading Habits change> Salinger,Colin
Wilson,Sartre ,Hesse ,Camus etc












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Early 60s India:

1962 November - China invades India
--1964 May 27 Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru (Indian Prime Minieter) dead
1966 Indira Gandhi becomes PM and rules India till 1977; GUIDE AND SANGAM representative indian films of '60s











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Early 1960s The world:

1961 : Gagarin - first man in space
PIK from left clockwise : (a) Proof for the Big bang theory - It all started one fine ' day ' in the distant past ! (1965) (b) Beatles in US (1964) (c) 1963 August = Civil Rights March (The famous " I Dream" speech by M.L.King)(d) Discovery of quasars (The Pik shows that they are very very far; also quarks, the fundamental building blocks of matter , peoposed ) (1962) (e) Gagarin (1961) (f) 1962 -Silent Spring - Rachel Carson . The first Advocate of environmental ethics












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Going away to USA - Bidding farewell at
Bangalore Railway Station (~Dec22 1967)-
What is there for him on the foreign shores ?

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