Saturday, April 30, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 2 updates in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 30 06:14PM

Mathematicians And 'The Man Who Knew Infinity'
 
By Ramin Skibba, Contributor
Inside Science
insidescience.org
Friday, April 29, 2016
 
[Caption] Real portraits of the main characters from the
new film "The Man Who Knew Infinity," Srinivasa Ramanujan
(left) and G.H. Hardy (right).
 
A new movie tells the story of an underdog Indian
mathematician.
 
(Inside Science) - In 1914, an unknown Indian man boarded
a ship and traveled across the world to Cambridge
University in England, where he could finally follow his
passion for mathematics. In the few short years between
his arrival and untimely death, he filled notebooks with
formulas and discovered theorems, some of which still
influence the work of mathematicians and scientists
today.
 
The new biopic, "The Man Who Knew Infinity," which opens
in U.S. theaters beginning Friday, April 29, chronicles
the life of Srinivasa Ramanujan. A self-taught Indian
mathematician from the city then called Madras (now
Chennai), Ramanujan struggled to overcome racism,
poverty, and outsider status in imperial Britain during
the tumultuous time of World War I. But he eventually won
over the mathematical community and was the second Indian
to become a Fellow of the Royal Society.
 
Written and directed by Matthew Brown, the film gives an
authentic portrayal of how mathematicians actually work.
At Cambridge, Ramanujan, began an unlikely partnership
with G. H. Hardy, who quickly recognized his impressive,
if untrained, mathematical abilities. Hardy later
described their collaboration as "the one romantic
incident in my life."
 
Dev Patel and Jeremy Irons play Ramanujan and Hardy,
respectively. The mathematicians had to bridge many
cultural divides. A steadfast atheist, Hardy persistently
placed an emphasis on reason, logic, and the "pristine
proofs of the Western mathematical tradition," as Robert
Kanigel's 1991 biography puts it. Ramanujan, in contrast,
relied on intuition and imagination, turning math into an
art with his love of form and elegance. In the movie, he
tells Hardy that the Hindu goddess Namagiri writes the
formulas on his tongue each night.
 
"Mathematics used to be an individual sport, but Hardy
and Ramanujan taught us how much you can accomplish with
collaboration," said Princeton mathematician Manjul
Bhargava. He and other mathematicians, actors, and the
director spoke at a post-screening event at the San
Francisco International Film Festival.
 
Their rare and at times fraught collaboration makes for
an entertaining film. This is in spite its sprinkling in
bits of math throughout, which some viewers might find
daunting. For example, upon hearing about a taxi's number
1729, Ramanujan pointed out that that it's the smallest
number expressible as the sum of two cubes in two
different ways (1 cubed plus 12 cubed and 6 cubed plus 10
cubed).
 
Continues at:
 
https://www.insidescience.org/content/mathematicians-and-man-who-knew-infinity/3926
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://bit.do/jaimaharaj
alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 30 06:35PM

Dr. Jai Maharaj posted:
> cubed).
 
> Continues at:
 
> https://www.insidescience.org/content/mathematicians-and-man-who-knew-infinity/3926
 
Computing the Mathematical Face of God
 
hinduismtoday.com
February 1990
 
He died on his bed after scribbling down revolutionary
mathematical formulas that bloomed in his mind like
ethereal floes - gifts, he said, from a Hindu Goddess.
 
Continues at:
 
http://www.hinduismtoday.com/modules/smartsection/item.php?itemid=1152
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.fan.jai-maharaj
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Thursday, April 21, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 2 updates in 2 topics

habshi@anony.net: Apr 21 10:46AM

Jungle book , the young indian actor is just great , should have had
more than one song, the action may be a bit too intense for children
 
 
Fan , would advise no one to watch this movie. It actually has got a
good storyline and there is a never a dull moment and srk has really
done a marvellous job , the same as Kangana in Tanu weds Manu returns.
However it does not have songs and dances , and really they could have
inserted a couple in Dubronovik.
If Bollywood gives up its songs and dances and starts to ape Hollywood
, it will get crushed as all other national cinemas have been
habshi@anony.net: Apr 21 10:45AM

Ki and Ka , a man wants to become a husband supported by his working
wife. Initially she is supportive but as women will soon starts making
snide remark.
Loved the Delhi train museum with rail wagons you can get into , the
rail models in the living room. Thankfully there is no smoking , but
alcohol is excessive , dont know any Indian woman ordering double
whiskey on the rocks.
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Monday, April 18, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 18 07:04AM

Kannad films
 
PNS, The Pioneer, Monday, April 18, 2016
 
The Karnataka Government is now making moves to take its
regional films at the national level. For the first time,
it has launched a three-day Kannada film festival
screening critically-acclaimed latest films and
blockbusters. Nine contemporary Kannada films are being
showcased at the festival jointly organised by the
Directorate of Film Festivals, Karnataka Department of
Information and the Karnataka Chalanachitra Academy at
Siri fort Auditorium. The fest concludes on Monday.
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/nation/2016-04-17-128512.html
 
More at:
 
The Pioneer
http://www.dailypioneer.com
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
http://bit.do/jaimaharaj
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Saturday, April 16, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 16 05:11PM

Dilip Kumar hospitalised; next 72 hours crucial
 
dailypioneer.com
Saturday, April 16, 2016
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/top-stories/dilip-kumar-hospitalised-next-72-hours-crucial.html
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://bit.do/jaimaharaj
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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 12 04:41PM

Dr. Jai Maharaj posted:
 
> dailypioneer.com
> Monday, April 4, 2016
 
> http://www.dailypioneer.com/top-stories/pratyusha-and-rahul-looked-very-much-in-love-arbaaz-khan.html
 
Pratyusha Banerjee suicide: Boyfriend Rahul gets interim bail
 
rediff.com
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
 
http://www.rediff.com/news/report/pratyusha-banerjee-suicide-boyfriend-rahul-gets-interim-bail/20160412.htm
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://ow.ly/UIz9w
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Friday, April 8, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 09 12:44AM

IMAGINE A FATWA AGAINST RAFI
 
By Rajesh Singh
Op-Ed
The Pioneer
http://www.dailypioneer.com
Friday, April 8, 2016
 
In today's crazy environment, Mohammed Rafi, Naushad,
Shakeel Badayuni and Dilip Kumar (Yusuf Khan) would have
been proscribed by fundamentalist clerics for having
crossed Islam's 'red lines'
 
The ongoing controversy over 'Bharat Mata ki jai' is
still going strong. It will fade away in due course of
time when politicians, media and intelligentsia find
another cause to engage one another on prime-time
television and in print. But the issue is too important
to be forgotten because it raises a core concern: Are we,
or at any rate many in the liberal-secular space,
becoming apologetic about displaying nationalist
sentiment, in the fear that we will be branded as 'ultra-
patriots'? Or do we really believe that the way to
secularism lies in the repudiation of slogans that
energised millions of Indians during the freedom-struggle
and continue to be morale-boosters to this day for
thousands of our jawans engaged in preserving and
protecting the nation's security and sovereignty?
 
We were not always like this. Religion was kept at more
than an arm's length in matters of nationalism, even when
the latter seemed to find metaphors in certain religious
leanings. Mahatma Gandhi did not lose followers from
other faiths just because he was a staunch Hindu and
loved to hear the chant of 'Raghupati Raghav Raja Ram' or
when he spoke of Ram Rajya. Nor did BR Ambedkar fritter
away Hindu support in the political sphere after he
embraced Buddhism. There are many similar instances, but
the most interesting of cross-religious support for
nationalist slogans and renditions are to be found in
Hindi films. Many of those songs would have generated
huge outcries today, what with an Owaisi or an Azam Khan
or an over-zealous Muslim cleric on the prowl.
 
A film, Jagriti, was released in 1954. It had many
popular songs, and one of them, written and sung by the
eminent poet, Pradeep, was: 'Aao bachchon tumhe dikhayein
jhanki Hindustan ki/ Is mitti se tilak karo, ye dharti
hai balidan ki...' So far so good, but the next line
would have ruffled the clerics today: 'Vande Mataram!
Vande Mataram!' The song was filmed on a bunch of Indian
children travelling with their teacher by train, and the
teacher was communicating to his wards about India's
great heroes and its imposing history and geography. It
cannot be said that the director had taken care to keep
out Muslim children from the scene. But there was no cry
of protest from the Muslim clergy, claiming that the song
offended its community's religious sensibilities. To this
date, on occasions like Independence Day or Republic Day,
one gets to hear the song played in public places.
 
In a more recent case, noted music director AR Rahman
composed the enormously popular, 'Ma tujhe salaam...
Vande Mataram'. It cannot be argued that he compromised
on Islamic beliefs which he holds dear to his heart, or
that he is less of a Muslim than the acerbic Asaduddin
Owaisi who refuses to chant 'Bharat Mata ki jai' because
it supposedly offends his Islamic sensibilities.
 
We must consider it lucky that the likes of Owaisi and
fundamentalist Muslim clerics did not exist, or at least
did not have a voice, during the early years and decades
of independence, or else they would have made the life of
someone like the legendary playback singer -- and a
devout Muslim -- Mohammed Rafi, miserable. Would this gem
have been able to live in peace as a 'true Muslim' after
singing songs such as 'Mann tadpat Hari darshan ko aaj';
'O duniya ke rakhwale' (given the film's situation);
'Insaaf ka mandir hai ye, bhagwan ka ghar hai'; 'Madhuban
mein Radhika nache re'? In fact, not just the singer but
also the lyricist and the music director in these
instances were Muslims. Additionally, the last two songs
mentioned had a Muslim hero on screen. And yet, neither
they nor the listeners or film-goers were cued in to
religious affiliation or felt offended. What mattered to
them was professional commitment and the belief that
films and music cut across religious boundaries and
united people
 
In today's environment,fatwas would have been issued
against Rafi, Naushad, Shakeel Badayuni (who was educated
at Aligarh Muslim University) and Dilip Kumar (Yusuf
Khan) -- all of whom collaborated in the songs mentioned
earlier -- for having crossed the 'red lines' of Islam
(determined by the fatwa-delivering clerics of various
hues having little support within their own community).
There would have been calls for boycott of these
personalities, effigies would have been burnt and the
screening of films concerned would have been disrupted.
Some would have probably filed cases against them for
'hurting religious sentiments'.
 
It's not a coincidence that, while many songs in the
1940s, 1950s, 1960s, and even in early 1970s, related to
nationalism, the list got shorter thereafter. Those were
days when children were shown to be imbued in patriotic
hue, walking spiritedly to the tune of, say, 'Chal, chal
re naujawan'. On occasions, there was the sagacious
gentleman who crooned to a child, 'Tu Hindu banega naa
Musalmaan banega'. Such songs projected the shaping of a
child's mind in nationalistic ways. As this sentiment
lost film space (with film-maker and actor Manoj Kumar
braving the trend almost single-handedly), it became
clear that the immediate generation, wedded to the
Internet and brainwashed by liberal-seculars, found it
acutely embarrassing to express its nationalistic
feelings.
 
This does not mean that today's youth are less
nationalist; it's just that they are being asked to
believe that open support to patriotic lines such as
'Bharat Mata ki jai' is somehow parochial and even ante-
diluvian. The encouraging part is that, with Owaisi and
group upping the ante, many people, generally silent,
have come out in support of raising nationalist slogans
without being made to feel guilty. Connectedly, it was
wonderful to hear Muslim women gathered at an event in
Saudi Arabia which Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently
attended, raise the 'Bharat Mata ki jai' slogan.
 
(Photo Caption: A scene from the 1954 film, Jagriti,
whose songs were laden with nationalist feelings)
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnists/oped/imagine-a-fatwa-against-rafi.html
 
More at:
 
The Pioneer
http://www.dailypioneer.com
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://bit.do/jaimaharaj
 
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Monday, April 4, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 2 updates in 2 topics

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 04 09:07PM

I found Varanasi extremely fascinating: Morgan Freeman
 
pradesh18.com
Monday, April 4, 2016
 
http://english.pradesh18.com/news/uttar-pradesh/i-found-varanasi-extremely-fascinating-morgan-freeman-883620.html
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://bit.do/jaimaharaj
alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 04 08:24PM

Dr. Jai Maharaj posted:
 
> dailypioneer.com
> Sunday, April 3, 2016
 
> http://www.dailypioneer.com/show-time/pratyusha-a-killing-news.html
 
Pratyusha and Rahul looked very much in love: Arbaaz Khan
 
dailypioneer.com
Monday, April 4, 2016
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/top-stories/pratyusha-and-rahul-looked-very-much-in-love-arbaaz-khan.html
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://bit.ly/1EM9nsg
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Sunday, April 3, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 03 05:53PM

Dr. Jai Maharaj posted:
 
> dailypioneer.com
> Saturday, April 2, 2016
 
> http://www.dailypioneer.com/top-stories/tv-actress-pratyusha-banerjee-commits-suicide.html
 
Pratyusha, a killing news
 
dailypioneer.com
Sunday, April 3, 2016
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/show-time/pratyusha-a-killing-news.html
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.fan.jai-maharaj
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Saturday, April 2, 2016

Digest for rec.arts.movies.local.indian@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

alt.fan.jai-maharaj@googlegroups.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj): Apr 02 06:34PM

TV actress Pratyusha Banerjee commits suicide
 
dailypioneer.com
Saturday, April 2, 2016
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/top-stories/tv-actress-pratyusha-banerjee-commits-suicide.html
 
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
 
http://bit.do/jaimaharaj
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