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June 2014

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Delhi University is set to launch the course of B. Tech in Forensic Science from this academic session. This four year course will include studies regarding crime scene reconstruction and DNA sequencing.
Delhi University has conducted workshops with Delhi Police, Indian Economic Intelligence and National Law University to give inputs for the course.Dr. Jaswinder Singh, Principal of SGTB Khalsa College confirms that the course is under Delhi University as of now and though SGTB Khalsa is ready to run the course, they haven’t received any approval from the University regarding the same.
The course will reportedly have 30 to 40 seats and the fees for it will be at par with the other courses with no additional charges.
“The teachers will be M.Sc in Forensics.” Said Dr. Jaswinder Singh, “As the college already runs a PG Diploma course in forensics, we have staff and teachers for the students. If we get approval to run the course in our college, we will be recruiting more teachers.”
The criterion to apply for the course is that the applicant should have a minimum aggregate of 55 percent. The program will have extensive lab related studies and practical. Students must have studied Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics or Biology/Bio-Tech.“As of now, we have sufficient labs and equipment because of the PG Diploma course in our college. We will be using them currently. We have space and plans to execute for new labs once we get approval from the University, ”he said.
For expertise, the program will also have international collaborations including Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Interpol, Israel Police investigation department and UN agencies. Regarding the purpose of launching this program, Dr. Jaswinder Singh said, “The diploma students will help the police in crime detection while training under them.”
While regarding the placements he added, “In the future, these students will get job opportunities in army, special cells of crime investigation etc.”

“My father gave me the greatest gift anyone could give another person, he believed in me.”  – Jim Valvano

They may not feature in those commercials showing a baby’s first steps, or in the ones with nutritious food for the family, but they are relentlessly there, like reassuring shadows. Not looming but towering, like pillars of solace. In their eyes you see the loving sparkle from your childhood, the watchfulness of today and a beacon for the morrow. He is the friend who supports, the teacher who motivates and the superhero that never fails to amaze you.

Today, we celebrate fatherhood, their love and inspiration, through stories that inspire us, tell us what is a father’s role like in the upbringing of a child so that we  celebrate and  return that greatest gift- and believe in them.

1. Every father’s prayer, every teacher’s Bile: Abraham Lincoln’s letter to his son’s teacher

“To live this life will require faith, love and courage. It is far more honorable to fail than to cheat. Teach him there is no shame in tears. Teach him to listen to everyone. Teaching him – but gently, if you can. He is such a nice little boy and he is my son.”

 

abraham

 

2.Imparting knowledge, imparting compassion, leading by example: ‘Letters from a Father to His Daughter’ by Jawaharlal Nehru

“I am going to write you short accounts of the story of our earth and the many countries, great and small, into which it is divided and I hope these will make you think of the world as a whole and of other people in it as our brothers and sisters.”

indira

 

3. Of everlasting love and a heart that forgives: The Prodigal Son- The Holy Bible

“I will get up and go to my father, and will tell him- Father, I have sinned against heaven, and in your sight. I am no more worthy to be called your son. Make me one of your hired servants.”

He arose, and came to his father. But while he was still far off, his father saw him, and was moved with compassion, and ran towards him, and fell on his neck, and kissed him.

pr

4. On life, boys, insects and courage: Letter to Scottie by Scott Fitzgerald

“All I believe in, in life is the rewards for virtue (according to your talents) and the punishments for not fulfilling your duties, which are doubly costly. If there is such a volume in the camp library, will you ask Mrs. Tyson to let you look up a sonnet of Shakespeare’s in which the line occurs- Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds.

letter

5. Raising a gentleman, and being gentle at it: Seeing a Woman: A conversation between a father and a son by Nate Pyle

“Someday I am going to have to have the conversation with my son. The one that happens after I catch his eye doing what male eyes do well – following an object of lust: I’m not telling you to not look at women. Just the opposite. I’m telling you to see women. Really see them. Not just with your eyes, but with your heart. Don’t look to see something that tickles your senses, but see a human being. “hands

 

And, this is why fathers matter. Here’s wishing them a Happy Father’s Day. Cheers to the learning, the faith and the love!
imagecourtesy: tumblr.com

Citing inflationary pressure and rising operational costs as the reason behind the move, Delhi University colleges are preparing to hike fees by 2-7 percent this academic season.

The first such move comes from St.Stephens College. While humanities courses at the college will now cost Rs. 23,660 per annum, a Rs. 1,225 hike, the fee for the science courses has been hike by Rs. 1,345 to Rs 25,655. Students enrolling for mathematics will have to Rs. 24,020 per annum. Apart from tuition fee, the college has also hiked its hostel fee from Rs 37,400 per annum to Rs 44,500.

Colleges of Delhi University charge a highly subsidised fee from students as they are funded either by the Central or Delhi State government. Some colleges are also funded by organisations such as the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee.

The colleges that are following suit are Maharaja Agrasen College, Bharati College, Hindu College and Ramjas College. Dr.Promodini Verma, Principal of Bharati College, spoke to DU Beat. “The language and medical courses we teach are funded neither by DU nor UGC, thus we are hiking their fees by Rs.1000 and Rs.100 respectively to cope with increasing costs. Bharati College is still one of the most inexpensive colleges in DU as our fees do not cross Rs.10,000 p.a. for any course,” she said.

Meanwhile, the issue is still being debated upon at Sri Venkateswara College. The colleges that are expected to not hike fee are SRCC, Dyal Singh College and Daulat Ram College. Dr. IS Bakshi, Principal of Dyal Singh College, explained that the college did not need to hike fees immediately although a decision in this regard could be taken in the future.

Colleges are careful in citing reasons and only marginally raising fees since the University has been witness to numerous protests by student bodies related to inadequate infrastructure and high canteen food rates among others.

Delhi University has declared the result of the following three year courses:

Sr. No. Exam Type Course Code Course Name Sem
1 Semester 205 B.A. (HONS.) APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY IV
2 Semester 206 B.A. (HONS.) ARABIC IV
3 Semester 206 B.A. (HONS.) ARABIC VI
4 Semester 207 B.A. (HONS.) BENGALI IV
5 Semester 207 B.A. (HONS.) BENGALI VI
6 Semester 208 B.A. (HONS.) BUSINESS ECONOMICS IV
7 Semester 208 B.A. (HONS.) BUSINESS ECONOMICS VI
8 Semester 210 B.A. (HONS.) ECONOMICS IV
9 Semester 210 B.A. (HONS.) ECONOMICS VI
10 Semester 213 B.A. (HONS.) GEOGRAPHY IV
11 Semester 213 B.A. (HONS.) GEOGRAPHY VI
12 Semester 216 B.A. (HONS.) HINDI IV
13 Semester 216 B.A. (HONS.) HINDI VI
14 Semester 217 B.A. (HONS.) HINDI PATRAKARITA IV
15 Semester 220 B.A. (HONS.) JOURNALISM IV
16 Semester 220 B.A. (HONS.) JOURNALISM VI
17 Semester 222 B.A. (HONS.) MASS MEDIA AND MASS COMMUNICATION IV
18 Semester 225 B.A. (HONS.) PERSIAN IV
19 Semester 225 B.A. (HONS.) PERSIAN VI
20 Semester 227 B.A. (HONS.) POLITICAL SCIENCE IV
21 Semester 227 B.A. (HONS.) POLITICAL SCIENCE VI
22 Semester 228 B.A. (HONS.) PSYCHOLOGY IV
23 Semester 224 B.A. (HONS.) PUNJABI IV
24 Semester 224 B.A. (HONS.) PUNJABI VI
25 Semester 229 B.A. (HONS.) SANSKRIT IV
26 Semester 229 B.A. (HONS.) SANSKRIT VI
27 Semester 232 B.A. (HONS.) SOCIAL WORK IV
28 Semester 232 B.A. (HONS.) SOCIAL WORK VI
29 Semester 230 B.A. (HONS.) SOCIOLOGY IV
30 Semester 230 B.A. (HONS.) SOCIOLOGY VI
31 Semester 233 B.A. (HONS.) URDU IV
32 Semester 233 B.A. (HONS.) URDU VI
33 Semester 253 B.SC. (HONS.) BIO-CHEMISTRY IV
34 Semester 253 B.SC. (HONS.) BIO-CHEMISTRY VI
35 Semester 254 B.SC. (HONS.) BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE IV
36 Semester 254 B.SC. (HONS.) BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE VI
37 Semester 270 B.SC. (HONS.) COMPUTER SCIENCE IV
38 Semester 270 B.SC. (HONS.) COMPUTER SCIENCE VI
39 Semester 258 B.SC. (HONS.) ELECTRONICS IV
40 Semester 258 B.SC. (HONS.) ELECTRONICS VI
41 Semester 264 B.SC. (HONS.) MICROBIOLOGY IV
42 Semester 264 B.SC. (HONS.) MICROBIOLOGY VI


To see the result follow the link: http://duexam1.du.ac.in/RSLT_MJ2014_3Y/Students/GradeCard.aspx

To see the list of results: http://duexam1.du.ac.in/RSLT_MJ2014_3Y/Students/List_of_Declare_RSLT.aspx

 

The FIFA World Cup 2014 kicked off on 12th June in the Corinthians Arena in Sao Paolo with Brazil defeating Croatia 3-1 in the opening game of the tournament.

The event began with a 25-minute long opening ceremony in front of guests like the Brazilian President Dilma Rouseff, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the FIFA President, Sepp Blatter. The ceremony was held in front of 62,600 fans, largely dominated by the home crowd. The opening ceremony saw performances from more than 600 artists, including acrobatic gymnasts, trampoline artists, martial arts-style capoeira performers and stilt walkers. The highlight of the event was the performance by Jennifer Lopez, Claudia Leitte and rapper, Pitbull who performed the World Cup’s official song this year, ‘We are One’.

The match began 75 minutes later and the host nation was subjected to early shocks as Brazil conceded the first goal of this World Cup through their own player, Marcelo Viera in the 11th minute. However, Brazil quickly came back with a goal from Neymar in the 29th minute. Brazil scored again via Neymar who converted the penalty after Fred was controversially awarded a penalty. The game was sealed by the host nation in the extra-time as Oscar scored a beautiful goal after beating two Croatian men. Brazil’s pace was the deciding factor in the end.

It was a good start for the host nation, considered to be a highly potential contender for this year’s World Cup.

Bollywood has its own share of glamorizing the college life in our minds. The campus, the college students, the song and dance routine – are some regular contents of a college based Bollywood movie. In fact, Bollywood has a handful of directors who are pass-outs from Delhi University and they often keep coming back to the memory lanes of the University campus to shoot their movies.

Imtiaz Ali, Maneesh Sharma, Parvin Dabas have all returned to their respective alumnus to shoot the college scenes for their big ventures.

Here are five movies which feature Delhi University colleges –

1. Rockstar

Imtiaz Ali directed and Ranbir Kapoor starrer super hit movie Rockstar was shot in Hindu College and St. Stephen’s College. Ranbir played the character of Janardhan Jhakar, the Jat boy from Hindu College who falls for the beautiful Stephanian Heer Kaul ( Nargis Fakhri).

Rockstar was shot extensively in the campus during the summer break of 2011.

Rockstar

2. Fukrey

2013’s sleeper hit Fukrey features Delhi University’s Miranda House College. The movie was supposedly going to be shot in Shri Ram College of Commerce but ended up getting shot in Miranda House instead. However, the movie features the women’s college as co-educational institution.

 

fukrey

 

3. Do Dooni Chaar

This family flick had some scenes shot in Kirori Mal College. The fest scene in the college of Rishi Kapoor’s daughter, in the movie was shot in KMC.

do dooni chaar

 

4. Band Baaja Baaraat

This 2010 blockbuster and Ranveer Singh’s debut film, has one of its popular songs Tarkeebein entirely shot in Hans Raj College. The song captures the campus roads, the college’s boys’ hostel and the classroom. A few shots are also taken in Ramjas College’s gallery.

band baaja baaraat

  1. Akaash Vani

This movie was again shot in St. Stephen’s College. The leads Kartik Tiwari and Nushrat Bharucha played the hostellers-in-love.

akaash vani

These movies are just to name a few while the list goes on!

th and 12th  of June. The inaugural ceremony started at 10 am on June 11 with Dr. C.P. Thakur, National Vice- President (Bhartiya Janata Party) and M.P (Rajya Sabha) and Ch. Krishan Pal Gujjar, Minister of State (Transport, Govt. of India) as the Chief Guests for the event. The Job Fair was largely seen as an important initiative taken up by the University. “It is a perfect step towards change”, said Dr. Thakur.  Krishan Pal assured that any help in the future regarding such an initiative will be provided by the government if the university somehow fails to do the same. After the inauguration, students headed up to the various stalls allotted to the companies for submitting applications and registration. A total of 42 companies including Times Pro, NIIT IFBI, HT Media, Whirlpool, Convergys, CITI Bank came for recruitment, with around 15000 registrations for placements. The average salary offered was 1.5 Lakhs to 1.6 Lakhs per annum and the highest being 4.6 Lakhs per annum. 460 students got placed and over 13000 students got internships with various companies. The various job positions offered by the companies were in sales, customer care execution, management, content writing, finance, banking and teaching. The closing ceremony on 2nd June saw Meenakshi Lekhi, MP (Lok Sabha) and Spokesperson (BJP) and Chaitanya Mahajan, Yuva Morcha. Utkarsh Chaudhary, DUSU Vice-President said “So far, the university has been taking decisions that are against the students, but now against this dictatorship, it has done something very significant for the students”.]]>

It is possibly one of India Today’s most awaited issues, the Best Colleges Survey undertaken in a joint effort by India Today and AC Nielsen is a yearly feature released weeks, if not days, before most colleges in the country open admissions for the new academic session.

Here, we bring to your attention the methodology to point to how these rankings may be optimal in relative terms but not necessarily so in absolute terms. This is not to discredit the colleges that featured on the various lists.
Other publications like Outlook also publish an annual survey and it is more or less the same colleges that feature at the top; clearly, the rankings is based on substantive data. But focusing on the colleges in the Arts, Science and Commerce streams, each of which is topped by a Delhi University college with a 100/100 score, we try to understand the methodology that goes into the score calculation and whether, in spite of the rankings in the different parameters and the overall ranking of 1st position, a full score is suitable or not.

According to the methodology followed for Arts, Science and Commerce colleges, a list of colleges was drawn up  from 17 cities across the country and this list sent to ‘experts’ in those 17 cities along with a standard questionnaire. This was the procedure followed for city-wise rankings. In the second stage, the ranking was done for the nation-wide list, this time by a panel of experts at the national level. By experts, the survey means Principals, Vice-Principals, HODs and Deans and to eliminate bias, they were asked to not rate their respective colleges. Over 1250 expert opinions were taken overall.

The various parameters like reputation, academic input, student care, infrastructure, placement, perceptual rank are then supplemented by a factual rank.  In the case of Arts colleges, it is interesting to note that Lady Shri Ram College has a full score of 100 and Loyola College which is ranked second has a score of 91.8 but in terms of parameter-wise ranking, Loyola is ranked 1st in all parameters except factual rank where it stands 17th and LSR stands 1st. Similarly, amongst the Science colleges, St. Stephen’s College has a score of 100 which is closely followed by Loyola at 99.26 but again, Loyola is ranked 1st in all parameters but the factual ranking where it stands 15th and Stephen’s 8th. It is Ramjas College from DU which has a factual rank of 1 and is in the 5th position with a score of 83.63. In Commerce, we have a neat case of SRCC  having been ranked 1st across all parameters with a score of 100 and LSR follows with an 87.30 and 2nd position in all parameters except factual ranking where it stands 3rd and Christ University, Bangalore stands 1st. Clearly, the system of parameters and the concept of perceptual and factual rank need to be explained better to allow for a more informed analysis of the rankings and the scores.

Lady Shri Ram College, St. Stephen’s College and Shri Ram College of Commerce have scored an outstanding 100 out of 100 in Arts, Science and Commerce respectively. While these are known to be the ‘top’ colleges, and are almost certainly so in relation to the other colleges surveyed, two things need to be considered- the ambiguity of the parameter-wise ranking system and the credibility of the full scores. Surely, even students from these colleges would admit that the institutes (like all institutes all over the world), have scope for improvement. Again, this is not to discredit the colleges ranked at the top but to question the process by which the scores were arrived at.

Dear Amma, I am in a girls’ college and that means very less interaction with the opposite sex on a daily basis. Well, I think I have a thing for this male teacher. I find him so cute and he is very intelligent and attractive. There are times when I feel like making an advance, despite knowing that it is wrong and against all moral codes. He is not very old too, and has just started teaching. I can’t seem to be able to help it. Please tell me how to cope with this.

 

Amma can never find a question from you confused little machhis that doesn’t make her nostalgic! I believe that having a crush on a teacher is an inevitable feeling that everyone goes through. Amma went to an all girls’ college too and can relate very well with you. Oh the fantasies I had of my teacher!

Go ahead, have a crush on him, dream about him and I’m pretty sure you stare at him in the corridors too! Don’t make him uncomfortable though. Amma firmly believes that the fantasies about teachers should be only that, fantasies. Even if he is not much older than you are, there is a line that must not be crossed little idli! It is very unprofessional and will put him in a difficult situation, for he has much to lose in case anything goes wrong. Once you pass out though, you could see if he’s available and “make your moves”. Until then, keep calm and keep on crushing!

Amid raised slogans seeking the newly elected BJP government to roll back FYUP as promised in their manifesto, an AISA member criticized FYUP saying, ” The time isn’t the real concern, but the subjects are. The teachers aren’t trained well to be able to teach these subjects. At places, Political science teachers are expected to be teaching Mathematics related courses.”
The representatives of AISA are of the view that the second time elected Padma Shri awardee Vice Chancellor Prof.  Dinesh Singh has not been able to justify neither the introduction of FYUP nor as to why it is a better structure.
The AISA has been previously involved in making endeavors to facilitate the roll back of FYUP. It conducted a referendum  dated August 22nd, 2013, wherein more than 90 percent of Delhi University students had voted against the motion of four year under graduation, foundation courses and the idea of multiple exits. ( See here.)
The new BJP government at centre has given everyone high hopes of promising change courtesy the Achche din aane waale hain slogans. It’ll be interesting to see if Delhi University students too, get their share of happiness from the supposed revolutionary government.
By Bharat Mohindru with inputs from Ishaan Gambhir
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