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Girls invent device to fight mosquitoes

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Deccan Chronicle          26.08.2013

Girls invent device to fight mosquitoes

Students explain the working of the device which attracts and electrocutes mosquitoes in the city on Saturday.	— DC
Students explain the working of the device which attracts and electrocutes mosquitoes in the city on Saturday. — DC

Chennai: Three Chennai students of Class 11 have invented a state-of-the-art device with which to electrocute mosquitoes.

I. Abirami, T. Opeel­e­aya and V. Then­mozhi, students of a private school in Chennai, are the young inventors, taking time to think out of the box where most others their age would perhaps routinely drop in at a shop to pick up coils and mosquito repellents to ensure they got a good night’s sleep.

The device that the three students have created raises a vapour that smells similar to the human body, deceiving the mosquitoes into alighting on a charged wire.

“This will be the first device to kill mosquitoes while all the other products available in the market only repel them. The liquid used lasts two months and can be replaced once over,” said Alphonse, who guided the students in the project.

 

Corporation to conduct vasectomy camp

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The New Indian Express              08.08.2013

Corporation to conduct vasectomy camp

Those who undergo vasectomy procedure, will be paid Rs 1,100 as an incentive and they will be paid Rs 100 additionally as travelling expense.
Those who undergo vasectomy procedure, will be paid Rs 1,100 as an incentive and they will be paid Rs 100 additionally as travelling expense.

The Corporation of Chennai is to conduct a mass Vasectomy camp today at Government Maternity Hospital Saidapet, said officials.

Speaking to City Express, an official said,“The camp is open for all the men who are below 50 years of age. The sterilisation needs no anaesthesia. There will be no pain in the course of operation, since it is to be done through modern methods. Neither scalpel nor suture is required in this sterilisation process. Within two minutes the surgery will be completed and a patient can be discharged immediately”.

Stressing that vasectomy does not create impotency, the official said, “The sexual life of the individual will not be affected due to taking vasectomy. There are no side-effects in this surgery. If the individual interested in vasectomy reversals sometimes later in his life, it can be done through alternative procedures”.

Those who undergo vasectomy procedure, will be paid Rs 1,100 as an incentive and they will be paid Rs 100 additionally as travelling expense. The vasectomy camp is to be held at Government Maternity Hospital, Saidapet between 8 am and 3 pm. Those interested can contact at 24358465, 9445190720, 9445194935.

 

Pay twice to park your vehicle

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Deccan Chronicle             05.07.2013

Pay twice to park your vehicle

Corporation-listing parking charges are not followed by contract labourers employed by the civic body in  most of the busy thoroughfares in the city. A scene at Pondy Bazaar. 	— DC
Corporation-listing parking charges are not followed by contract labourers employed by the civic body in most of the busy thoroughfares in the city. A scene at Pondy Bazaar. — DC

ChennaiParking a car at Pondy Bazaar and a few other areas in the city often has one paying both the Chennai corporation's parking meter rates and also those fixed by staff hired on contract on the premises.

A top official from the corporation has now assured action against such irregularities. The civic body’s rate is Rs 5 an hour and another Rs 5 for every additional hour. The drivers must collect a ticket, printed with the car’s number and display it on the dashboard of their vehicles after parking it.

But contract workers insist that the car owners buy 10-rupee tickets against the fixed charge of Rs 5 per hour. The tickets do not have any car number printed on them and the staff often fails to explain the details of the billing system they use.

“We are paid poorly and this extra buck helps us meet our ends,” said a parking assistant at Pondy Bazaar. “The workers need to deposit at least Rs 700 every day to the contractors,” said a doorkeeper at the locality requesting anonymity.

Adding that after paying the private parking firm the daily deposit money, the balance additional amount is distributed among workers. Saturdays and Sundays are always a good hunt as vehicles throng the parking lots, he noted.

When contacted about these parking irregularities by workers hired by private firms, a senior corporation official said so far they had not received any complaints. “If there are specific complaints necessary action will be taken,” he said.

City’s parking woes sprout in many forms

City corporation has installed  parking meters at 12 places. These include Shanthi Colony, Tara­mani, Purasawalkam, Gandhi Nagar, Whites Road and a few places in Anna Nagar and Pondy bazaar.

The corporation started the initiative contracting it to private parties with an agreement of 11.5 per cent share from the total revenue earned from ticket collection. Now the deal has reached 19 per cent and corporation officials find the project good for the civic body.

However, the parking woes in the city do not come to an end, but only sprout in some other form.

If traffic is conceptualised as the main villain, parking comes as the sidekick adding to the woes of residents. There are very few places in the city where one can get their vehicles parked for a certain rate.

“I used to park my car at Spencer Plaza two years ago, but now they have increased the rates seeing other malls charging exorbitant rates,” said S.Madhan, a marketing exe­cutive. On CSIR road in Taramani, two-wheelers are parked on the footpaths due to lack of space. “The MNCs and other IT firms should first ensure that there are enough parking for their employees,” said Harish.S, an IT employee.

In residential areas like Mylapore and Mandaveli, vehicles are parked in narrow lanes in front of houses making it difficult to traverse through the streets. Roads can be widened in places encroached and converted into parking spaces, feel residents.

With the ever-growing vehicle population, it’s time the officials and planners came up with a solution to counter the parking woes.

Chennai bikers most affected

Around 1,000 mot­o­rcycles are add­ed to city roads ever­yday. Almost 75 per cent of the city’s vehicular population comprises motorcycles as per the latest estimates.

The increased ea­r­­ning capacity of people and easily available loans from banks have only incr­eased the number of moto­rcyc­les on roads. Mot­o­rists in Chennai feel that in spite of huge growth in vehicle population, the corporation has done little to ease the congestion on roads.

According to official sour­­ces, Chennai has more number of two-whee­lers than Delhi and Mumbai. “In Adyar,  the are­as under the flyover have been used as parking spaces, but those are not enough,” feels Gopi Krishnan, a resident of Gan­dhi Nagar. The case is similar in many parts of Chennai which do not have enough parking spa­ce for their motorists.

Busy areas like T.Nagar and Broadway where lakhs of people gather face this problem and many times bikes get towed away by the traffic personnel. “We are left with no choice. Our priority is easing out traffic snarls,” said a senior traffic personnel in T.Nagar.

The corporation has come up with paid parking spaces for cars in 12 parts of the city like Pon­dy Bazaar, Adyar, Tara­mani and Mylapore. But, there seems no respite for motorists from the parking woes.

S.Sumathi of MRC Nag­ar said, “Most of the time, bikes are parked in  small lanes and in front of the shops on North Mada Street in Mylapore.” A senior town planning official in CMDA said the stalled multi-level parking project in five busy places in the city might help  rein in the problem to some extent.

 


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