Ram Ramaswamy, Vice Chancellor UoH posted: "The news that Prof. C N R Rao has been awarded the Bharat Ratna should be warmly welcomed in our University. After all, he was conferred an honorary doctorate by us in 2005. And importantly, he has been a mentor, directly or indirectly to many of our coll" Respond to this post by replying above this line | New post on A central Central University | | The news that Prof. C N R Rao has been awarded the Bharat Ratna should be warmly welcomed in our University. After all, he was conferred an honorary doctorate by us in 2005. And importantly, he has been a mentor, directly or indirectly to many of our colleagues in various science faculties at the UoH. He was on the faculty- he was one of the stars of the department- at IIT Kanpur where I did my M. Sc. (Chemistry) in 1974. Actually, he was on the interview panel that selected me for admission in 1972 - no entrance exams then- and although I then did not know who he was, I can still remember one question he asked me then: How many molecules of water are there on earth? It was a serious enough question, and as I was grappling with estimating volumes, dividing by 18, multiplying by Avogadro's constant and doing all that I could to come up with an answer, he added: When its not raining! I took Physical Chemistry from him the next year- he was an inspiring teacher in many ways- and over the years I have stayed in touch with him enough to be very very impressed by his tenacity and his passion for science. In Kanpur when he was already famous and had nucleated the Department of Chemistry, he was just about 40. That he has stayed current and obsessed with his science for the next four decades (and this shows no sign of abating) is phenomenal. But the news of the Bharat Ratna to him is welcome in many many ways. It is, as he says, also a recognition of the value of science, of scholarship, of research. Having seen the institutions he has built, one could give it for that alone. And CNR does not mince his words- he is an outspoken advocate for research, and has let government after government know that funding for science is inadequate. As we all recognize only too well, funding for higher education is inadequate, and our only hope for excellence is that we get funded at reasonable levels. In the past two days alone, he has raised the sensibility of not just the political class, but indeed the public at large of the need for funds, for support. We need more champions like him. | | | | |
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