This is a short history of College of Engineering Guindy Chennai (Madras) in India. This was the first engineering college in India. This was made by the year 1966 batch and available free. Has a lot of interesting anecdotes and photos of the 200 year history.
This is a short history of College of Engineering Guindy Chennai (Madras) in India. This was the first engineering college in India. This was made by the year 1966 batch and available free. Has a lot of interesting anecdotes and photos of the 200 year history.
This is a short history of College of Engineering Guindy Chennai (Madras) in India. This was the first engineering college in India. This was made by the year 1966 batch and available free. Has a lot of interesting anecdotes and photos of the 200 year history.
This is a short history of College of Engineering Guindy Chennai (Madras) in India. This was the first engineering college in India. This was made by the year 1966 batch and available free. Has a lot of interesting anecdotes and photos of the 200 year history.
College of Engineering, Anna University, Guindy; Madras 600 025
End Paper 1: College of Engineering, Guindy (1949) End Paper 2 : College of Engineering, Anna University, Guindy (1991) Cover Design: Printing Technology Students (1988-92 Batch) Dedicated to the past, the present and the future students and staff of College of Engineering, Guindy who contributed, contribute and will contribute to the betterment of the world, in general, and the state and the country, in particular SURVEY SCHOOL T O TECH. TEMPLE (A History of College of Engineering, Guindy) Contributed by GUINDY ENGINEERS - 1966 1794 - 1994 FOREWORD Writing the history of a great Institution like the College of Engineering, Guindy is indeed a stupendous task. Posterity would demand that we make sincere attempts to record the various events that signified the growth of an Institution, which is closely associated with the developmental activities of our Nation and improving the quality of life of its citizens. I am happy that a dedicated team of Alumni, Faculty and Students has taken considerable efforts in bringing out this edition of the history, of the College of Engineering, Guindy. Being the first attempt, there may be scope for improvement with addition of further important details. The data and information on many events in the 200 years of useful existence of the Institution cannot be easily compressed into a compass of 200 pages of this kind. I appreciate the efforts put in by this enthusiastic team of Guindy Engineers and I hope it would be well-received by all alumni and others. (M. ANANDAKRISHNAN) Madras 600 025 Vice-Chancellor August 15, 1991 Anna University PREFACE The aim of this book is to present the salient features of the genesis, growth and present status of a glorious institution, our Alma Mater, the College of Engineering, Guindy. During its 200 years of chequered history, the Institution has contributed significantly in meeting the technical manpower requirements of our mother land. Starting as a small Survey School on May 17, 1794 with a student strength of eight, it has now grown into a mammoth institution with three thousand students. pursuing excellent engineering education. An attempt has been made to chronologically portray the beginning, the arduous but impressive growth during the formative days and the giant strides witnessed in. the recent past by this important seat of learning in the country. While no great accuracy is claimed for the matter presented in the Six Chapters and the Annexure entitled Down the Memory Lane, the main aim is to provide the details as obtained from available records to fulfill the desire of thousands of distinguished Alumni, whose love for this Institution is immense. This edition is the fruition of a team effort. Yet, the large contributions made by some of the Alumni, the Faculty and the Students must b< gratefully acknowledged. I must acknowledge the valuable ai*iance rendered by Prof. M. Sadasivam, who has spent almost the entire period of his service in this College. He also did a wonderful job of editing the final version. Thiru C.T. Radhakrishnan, a distinguished Alumnus, provided extensive data and enthusiastic support. The help given by Tmt. Lalitha Murali, a free lance journalist and grand-daughter of Thiru N.S. Narayana Iyer, an Alumnus, is greatly acknow- ledged. The Faculty and the Students of the Printing Technology Division of the College of Engineering have done an excellent job in bringing out this edition. I would like to place on record the significant contributions of Dr. N. Sankaranarayanan, Thiruvalargal K. Vipinendran, T. Kalaiselvan, C. Navarethinam, R. Elumalai, B. Ramesh, A. Nesakumar, B. Govindarajulu, C. Rajesh, M.P. Senthilkumar, M.Y. Hameed Gani and Ms. E. Nagalatha. Even though the idea of bringing out a book on the history of the College of Engineering, Guindy was there for some time, it was the 1966 batch of Guindy students who made the dream become a reality. My grateful thanks to these distinguished Alumni for their significant contribution and unstinted support for this venture. I must particularly acknowledge the dedicated work of Selvi K.S. Babai, Thiru M.R. Ranganathan and Thiru N.V. Ramakrishnan of 1966 batch, who worked relentlessly against odds for the completion oFthis project. I must thank Dr. M. Anandakrishnan, Vice-Chancellor, Anna University, a very distinguished Alumnus of this College for his encouragement and guidance. My thanks are also due to a large number of Alumni, my colleagues, my students and others who helped achieve bur long-cherished desire. I would appreciate useful suggestions for enhancing the worth of this effort from all those who love our Alma Mater, the College of Engineering, Guindy. IK^f J^K (T.R. JAGADEESAN) Madras 600 025 Director August 15, 1991 College of Engineering ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Writing the history of the Great Institution 'College of Engineering Guindy' is a stupendous task. As Alumini, we have the privilege of walking back in the Memory Lane, but still are we competent enough to write the history of our College? We are engineers but not historians. But the confidence with which the Bi-Centenary Committee asked us to take up this pleasant but difficult task made us feel competent to take up this job. We immensly thank Dr. M. Anandakrishnan, Vice- Chancellor, Anna University, Dr. T.R. Jagadeesan, Director, College of Engineering, Madras - the 'Moving Spirit' behind this effort - and Mr. C.T. Radhakrishnan, whose enthusiasm is the starting point. We also place on record the excellent help given to us by Mrs. Lalitha Murali, a freelance journalist and the grand- daughter of Mr. M.S. Narayan Iyer, an alumnus of the College whose M.Phil, dissertation topic was the 'The History of College of Engineering'. We are also very grateful to Prof. M. Sadasivam for his valuable help - in giving his 2 published articles, counsel in layout, editing and proof-reading, e t c We sincerely thank, from the depth of our hearts, Dr. N. Sankaranarayanan, Head, Printing Technology Division, Mr. K. Vipinendran, Lecturer, Printing Technology Division and an alumnus of the College in doing an excellent job of leading the production team. We also thank Mr.T. Kalaiselvan, Mr. C. Navarethinam, Mr. R. Elumalai, Mr. B. Ramesh, Mr. A. Nesakumar, Mr.B. Govindarajalu - staff of Printing Technology Division -for their valuable assistance. This book would not have taken its final shape but for the tremendous interest and enthusiasam shown by Messrs. C. Rajesh, M.P. Senthilkumar, M.Y. Hameed Gani and Ms. E. Nagalatha - final year students of Printing Technology Division who poured never ending stream of sweat during day and night and were supported by Mr. S. Ganesh, Mr. K. Srinivasan, Mr. S. Sethuram, Ms. K. Rajeswari, Ms. Himani Mohan, Messrs. S. Srikanth, Pankaj Agarwal, M. Subramani, P.S. Perumal and J. Ajith Paul. To them, we offer our heartfelt thanks. We welcome your suggestions and cooperation regarding this effort for bringing out subsequent editions. We dedicate this book to all those who had taken this great institution to the Pinnacle of Glory. Yours sincerely Guindy Engineers - 1966 <&IS^- (K.S. BABAI) (M.K. BABA) Convener Secretary CONTENTS I. LANDMARKS II HISTORY 1. Humble Beginning 2. On the Anvil 3. Comes of Age 4. Chequered life at Guindy 5. Varsity is Born 6. Retrospect and Prospect III DOWN THE MEMORY LANE 1. Preamble 2. Succession List of Principals 3. Selected Essays 4. Photo Gallery 5. Poet in the Engineer 6. Cartoonist in the Engineer 7. Humorist in the Engineer 17 29 39 55 91 105 115 117 119 121 180 188 194 203 IV PEOPLE BEHIND THIS BOOK 210 1 LANDMARKS Milestones in the History of C E G 1794 May 17th : Survey School was established by the East India company and was located in a building near Fort St. George School. Later, it was shifted to a separate building erected close to the Astronomical Observatory built by Mr. Topping in 1792. 1810 The School was closed temporarily due to budgetary limitations. 1819 The School was restarted on the advice of Major De Havillard the Inspector General of Tank Department. (This Department has later come to be known as the Public Works Department.) 1826 The decision to transfer this School to the Office of Surveyor General was dropped. 1842 A proposal to establish a College for Engineers, affiliated to the so-called 'University of Madras' was mooted. But no decision was taken. 1849 An idea was floated to attach this School to a Private School for Ordnance Artificers and Apprentices founded by Major. Maithland. But the Military Board dropped the idea. 1854 A suggestion was made to have the Institution on the pattern of the Thomas on Civil Engineering College founded at Roorkee in 1847 and to include Mechanical Engineering subject for Civil Engineers was also suggested. Survey School to Tech. Temple 1855 The Director of Public Instruction, Mr. A.J. Arbuthnot, was called on to submit arrangements for the establishment of an Engineering School or College. This led to long-drawn controversy between him and Major. Maithland--as the latter wanted his own School to be developed. 1857 Lt. G. Winscom was appointed as the Principal to organise the proposed College. 1858 The designation of the Survey School was changed to 'Civil Engineering School'. 1859 The school moved to the "Kalasa Mahal" at Chepauk. The School was renamed as Civil Engineering College. The scope was still to train Upper and Lower subordinates. 1860 Capt. Carpendale succeeded Lt. G. Winscom as the Principal. 186.1 The College was affiliated to the University of Madras. 1862 The College was finally raised to the status of an Engineering College. A class for Photography was formed. The first "Survey Camp" was held at the hilly grounds of Pallavaram. 1864 The first set students who passed their B.C.E. Examinations came out of the College. The first Bachelor of Civil Engineering was Mr. S. Subbarayachariar. 1866 Mr. Powell, Director of Public Instruction, strongly urged that the graduates of the College must be given posts with responsibility and remuneration adequate to fit the education received. Only 2 out of landmark the 13 students passed were appointed as Assistant Engineers.and those two students happened to be of British origin. 1868 Minimum entry qualification for admission into the College was raised from Matriculate to pass in the First examination of Arts course. Matriculates could join only in the subordinate course. A library catalogue was printed for the first time. 1872 The first graduate from this College became the first native Assistant Engineer following a Government Order for the appointment of natives for the post of Probationary Assistant Engineers. 1877 The College was affiliated to the University of Madras. 1878 Lt. H.D. Love was appointed as the Principal. 1879 Due to extensive reduction in the intake of engineers into PWD, the numbers joining the College were diminished. 1880 Employment register was opened and assistance was given to pass*ed out students to get employment outside P.W.D. Course duration was increased to 3 years with practical training. For the first time the persons who had 2 years of practical training in Mechanical Engineering were designated as Mechanical Engineers. 1881 Government of India ordered that 6 vacancies in the Engineering establishment in P.WD. to be filled from Indian Engineering Colleges after 1885. 1884 As suggested by the Principal, the South Indian Railways alone tried satisfactorily the experiment of Survey School to Tech. Temple appointing Indian Engineers. Government of India sanctioned 24 permanent posts of sub-overseer for those passed out of civil engineering colleges, and one was allotted to a graduate passed out from Guindy Engineering College. 1885 College awards for Proficiency changed from 'Books' to 'Instruments.' 1886 A scheme for recognition of the College by the Government came into effect. 1889-1891 Special skill development programmes for Artisans and Maistries were introduced. 1890 College gets furniture produced by students in the workshop. 1894 With the introduction of Mechanical Engineering, the B.C.E. degree was changed as B.E. (Bachelor in Engineering). The College became the first institution in India to award Mechanical Engineering Degree. Early morning Survey Practicals changed to full-day Survey Classes, and Visiting Faculty from P.W.D. were introduced. 1904 The reorganised Committee of the College recommended to shift the College to Saidapet and to make it as a residential Institute. 1912 The entry qualification for joining B.E. was made a pass in Intermediate. The duration of the course was increased from 3 years to 4 years. 1920 The College was shifted to its present campus at Guindy. 1925 First Indian Principal, Thiru. G. Nagarathanam Iyer, was appointed. He was an alumnus of the College.Old Boys' Association was started. landmark 1930 Degree course in Electrical Engineering was started. 1931 Mechanical Engineering Association was started. 1932 First batch of students in Electrical Engineering came out of the College. The College and University of Madras became the first in India to introduce Degree in Electrical Engineering. November, 14 : 1932, Civil Engineering Association was started. Severe depression and unemployment was the order of the day. 1933 College Magazine was started, and it was priced at Re. 1/- per copy. For the General Body meeting of the Old Boys' Association held on Jan. 20, only 2 old boys attended, apart from fhnse in the College. The Staff Club functioned from a tent. 1935 Research Degree in Engineering was introduced. First Engineering Exhibition was held from January. 1936 First change in Time-Table. Duration of period changed from 1 hr to 50 min. and number of periods increased from 5 to 6 per day. Survey classes started at 6.30 a.m. 1938 Hindustani Premi Mandal inaugurated on Aug. 22. Eirst Drama by students staged on Aug. 6. K.L. Rao gets First M.Sc. Degree by Research from University of Madras. Survey School to Tech. Temple Co-operative Society was started with 60 memebers on Feb. 8. 3rd College Exhibition was held. 1939 Miss. Oosha Devakaran Desai, First Indian Lady to join Engineering course in Poona College. 1940 Andhra Sahithi Samithi was started. 'Block Unions' for Hostel Blocks HDFC formed. Miss. Leela George and Miss A. Lalitha were the first two 'Lady' Engineers of Guindy. 1942-43 Accelerated course brought into effect with no vacations and 3 batches passed out in two years, during World War II. 1943 Tamizhar Kazhagam was started. 1944 Book club was started. Sir Mervel, former DPI passed away. Starting of an Electrical Communication course was under consideration. After a lapse of four years, Engineering College Hostel Silver Jubilee was celebrated with open-air dinner. 'Board Visitors' (Board of Revenue) recommend abolition of Diploma courses. February 1944, 150th year celebrations, SirT. Austin, Advisor to H.E. Governor of Madras, presided. Landmark 7 New regulation with final examination at the end of every year was introduced. 1945 Society of Electrical Engineering was separately started in July after having functioned with Mech. Engineers' Association for some time. Mechanical Engineering Association was separately started in October. Degrees in Telecommunication and Highway Engineering were started for the first time in India. 1946 Engineering Exhibition was held. Officiating Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Lt. Col. Paul gets Rao Bahadur title. Engineering Colleges at Coimbatore and Annamalai Nagar were started. Prof. Karl Terzagi (U.S.A.) addresses the students in the Geotechnical Symposium. First Ph.D. in Engineering (through Research) was obtained by Prof. K. Sukumaran and two students obtained M.Sc. degree by Research. 1947 The Kannada Sangha was staited. War certificate exams in the Technical Wing of UOTC. 1st Madras (BN). 5 out of 15 cadets passed. Two more Engineering Colleges were started, one at Anantapur and the other at Visakapatnam. The Anantapur College was housed at Guindy to begin with. To celebrate Independence Day, "Freedom Arch" was erected by the students. Survey School to Tech. Temple November 14 : "Mock parliament" was held. Highway Engineering Association was started. 1948 Malayalee Association was started. NCC was started on July 15. 3rd Madras (Engrs.) with 60 cadets. Social Service League was formed in November with 20 members and gets a donation of Rs. 65 from Student Christian Organization of College. College Boxing Team won Lalitha Shastry shield after a long lapse. The power farming society formed on Aug. 15. 1949 September 1 : General body of the College Student Association met to consider the motion of censure against President & Secretary. Motion failed. First time debating and essay competitions were introduced. Canteen was started on Feb. 12. Highway Engineering Association was inaugurated on Aug. 12. Old Drama hall was inaugurated on Oct. 29. Mahatma Gandhi bust was unveiled in Hostel. Attendance Register to be maintained by various departments instead of by the office. 75% minimum attendance in every department was made compulsory. 30.12.49 to 6.1.50 Fifth Engineering Exhibition. Landmark 9 1950 Science Association was inaugurated on Nov. 21. First Old Boys' Rally was held on Sept 13. Welfare Committee was formed on Aug. 13. Transport Committee also formed in August. 1951 Radio Committee was formed. Open Access Library System was introduced. College campus having come within the city limits, PWD had no money to pay taxes levied with retrospective effect. Improvements to AMT Blocks were carried out along with remodelling of M Block. Highway Lab. secured fund allocation. Hostel Committee purchased 5 cows for Night Milk for Hostel inmates. Canteen served Badam Halwa & Fruit Salad for 2 annas. The price of 3 Annas was tried and given up. Entry point designation of College graduates changed from Supervisor to Junior Engineer in the PWD. Hostel Committee and Jaggery Manufacturing Society was started. Dr. J J. Rudra, former Principal passed away. Common Room Committee was formed on July 30. 10 Survey School to Tech. Temple 1956 Degree in Mining Engineering was started. 1957 Intake of students increased from 175 to 275 for the College. A short-term course for three months to provide in-service training for Supervisors and Engineers from the field in Public Health was started. 'Tamizhar Kazhagam' name changed to 'Tamil Manram' and first Tamil article in the magazine appeared. 1958 Highway Engineering course was abolished. 1959 Five-year Integrated B.E. course was introduced. PUC was made the minimum entry qualification for B.E. course. 1962 NCC Rifles started. College Tamil Debating team represented' by O.A. Sivakumaran & MR. Ranganathan won Rangaswamy Memorial Cup donated by PSG Arts College for the best team in Tamil debating in Tamil Nadu Colleges, for the first time. 1963 Duration of PG courses increased to two years 'Post- B.Sc'. B.E. Degree course was introduced with 3 years duration. 1964 Old Boys donate Rs. 25,000/- for scholarship. NCC Rifles closed. New cadre of Asst. Professors created. University affiliation for High Voltage Engineering was given. Landmark 11 1965 In June, a new guest house, College Canteen Building, Auditorium, Library, Fundamental Engi- neering Research Building, PG Hostel and Staff Quarters were inaugurated. 1966 First batch of 'Post B.Sc' B.E. graduates came out of the College. 3 girls one in Civil, one in Electrical and one in Electronics (Miss Babai, Ms. Indra, Ms. Prabhavaty passout of Post B.Sc. First woman Mechanical Engineer, Ms. Sarojini of the Five-year Integrated course graduated from Guindy. 1968 With a thorough revision of syllabi 'Semester Pattern' was introduced for undergraduate programme. From July, Air-conditioning and Refrigeration Engineering was introduced as a New Elective for M.Sc. in Mechanical Engineering. "Post B.Sc' course was abolished. 1969 Degree in Metallurgy was started. B.E. (Honours) course was introduced on optional basis. The course on Mining Engineering was abolished. 1970 A full-time Post-graduate Diploma in Traffic Engi- neering was introduced. Sept. 25 : 'Scheme foi Enterpreneurs' was started for final year students. 1971 Semester system introduced for M.Sc. degree. Part time courses, B.E. in Civil, Mechanical and Electrical 12 Survey School to Tech. Temple for the benefit of Diploma holders were started. Separate wing for PG Studies and Research was esta- blished under the administrative control of the Dean of Post-graduate Studies. B.Sc. degree in Applied Science in the Faculty of Engineering was started. Aug. 23 : Science Association was started. Symposium on "Bionics" held in September. Society of Metallurgical Engineers was started. A new trophy for 'Mono-acting' introduced in the Arts Section. First Summer School was started and conducted. Part time B.E. course was started. Semester system for M.Sc. (Engg) was introduced. 1972 PG courses in Engineering Design and Applied Electronics were introduced. M.Sc. Applied Mathe- matics was also started. 1973 PG Diploma in Industrial Engineering was commenced. 1974 M.Sc. course in Urban Engineering was started. 1978 Sept. 4 : Anna University was established. Mr. P. Sivalingam became the first Vice-Chancellor. Dr. V.C. Kulandaisamy takes over as .second Vice-Chancellor of Anna University. landmark I ;! 1981 Undergraduate programmes in Industrial Engineer- ing, Electronics and Communications, Automobile Engineering were started. Post-graduate programmes in I rrigation and Water Management, Medical Physics, Laser and Electro- Optics, Business Administration and Production Engineering were started. 1982 Undergraduate programme in Computer Science and Engineering (B.E.) and Post B.Sc. Diploma in Computer Science and Applications were started. 1983 B.E. Printing Technology, P.O. Diploma in Hydrology and Water Resources Engineering and M.Tech. in Remote Sensing were started. 1984 Master's Degree in Computer Applications was started. 1985 M.Tech. in Biotechnology' was started. 1986 Master's programme in Architecture was started. New schemes for Centre for Water Resources and I nstitute of Remote Sensing, Recurring grants for Centre for Water Resources, Centre for Environmental Studies, I nstitute of Remote Sensing and Microprocessor Education, Training and Research (1985-1988) were approved. CAD/CAM programmes were started in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. 14 Survey School to Tech. Temple 1987 B.E. course in Mining Engineering, P.O. Diploma in Footwear Science and Engineering and M.Tech. in Footwear Science and Engineering were started. 1988 Dr. V.C. Kulandaiswamy, Vice-Chancellor, Anna University was honoured with "Sahitya Academy Award". 1988-89 B.Tech. in Rubber Technology, Cross Migration Scheme in M.E., (Computer Science and Engi- neering) and M.Sc. by Research were started. 1989 23 Volunteers from various units of NSS headed by Mr. R. Radhakrishnan, Programm Officer, Unit II made a cycle expedition to Konai Falls during March 23-26. 1990 May 11 : Dr. M. Anandakrishnan succeeded Dr. V.C. Kulandaisamy as-third Vice-Chancellor. 1991 'New Computer Shading Method' for TNPCEE was introduced. May 17: College started Bi-Centenary Celebra- tions. 1966 Batch Students celebrate their Silver Jubilee year. Alumni centre is opened New Central Library Building is completed. Landmark 15 Quality Circle Forum of India Madras Chapter started at Guindy. The student branch of IEEE wins the Vincent Bendix Awards. HUMBLE BEGINNINGS 1.1 Prologue T he name Guindy is associated with three famous places, the Raj Bhavan of Tamil Nadu, the race course in Madras city and the Engineering College at Guindy. First, the Raj Bhavan at Guindy, had been known as "Guindy Lodge" prior to 1813, and the property was purchased by the Government in 1822, by Sir Thomas Munro, the then Governor, to be used as a country house for the Governor. It became the official residence of the Governor in 1946, when the other residence, in the present Government Estate in Mount Road, was transferred to the Government. Regarding the second landmark, some assemblage of racing was conducted on the present site of the race course at Guindy early in the 19th century, and it was known as the "Madras Races" from 1887 to 1895. The "Madras Race Club" was formed in 1896 and registered under the Indian 18 Survey School to Tech. Temple Companies Act in 1922. The last of the trio, the Engineering College, Guindy, is by far the oldest, having been started late in the 18th century. While the Raj Bhavan has offered sojourn for tens of Governors, and the Race Course has made hundreds of turf-lovers rich (at the cost of thousands), the Engineering College has "manufactured" tens of thousands of engineers. Members of the engineering profession, in and out of India, call it, with affection, as Guindy. The soil was prepared and the seed was sown by Mr. Michael Topping which grew into a mammoth tree. The first phase of Topping's efforts to establish a School with 8 boys picked by a simple process of personal selection has, over a period of 197 years, changed into a Hi-tech process of selection by computers. Before going into the details of Topping's School, it may be worth seeing the early life of engineers of East India Company. For more than a century after East India Company had built their first factory at Masulipatnam in 1611, there was not even a single trained Engineer in India as the Company was concerned with Trade and not Engineering. In the eighteenth century, an Engineer was defined as follows : "An able expert man who, by perfect knowledge of Mathematics, delineates upon paper, or marks upon the ground, all sorts of forts and other proper, works for offence or defence. He should understand the art of fortification, so as to be able not only to discover the defects of a place, but to find a remedy proper for them, as also how to make an attack upon, as well as to defend, the place. Engineers are extremely necessary for these purposes. Therefore, it is necessary that, besides being ingenious, they should be brave". The East India Company Gunners, who built walls, mounted guns, erected homes and dug wells, had no qualifications other than bravery and some ingenuity. When approached for the appointment of an experienced Engineer in 1677, the Directors of the Company replied "Our business is Trade and not War. You will contriveto carry on the work to make it answer our ends without our sending an Engineer from here, as these sort of men are found always very expensive". Immortal Architecture What the Survey Department has to contend with. What nexttoddlers in the Overseer Class? 20 Survey School to Tech. Temple However, the Engineers employed from 1700 fell victims of diseases and died prematurely or were tempted away into proving disloyal to their employers. Even in 1763, the Military Engineers were considered as people who had to plan fortresses, and not officers competent to command technical troops in the field. During the later part of the 18th century, the Engineers were well educated and experienced men. It was said that these Engineers, who survived the rigours of the climate and the effects of over indulgence in liqour, either retired as wealthy Nawabs or lost their money at the tables and died in a debtor's prison. They were gamblers in both wealth and health. But they had with them the adventurous spirit of facing up odds boldly, a quality essential for a practical engineer. It is this spirit that transformed Survey School of 1794 to Tech. Temple of today, as is made out in this book within a compass of 200 pages. 1.2 Genesis of Survey School Developed from a Survey School, which was established in May 1794, the College of Engineering is one of the most venerable of British Indian Educational Institutions, and certainly one of the most ancient of India's professional training schools. It owes its inception to Michael Topping, the earliest Astronomer, and Geographical and Marine Surveyor at the Presidency of Fort St. George. He proposed an establishment to carry out the surveys for the construction and repair of tanks, and to superintend the execution of such works. On 17th of May, 1794, the Survey School, which ultimately developed into the College of Engineering, was started with eight boys. The School was erected close to the Observatory which had been built by Topping two years earlier. The process of territorial expansion and acquisition of lands by the English East India Company was gradual in South India. It was towards the end of the 18th century that the districts of the Camatic came under their hegemony. Since more land meant more land revenue, land surveys were meant to help assess the Humble Beginnings 21^ revenue. Regional administrative requirements of the Company, coupled with the vagaries of climatic conditions and the increased expenditure on European surveyors, necessitated the training of Indians in survey operations. This dire need found its fruition in the Survey School. The formative years saw incessant efforts by individuals and encouragement from the Government. It is worthwhile here to understand the genesis of an intellectual heritage which, over the sands of time, evolved into a Civil Engineering College. Michael Topping, an able surveyor and geographer, was consulted for the setting up of an observatory. In 1771, he was deputed to build the observatory. Land was purchased for 5,000 pagodas (pagoda was 3-1/2 rupees) and the observatory was completed in 1792. Topping suggested the establishment of a survey depart- ment. He was directed to send the survey reports to England. He wanted persons desirous of taking up the surveying work to attend the observatory. On 30th March, 1793, Topping wrote to Sir Charles Oakeley, President and Governor in Council, Fort St. George, emphasising the necessity for draughtsmen to make copies of the surveys and plans of the Kistna. The need fora class of surveyors to be attached to the observatory was also stressed. 1.3 Topping's Proposals To draw survey plans, the setting up of a regular Surveyor General's office was suggested by Topping for the benefit of the public and for betterment of Company's land. The following were some of the features of Topping's proposals : 1. Two assistants are to be provided to help the Surveyor General. 2. Ten to twelve practitioner-surveyors, who should form a regular body under the Company's service, would assist. 3. The recruits would be taken from schools, viz. the Male Asylum and English Schools. Survey School to lech. Temple 4. Head of the Department was to be selected from the Male Asylum or any other Public School. 5. Since Europeans in India faced numerous problems like severity of climate, which was irksome, and the constant need for interpreters and provision of tents and conveyances, Indian-born children of the Europeans in India and educated in Public Schools at Madras might render useful public service. He further elaborated on the utility of surveying. It would open avenues for employment, as a few could join the obser- vatory, some could become draughtsmen and clerks in the public offices, and others work as artificers in the arsenals and storehouses. The suggestions were appreciated for their utility to all the districts of the Presidency. The Government accepted the opinion of the Board of Revenue, regarding the usefulness of survey practitioners. It wanted knowledgeable persons to be involved in surveys. For this it wanted to know the cost of employing native assistants. After acquiring practical experience, the surveyors would be able to identify works for'the supply of water, and land revenue would also increase. It was, indeed, a long process of communication before the surveying school was founded. Topping was required to give a statement of estimates. Incessant efforts on his part resulted in the establishment of the office to direct all geographical surveys on the coast. Surveyors were to have a thorough knowledge before they returned to the field. Topping, the self-effacing tireless Surveyor that he was, selected 8 boys from many schools in Madras, including the Male Asylum, in a way which was very different from today's objective tests and computer selection. Knowledge of arithmetic and writing was made compulsory. 1.4 Establishment of Survey School Topping's earnest efforts, coupled with the persistent demand for surveyors and craftsmen, led to the establishment of Humble Beginnings 2 the Survey School on 17th May, 1794. The first -Super- intendent was Mr. John Goldingham, who was permitted to draw 50 pagodas per month for his hard work. However elemen- tary it may seem, the seed for a future engineering college was sown. The School building was attached to the observatory. The rn,ain objective was to train a large number of surveyors in carrying out surveys, for constitution and repair of tanks and to ensure a continuous supply of water to the lands. The boys were indentured as surveyors for working in the Honourable Company. Topping was to prepare an estimate for the erection of quarters for the apprentices. The School functioned well. Three boys within 18 years of age were trained and sent to Dindigul for carrying out survey and were assisted by 10 lascars. Emphasising the importance of the institution, Goldingham wanted to raise the total number of apprentices to 24. Assistant surveyors were placed under Topping for employment. Topping died at Masulipatnam in January 1796, while executing a survey of the Kistna delta. He was succeeded by John Goldingham, F.R.S. who built the Banqueting Hall in 1.802. The first batch of apprentices came out of the School in 1799, and they were sent for surveying to Mysore, Malabar and Persia. Goldingham gave instructions to them on the completion of training in the Survey School. They were to be as accurate as possible in survey, to report on the condition of embankments, to make survey of wells and tanks that were used in cultivation and suggest the mode of filling them and other improvements. Further instructions given were that every survey should be marked separately and levelling must follow it. In inaccessible areas, a second base was to be set up. After the completion of the survey, they were to bring back the reports to the Collector of the district. These details formed a part of revenue surveys, for the next 50 years. 24 Survey School to Tech. Temple 1.5 Teacher and Taught The staff consisted of the Superintendent (who was also Astronomer and Inspector of Revenue Surveys) on 50 pagodas, a Mathematics teacher on 35 pagodas, a Draughtsman on 25 pagodas, and a Munshi on 8 pagodas. In addition to the boys of the establishment, who were qualified to act as Surveyors, Draughtsmen, Writers and Interpreters, many officers employed by the Government as Surveyors in the Department also attended and received instructions. The Superintendent was also given 120 pagodas per mensem to subsist and clothe the apprentices. The first Survey School in India slowly expanded. Efforts were made to raise the total number to 24 as planned. Fresh admissions were made in 1798 and 1800. A language master was appointed. There were consistent demands for the trained boys of the School. The Board wanted a capable boy to be committed to the charge of the Superintendent of Tank Repairs. The School had to cater to the requirements of the Company. Two boys equipped with surveying instruments and clothing were to proceed to Malabar and place themselves under the Principal Collector, Maj. Maclean. In 1798, Goldingham was required to send two boys under the charge of the Superintendent of Tank Repairs. Goldingham was elevated to the position of Civil Engineer responsible for all repairs and construction of Company's buildings, both Civil and Military, at the Presidency. As a result of this elevation, apprentices in the School got more opportunities for work.This was a significant year in the history of the School as the Government of Lord Clive sanctioned Goldingham a sum of two thousand five hundred star pagodas. Total cost of running the School was 245 pagodas per month. Increase in remuneration was always an incentive to work better. At the end of 1804, Lt. John Warren succeeded Goldingham. During this period, Engineers and Officers were to supervise tank repairs and assist the Collectors in their duties. Till 1809, there was only one Engineer Supervisor. Apprentices were to work for the Company only and for no one else, as training involved expenditure. Humble Beginnings 25 1,6 Trials and Tribulations The survey school rendered a great service to the State. The boys who received instruction in the school had a good scope of being employed. Training for the position of Surveyors, Draftsmen, Writers and Interpreters were given instruction in this school. They were sent for tank repairs under Collectors and the Quarter Master General's Department till 1810. In fact the founder of the school, Michael Topping wrote to the Board of Revenue, that Indian born practitioner surveyors would regard themselves fortunate to be taken in the Company's Service. The School functioned well till 1809. In 1810, budgetary limitations forced the School to be temporarily closed. It was suspended till 1819. The Inspector of Tank Estimates. Major De Havilland, proposed that the School be reopened. The Institution was contributing a lot for the revenue surveys. He formulated a detailed set of regulations. According to him, the School was to be attached to the office of the Inspector General of Tank Estimates and the boys selected were to be between 12 and 14 years of age with good character and ability to speak fluently in vernacular languages. The salaries of the boys were to be fixed at Rs. 50 per annum. He suggested that the teacher should be an experienced Surveyor, and that the boys should be selected from the Military Asylum or elsewhere and should be apprentk es for a term of seven or nine years. He recommended that the entrance examination should be in the 3 R's and vernacular language, and that the apprentices should be drafted into the Tank Department as required, eventually to become Assistant Surveyors. Though it was decided in 1819 to transfer the School to Surveyor General, the proposal was hanging fire till 1826 when the Board of Revenue decided that the transfer ordered in 1819 should not take place. Major Havilland was not in agreement with the transfer of the School to the Assistant Surveyor General's office. He pointed out the limitations of this transfer. He felt that a wide spectrum of subjects would not be known to the boys. _'!i Survex School U> Tech. IViiiplc In 1821, the Inspector General pointed out that the transfer .of the School to the Surveyor General, which had been ordered two years before, was undesirable. He stated that the appren- tices were trained as Surveyors, Levellers, Superintendents, Draughtsmen and Estimate-makers, and that geographical surveys were only occasionally required. The apprentices would become familiar with works on Irrigation, acquire a knowledge of Hydraulics, and the mode of executing works only in his office as the duties of the Revenue Department embraced the repair of tanks and water courses, choultries, roads and civil buildings.The Government concurred with this view and the School thus became an integral part of the. Civil Engineer's Department of the Board of Revenue. From this time onwards and till 1846, the Revenue Surveyors trained at the School were the only Upper Class Subordinates of this Department, afterwards called the Public Works Department. During the period 1826-1846, European non-commissioned Officers of the sappers were first appionted as overseers. In 1836, the school was re-organised and its strength increased and the boys were given greater responsibilities. Apart from surveying and levelling, projecting and inspecting of small works and estimate-making were also under their purview. This enhanced the services rendered by the boys for public good. Boys were admitted after an entrance test. The course for one and a half years comprised Algebra, Mensuration, Trigono- metry, Building Construction, Surveying, Drawing and Estimate- making. 1.7 Towards Renaming In 1842, the need to establish a College of Engineers was felt to meet the increasing requirements of the Public Works Department. A wide range of subjects was covered in the proposals. The Coiicge was to be a part of the University of Madras and Civil Engineering was to be taught. The object of the College was to train officers as engineers and civilians as upper subordinates. The Marquess of Tweeddale who succeeded Elphinstone, as Governor of Madras, in 1842, wrote that a Humble Beginning* 27 College .imparting Civil Engineering education would prove beneficial to the country and for public service. The relevance of professional and industrial institutions for uplifting the social and mental faculties was stressed. In 1843, the Board also wanted a Collegiate Department of the University comprising Medical and Civil Engineering which would prove beneficial. The Court of Directors did not think that the establish- ment of a (sollege was necessary. They pointed to the lack of preparedness among the Indians and the inadequacy of general education. In such circumstances, it was felt that the establish- ment of medical and civil engineering college would not serve the purpose. Hence, no significant change took place. But the School continued to function creditably. It had a lasting influence on the Public Works Department. Supervisory posts were also granted to the boys of the School with experience. ON THE ANVIL 2.1 Efforts at Elevation T he service rendered by the Survey School to the state was highly appreciated. The issue of" starting a College of Engineering was again brought up in 1847. In order to enhance the efficiency of the Public Works Department, a plea was made to the Government for introducing classes in Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Law and Jurisprudence. Scholastic demands steadily increased. As a result, a plea for instituting an engineering class in the University was made. Thereupon, the Home Government approved of this. In the ^Seventh Annual Report of the Governor of the University of Madras in 1847, the Board opined that, by introducing Civil Engineering in the University, the social status of engineers would be elevated. 30 Survey School to Tech. Temple A School for ordnance artificers and apprentices was set up in 1842, in the Gun Carriage Manufactory by the Superintendent, Major Maitland. It was an unaided institution. Since it functioned efficiently, suggestions were made in 1849 for an amalgamation of the Survey School with this school. Major Maitland considered this feasible as every student could be perfect in one trade. The Military Board disapproved of it. Their observations showed the need for starting a technical college. It was stated thus: "a master workman must know his trade and know it well, but a Civil Engineer has a craft of his own, his skill is his science; his tools are his formula and his surveying and mathematical instruments; his labours are for the most part those of the mind; his studies those of projecting and controlling; and he must therefore be one of a very different class and status in society as well as of totally different attainments from those of the mechanic, whose labours he had to direct". Public Works Commissioners, when referred to, recommended the establishment of an Engineering College based on that set up by Thomason at Roorkee. The proposed College was to train students in three branches for the Public Works Department: 1. Subordinates Engineers 2. Upper Subordinates 3. Lower Subordinates The Principal was to be an Officer of the Corps of Engineers. All the students were to receive stipends ranging from Rs. 5 to Rs. 50 per month. 2.2 Changes in School A renovation of the School was requested. Since the School had to cater to the Public Works Department's demands, better buildings and finance were requested. A separate accommodation for Maistries was also demanded. Suggestion for the abolition of the School was mooted. This made the authorities feel the indispensability of Assistant Surveyors in Government Services. On the Anvil S1 Due to increasing demand and work, another clerk was appointed. Educating Europeans in the School was an expensive affair. The severe climate, the language problem and the conveyance cost were the practical difficulties in educating Europeans for employment in the Public Works Department. Natives could find employment easily and the cost of education would be very low. Admitting natives was essential to advance technical education in the Presidency. Due to a well-planned training programme, boys despatched as Assistant Surveyors could attend to all works executed in the Madras Presidency. One of the main aims of the School was to meet the demands of the Public Works Department. To meet the demand, boys were sent to the field as soon as the training was completed. A large number of them was involved in many projects. In 1851, apprentices were wanted in the Godavari anicut. The demand was so much more than the supply that even inexperienced youths had to be employed. Sir Henry Pottinger, Governor of Madras, wanted to introduce professional education in the University. In his minute dated June 6, 1981, he wished that "the Madras University's sphere of usefulness may, in the fitness of time, be extended to the establishment of classes in all higher departments, such as Medicine, Surveying, Engineering, etc". Despite the awareness of the Governor, the Board and the Government, nothing concrete was achieved. The year 1853 was one of uncertainty. There were fears of the School closing down. The apprehension of a shortage of qualified subordinates was one reason to keep it going. Supply from the Sappers and Miners of educated Non- Commissioned Officers to the Public Works Department was discontinued in 1853. This affected the work and efficiency of the Public Works Department. This exigency was to be met by the Survey School boys. Realising the shortage in the supply, the Government wanted to set up a School in Civil Engineering. 32 Survey School to Tech. Temple 2.3 Wood's Despatch The Wood's Despatch of 1854 was a landmark in the history of education in India. It stressed the importance of Civil Engineering as the natives started becoming aware of this profession. The educational policy from 1855 to 1858 was determined by this despatch. It reported the success of the Thomason College of Civil Engineering at Roorkee and stated, "similar places of practical instruction should be established in other parts of India and especially in the Presidency of Madras where works of irrigation are so essential not only to the prosperity of the country, but to the very existence of the people in times of drought and scarcity". This was a new approach to an old problem. In the same year Lord Dalhousie, the Governor General of India stated that a comprehensive system of instruction was to be provided at Madras for all classes of the Public Works Department. This included Europeans, East Indians and Natives, whfiher artificers, foremen, overseers, surveyors or Civi' Engineers. The Government's decision was laudable as. they concurred with the Governor General. 2.4 Separate Institution A separate Institution was definitely in the offing. The availability of Civil Engineers in India was not adequate to meet the requirements of the Public Works Department. They were sent from England. . It was a drain on the resoures of the Company and such trained personnel could be made available in India by starting a separate college. Viewing the urgency, the Government sanctioned the establishment of a Civil Engineering College at Madras. Inspite of the several advantages of the School, the efficiency of the surveyors educated in the School was questioned. The Public Works Commisioner's opinion was also not favourable. In 1855, a scheme for a College of Civil Engineering at Madras was submitted. A great step was taken in 1855 when Mr. AJ. Arbuthnot, the Director of Public Instruction, was On the Anvil 33 deputed to submit proposals for the establishment of an Engineering School or College. A detailed report was submitted which included the formation of three departments in the College, provision of scholarship instead of stipends, provision of a boarding establishment of limited Civil students and barracks for Military students, and courses of instruction. These were to be determined by the Public Works Commissioner. The staff was to consist of an Officer of Engineers, a Professor of Engineering and Architecture, two Mathematics masters, a Surveying master, a Drawing master and a mechanic. A workshop was also to be set up. The Government of Madras approved of these arrangements in August. But it suggested that every student must be required to master one trade or craft at Major Maitland's School. In 1856, the Supreme Government gave up the idea of amalgamating Major Miitland's School w*ith the proposed College. This was a very important decision. The idea of amalgamation was plaguing the Survey School for a long time. Major Maitland's School was to continue as such, and Maitland was to be put in charge of practical teaching. The Public Works Department, the largest employer of those passing from Survey School, wanted to revise the methcxls of instruction in the School. This was to enhance the efficiency in the Department. The Public Works Committee was full 01 appre- ciation for the School. It ordered that all candidates for the Overseer grade should attend the Survey School for instruc- tion under Mr. O'Hara. This was to the credit of the School. Mr. Faber, who presided over the Committee, advised the expansion of the Survey School which had 46 students. In order to improve the capability of the students, a scheme of \ests was recommended for Assistant Engineers, Assistant Overseers and Sub-Overseers. The School was a boon to the Survey Department as the needs were met by it. Positions of Assistant Surveyor and Revenue Surveyor were Tilled by the School. Boys were despatched on surveys to Zainindari lands between Masulipatnam and Vizagapatnam. They had to plan and ;V4 Survey School to Tech. Temple draw maps after proper survey was done. The practical training provided in the early years of its existence continued. Boys were sent to irrigational channels and to the waters of the Krishna and Godavari. Devicottai was another place where boys were despatched to survey the water channels for proper utilisation of lands there. A progressive legacy was formed in the Survey School which benefited the Madras Presidency. Civil Engineering, as such, was gaining in status, due to the service rendered by the Survey School. The Madras Senate made provision for two degrees: 1. Graduate in Civil Engineering or the GCE, and 2. Master in Civil Engineering The two courses were expected to equip the students with a detailed education in Engineering. The Director of Public Instruction (D.P.I.) was appointed in 1855-56. The first landmark in the University Education was the establishment of the three Universities of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras in 1857. Civil Engineering was one of the several branches introduced in these Universities. 2.5 Civil Engineering School In 1857, Lt. Col. George Vivian Winscom of the Madras Engineers was appointed as Principal, with a staff salary of Rs. 600 and a house rent of Rs. 150. He was to draw up a scheme for the additional establishments required and for the courses of instruction. The aim was to prepare men for the various kinds of Engineering works needed in the Madras Presidency for Government or for private companies. In October 1858, the Government of Madras directed that the Survey School should hereafter be called as the Civil Engineering School with provision for two masters, and a fee of Rs. 3 to be charged from each student. The Survey School, which was first attached to the Board of Revenue and the Chief Engineer's Office, was adopted as the basis of the Civil Engineering School. On the Anvil 35 In January 1854, Arbuthnot suggested the expansion of the School. At the outset, the School imparted training for the grades of Assistant Engineers and Sub-Overseers and the total number of students was limited to 70. Twenty stipendiary studentships were established for European and non-European non-commissioned officers and soldiers of Her Majesty's British and Indian regiments serving in the Presidency. Those who qualified in the entrance test were placed under the Principal to draw pay, ration and clothing from the Military Department. A third department was set up late in the year for training draughtsmen, estimators and accountants. The course of instruction for lower department was only practical, but for the higher department, theoretical instruction and practical training was imparted. In 1857, the Survey School contained 46 students. Winscom was appointed Principal to organise the proposed College with the Survey School as a basis. He proceeded to Calcutta to examine the Civil Engineering College which had bjeen opened just a year previously, at Fort William. The following remarks were made to him by Principal Lt. Williams and they are not inapplicable at the present day. "Text-books are evils, though doubtless indispensable, especially when for the use of those who evince so much readiness in getting up a subject by rote. Choice of them is much hampered by the poverty of the students generally. The evil effects of text-books may, it is hoped, be met by the professors generalising, as much as possible in their lectures, and by a set of books for consultation placed apart in the library and open at all times to the students". 2.6 Shift to Kalasa Mahal The year 1859 was a significant year in the history of the Institution. During the year, the palace of the late Nawab of the Carnatic at Chepauk was converted for the use of Government Offices, and Captain Winsom was required to use a portion of the main building in Kalasa Mahal for the School and some of On the Anvil 37 the outer buildings as the barracks. The School moved in to Kalasa Mahal. Curriculum was extended and the Survey School was amalgamated with the College. An entrance test was held to select good students. 36 military and 83 Civil candidates presented themselves for the entrance exam, 20 military and 26 Civil candidates qualified themselves for admission. An increase in the number of students was seen in 1859. 2.7 Engineering College On September 19, 1859, the institution was named as Civil Engineering College and later on, in the same year, as Engineering College. Inspite of the difficulties encountered with the newly established College, accomplishments were laudable. There weFe two departments : 1. The Senior Department and 2. The Junior Department. The Senior Department was for the education of Engineers and the Junior Department was for the instruction of candidates lo fill up the inferior positions in the Public Works Department The fees taken from students were utilised to purchase boolts for the library. The first examination was held in 1860. The college had a military character as the number of military students were nearly double the number of civilian students. The staff consisted of the Principal, a first Assistant Mr. James Brad'shaw, two Junior Assistant Masters, two Munshis and clerical staff. The aim of the College was definitely to impart a better system of education to the Subordinates working in the Public Works Department. The subjects taught were Surveying, Plotting, Planning and Estimation, Costume Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Hydraulics, Elementary Mathematics, Tamil and Telugu 38 Survey School to Tech. Temple languages.lt was felt that these would help the students when on duty. To overcome the difficulties involved in practical training, the Principal despatched the boys to the Gun Carriage Manufactory and the Arsenal. Additional class-rooms were provided by the removal of the Board of Revenue from a portion of the Chepauk building to the Government House. In* the following years, a First Department to train commissioned officers and civilians as engineers was introduced. The College was all set to make a good start. It was a continuous process of experiment and development. COMES OF AGE 3.1 College in Infancy T he Survey School culminated in the Civil Engineering College, which was in its infancy in 1860. The following years saw the growth of a great tradition. Captain Vivian Winscom, the first Principal, observed that the efficiency and capability of students was far better than that of the students admitted so far. Boys passing out of the College were intelligent. In consonance with the introduction of classes, staff organs sations were expanded. Metamorphic changes took place in the following years. The College came to be called as the College of Engineering in the last decade of the 19th century. The Civil and Mechanical Engineering courses in which the College was a pioneer saw their fruition in the following years. Employment opportunities were numerous and varied. Indians received education and found employment in increasing numbers. 40 Survey School to Tech. Temple 3.2 First Department The First Department was created in 1862 to train Commissioned Officers and Civilians as Assistant Engineers. This was a two-year course for the Degree of Bachelor of Civil Engineering (B.C.E.) of the University of Madras. B.C.E. was at the graduate level with a First Examination in Arts (F.A.) Diploma or Manic Examination as the minimum qualification. Civil students were non-residents and they were 7 in number. The number gradually increased with awareness among the people. In 1880, there were 10 Civil Division students. Fee was reasonable at Rs.16 for this class. Though it was a successful course, the Principal in 1871-72 pointed out that language was a problem. The natives did not comprehend English and the Europeans did not comprehend vernaculars. This affected prac- tical work. The first batch of Assistant Engineers passed out in 1863 S. Subbarayachariar was the first Bachelor of Civil Engineering of the University of Madras in 1864. This was indeed a great honour to him and his'descendants. 3.3 Second Department The object of the Diploma course was to train young men for the Upper Subordinate branch of the Public Works Department. This Second Department was open to European Commissioned Officers and soldiers of European regiments and civilians. Certificates as supervisors and Taluq overseers were awarded under this Department Matriculate students were admitted without examination. This was a two-year course. Thirty stipendiary students were admitted into the Department in 1865. Commanding officers of the various regiments recommended these students. In 1880, the number of the military students was less than that of civilians. All amenities including pay, rations and clothing were provided to them. Annually five vacancies existed in the Public Works Department wherein students of this Department found a placement. Scholarships were awarded to encourage young minds. Five governmentscholarships to the value of Rs. 7.50 were awarded Comes of Age 41 for two years to Civil Division students on the basis of competitive examinations. This department contributed im- mensely to the efficiency of the Public Works Department. 3.4 Special Class In I860, Captain Carpendale succeeded Captain Winscom as the Principal, In addition to the First or Senior Department and the Second Department, a Special Class for Drawing and Estimating was instituted in 1861. In 1862, the Officers' Surveying Class was formed. The main object was to train Draughtsmen and Estimaters for Engineering Course and Sur- veyors for duty in the Revenue Survey Department or for any other Survey Department. All works like buildings, bridges, roads and irrigation works were to be carried out with the help of plans and specifications. Captain W.H. Edgecome observed, in 1866, that the course of study in the Special Survey Class should be revised and formulated to meet the requirements of Revenue Survey Department and the Public Works. In order to improve the efficiency, the need for viva-voce and more practical training was suggested. 3.5 Multi Facets In order to help the students to interact with experts and experienced engineers, a series of lectures was organised. In 1861 and 1862, a course of lectures on Geology was delivered by Bruce Foote of the Geological Survey. And, in 1863, lectures were delivered on Chemistry by Dr. Wyndome of the Medical College. This was followed by a course of lectures on Chemistry and Geology delivered in alternate sessions by persons specially appointed by the Government. It was heartening to note that, in subjects like photography, Indians were to be seen. But only very few students took up photography. Due to inadequate staff facilities, this class was discontinued in 1898. The students used to spend some days at Pallavaram in surveying the hilly terrain. In 1866, Mr. Gilby, the Senior 42 Survey School to Tech. Temple Instructor in Surveying was granted a horse allowance(!) of Rs. 25 to .enable him to supervise the out-door survey work. From 1868, F.A. was made the standard for admission to the Engineer Class instead of Matriculation. The Matriculates could get into the Subordinate Class only, while those with a pass in the F.A. could aspire for a seat in Engineering Course. In 1875, there was a move to restrict the College to the needs of the lower grades of the executive, in view of the establishment of an Institution at the Cooper's Hill. But it was Mr. Powell, the Director of Public Instruction, who resisted saying,"It would be a retrograde and impolitic measure to abolish the Senior Depart- ment of the Civil Engineering College, as such a move would practically debar the natives of the Presidency, and the Europeans and the Eurasians settled permanently in it, from admission to the Higher Ranks of the Public Works Department". A number of scholarships to motivate students was announced. Candidates standing first in the First Department and in the Second Department were given scholarships. Even text books were granted to them. This brought about a healthy competition among the students. Frojn 1886, scholarships ranging from Rs. 8 to Rs. 30 were open for competition among students. Accommodation was further extended in the College. The whole of the upper storey of the palace and a portion of the lower storey were appropriated to the College. 3.6 Practical training The best possible facilities were provided by the College to impart practical training. The Gun Carriage Manufactory and the Grand Arsenal served as training spots for the Mechanical Engineering Class. Students had to delve into the subject by observing the mechanisms and the drawings. Students were taken to brick kilns and they saw brick laying, mortar making, casting iron and laying of cement. ( :<IMH"N of Age Drawing and Estimating were dealt with in detail which enhanced the scope for employment. Despite the facilities given as early as 1863, the then Principal, Captain Edgecome, pointed out the need for adequate practical training and urged for the re-establishment of the Mechanical Class. A corollary to practical training was the study of vernaculars. Europeans found it difficult to converse in them. Vernaculars were imparted and a course was framed accordingly so that they could converse with Indian subordinates in the Public Works Department. As years passed by, practical training improved. In 1886, the whole programme was re-organised. 3.7 Back Bone of Institution The back bone of advancement in any institution is the Principal and his staff'. The Principal of the College belonged to the Corps of Engineers. He was stationed in the College premises in a house well-constructed for him. Proximity to the College enabled him to help students at any time. All Military students were housed in barracks under his surveillance. The Principal and Professor of Engineering were the first two of the supervisory staff. In addition, there was one Professor of Mathematics who was the Store-keeper. Photography was taught by one of them. In 1885, additional teachers were appointed to improve the teaching in Surveying and Drawing. Staff and student interaction was appreciable right through. Till 1872, there had been thirty stipendiary military studentships. The Public Works Commission made a plea in its report of 1870 for the employment of more natives as Overseers. Lord Napier suggested that the number of European Non- Commissioned Officers and Soldiers at the College should be reduced to ten and that ten stipends at Rs. 8 be made available for Native Sapppers. This facilitated native participation. 3.8 Placement Opportunities There was no guarantee for a positive placement as an Assistant Engineer. The number of students in the First 44 Survey School to Tech. Temple Department dropped owing to the difficulty in procuring jobs for them in view of* their labour, time devoted and the cost of education. Prospects of employment were less. In spite of this uncertainty, students applied in order to get some employment. The Government, however, suggested that their services would be utilised when occasion arose. In 1867, only two had been appointed Assistant Engineers, and the remainder had either accepted subordinate posts or were unemployed. In 1870-71, it was thought that the First Department existed only in name. In 1874, Ratna- sabhapati Pillai who passed the B.C.E. was appointed as the probationary Assistant Engineer. Even in 1874, there was no guarantee for appointment. A sudden spurt in the number of students was observed in 1871-72, as employment possibilities loomed large. In the same year, the Government also assured appointment to the grade of Assistant Engineers annually in the Public Works Department, feut, till 1880, there was no appointment in the Public Works Department. In 1877, the College was affiliated to the University of Madras which paved the way for great changes. In the seventies, the First Department lost its Military element and consisted of Civilian undergraduates, principally natives between the ages of 16 and 22-who were admitted on production of the University First Arts certificate. A Survey Class for Military Officers was established to enable young officers to get trained in Revenue Surveying or other Surveying. The class was in abeyance from 1864 to 1867 and was permanently dis- continued after 1868. In 1879, a reorganisation of the Public Works Department was effected, involving extensive reductions and, as a result, the total numbers in the College fell rapidly. In 1873, the College was transferred from imperial to provincial services. Due to extensive reductions in P.W.D. during 1879, the numbers joining the College seriously diminished. In 1880, standing orders were drawn for the College, employment register was opened and arrangements were made to assist passed-out students to obtain employment outside the P.W.D. Comes of Age 45 The year 1881 saw the Goverment of India order that six vacancies in the Engineer establishment of the P.W.D. should be filled from Indian Engineering Colleges after 1885, three from Roorkee and one each from Madras, Poona, and Calcutta. During 1884, the Principal urged that trial should be made of local men on the numerous Railway surveys and other projects. The South Indian Railway tried, with satisfactory results, the experiment of appointing an Indian to its Engineer establishment. 3.9 Reorganisation of Institution The year 1880 heralded the approach of a complete re- organisation of the Institution. The Principal, Lt. H.D. Love, submitted a scheme for improving the courses of instruction and rendering them more practical. It included independent field work, in place of class work, by students in Surveying; practical work in setting out, brick laying and well sinking, cement testing, carpentry; the inspection of works in progress (a practice which had fallen into disuse); obligations on natives to qualify in a vernacular other than their own; introduction of design, etc. On the suggestion, in 1880, of Col. Macdonald, D.P.I., the Engineer Course was, extended to 3 years and the Subordinate Course to 2-1/2 years. It was in the eighties of the 19th Century that Tech- nical Education was given a serious thought. The Education Commission of 1882 was set up to review the implementation of the Wood's Despatch wherein the need for technical education was first mentioned. It declared that "there is a real need in India for some corresponding course which shall fit boys for indus- trial or commercial pursuits, at the age when they commonly matriculate". In 1882, there was a move by the Chief Engineer to have admission to the Sub-Engineer and Overseer Classes open to Matriculates, who could produce a certificate of having attended workshops and kept workmen's hours for a year, and who were able to walk twenty miles in six hours and to ride twenty-five miles in three-and-a-half hours. But the Principal made a 4(i Survey School to Tech. Temple remonstrance on behalf of the Institution and the cause of Technical Education against these proposals. In 1884, the Government of India sanctioned a permanent establishment of twenty-five Sub-Overseers, the vacancies being filled, as far as possible, by men "who had passed out of the Civil Engineering Colleges - Roorkee five, Calcutta two, Madras one, Poona two. The first Madras student to profit by the Guaranteed Post (G.P.) scheme was Mr. S.A. Subrahmanya Aiyar, B.A.,B.C.E., who passed out in December 1884. From 1885, the College prizes consisted of various useful instruments instead of books. Some of the types of instruments were silver lever watch, parallel rule, magnetic compass, optical square, field glass, colour box, set of scales and clinometer. There was keen competition between Europeans and Eurasians, on the one hand, and the natives, on the other (many times the latter scoring over the former!). Several changes culminated in the reorganisation of the College in 1886, when the reorganisation scheme was finally approved. The year 1886 was particularly significant as the Civil Engineering College came to be known as the College of Engineering. In 1900, Sir E. Buck was deputed to look into the position of Technical Education in the provinces. He suggested setting up independent departments at the centre and in the provinces. However, some headway was made in 1901 at the Simla Conference, which concluded that the Education Departments should promote Technical Education. The scheme also sought to ensure guaranteed employment. An Assistant Engineership in the Public Works Department for the Engineer Class, Overseership for the Engineer Subordinate Class, draughtsmanship for the Draughtsman Class, were assured. Confirmation of the Surveyor posts in the Madras Survey Department was given. To assess the merit of students, a Board of Examiners was appointed by the Government to conduct the final examinations domes of Age 47 of the Senior Department. The College, however, continued to conduct the examination of the Surveyor and the Draughtsman Class. The Sub-Overseers and Maistries Class was introduced for the sons of artisans and for those with practical experience. This had a tremendous positive effect on Technical Education at the lower level. 3.10 Reconstitution of Staff In order to cope with the increasing workload, a reorganisation of staff was thought necessary. Mechanical Engineering was to be introduced and, for improvement of courses of study, additional staff was required. Besides, Technical Education had to be promoted and students desirous of taking up jobs in railways and at other places needed special attention. For all these purposes, staff strength had to be increased. As a result of the reorganisation in 1886, Mr. A. Chatterton, B.Sc. was appointed Professor of Engineering and Mr. E.W. Middlemast, B.A., Professor of Mathematics. In 1888, the new building was occupied. This was an extension to the existing building on the south side built at a cost of one lakh of rupees. The building was designed by Mr. Chisholm in the Indo-Saracenic style in keeping with the rest of Chepauk buildings. It is of interest to note that, in 1889, the Government ordered that passed men of the Engineer Class "should not be allowed a preference in the Upper Subordinate ranks over men who have been expressly trained for that grade only". The Mechanical Engineering Class for Sub-Overseers and Maistries Class were not formed in 1887. A decline in the strength of the other three classes was felt. The reasons for this were the difficulty in getting employment, the increase in the length of the course and the rise in fees. These together out-weighed the benefits accruing from these courses. Therefore, superior and inferior grades of Government were brought within the reach of the students. 48 Survey School to Tech. Temple Engraved gold and silver medals were presented to the most distinguished students from 1888 in Engineering and Subordi- nate Classes. Surveying field work was done by each class for a for full day each week. Practice in the gymnasium was made compulsory. College Workshops were started, and each class had practice for one morning per week The College Workshop was fully utilized, the students being employed in chipping, filing, turning and screw-cutting in iron and in sawing, planing and making tables and other College furniture in wood. Emphasising the importance of practical training, it was made compulsory for every student to obtain a certificate in practical training. A plea for coordination of theoretical instruction and practical training was made. To implement this, Civil Engineers were sent to large Public Works and instructed in the preparation of materials, practical construction details, labour management and accounts. In 1890, the first batch of students completed their practical training of two years - the first year in a workshop for all classes, and the second year on civil works for the Civil Engineer and Upper Subordinate Class and in a Workshop for the Mechnical Engineer Classes. Mr. V. Devasikhamuni Pillai, who spent the second year in the Madras Railway, was the first Mechanical Engineer of the College. A Model Room was set up during this period. Govern- ment Technical Examinations Were introduced in 1890. Systematic instruction in gymnastics commenced in 1888. From 1890, the courses were rendered as practical as possible. From 1891 the classes went out into camp for Survey field work at a distance from Madras. A new workshop and the experi- mental laboratory were commenced in 1892. The library consisted of a lending and a consulting branch with a total of 3,085 volumes of which 122 were added in 1893. Since 1889, there had been a steady increase in the use of library facilities. Reading room facilities also existed. Comes of Age 49 3.11 Introduction of Mechanical Engineering In 1880, Col. MacDonald, the Director of Public Instruction, suggested the introduction of Mechanical Engineering. The Committee appointed by the Government recommended the introduction of Mechanical Engineering, which was offered alongside Civil Engineering. In 1894, after 100 years of the existence of the College, the University of Madras introduced a Degree in Mechanical Engineering, and the B.C.E. degree was changed into B.E. Degree. The College did not have a separate course in Mecha- nical Engineering, but some students of the College passed the B.E. Degree examination in Mechanical Engineering from 1895. The University of Madras was the first university in India to introduce a Degree in Mechanical Engineering. 3.12 Developments from 1895 to 1920 In 1895, orders were issued for the reduction of practical courses from two years to one. The Surveyor Class was developed into one for the training of Lower Subordinates and the first batch of students passed out as "Sub-Overseers and Surveyors" in 1897. In the Engineering laboratory, a 100 ton testing machine was erected. In 1894 orders were issued that the Military Upper Subordinates for Burma P.W.D. should be supplied by the Madras College. In 1900, qualified Engineer students were ruled eligible for the temporary Upper Subordinate Establishment of P.W.D. wkh the prospect of eventual transfer to the permanent establishment while qualified Engineer Subordinate students were held suitable for appointment to the temporary Upper and Lower Subordinate Establishment with similar prospects. In 1901, Mr. W.H. James, B.Sc., was appointed Professor of Engineering, and Mr. J. Webster, Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. In 1902, tours for the inspection of irrigation and other important works were initiated. Survey Camp at Pallavaram Mechanicals on Tour Comes of Age 51 In 1901-1902, the College held classes for: 1. Engineers 2. Engineering Subordinates 3. Sub-Overseers and Surveyors 4. Draughtsmen and Surveyors This College was the only college imparting engineering education in the Madras Presidency. A memorable change took place in 1904. A committee was set up to look into the needs of the College. The new courses introduced were : 1. Civil Engineering 2. Mechanical Engineering 3. Upper Subordinate and Lower Subordinate classes The duration of the courses was three years. In order to inspect and report on the functioning of the College, a Board of Visitors was set up to advise the Director of Public Instruction and the Government. B.A. was made the entrance qualification for the Engineer Class. A number of facilities was provided. Laboratory buildings were considered for improvement. Due to inadequate accommo- dation facilities, the Government decided to transfer the College to Saidapet. The cost of maintenance was high. For the Engi- neering class, the minimum qualification continued to be B.A., i.e. Graduate in Maths or Physics. The duration of the course of study for graduates in Civil and Mechanical Engineering was increased to four years. Higher course engineering students prepared for B.E. degree exam of the University of Madras. The staff was strengthened to meet the increasing number of students and the courses. The posts of Professor of Electrical Engineering, Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Professor of Engi- neering were added in 1915. Survey camps were held for all classes in January. Earlier, it was held only for senior division students. Examinations were held by the staff rather than by an independent Board of Examiners. A Probationary Subordinate Class was conducted for matriculates and school leaving certifi- Survey School to Tech. Temple cate holders. Upper Subordinate Class consisted of students who were capable of showing progress. The rest of the students came under the Subordinate Class. In 1912, the College consisted of four classes : T. Engineering Class 2. Upper Subordinate Class for training subordinates for the P.W.D. 3. Lower Subordinate Class for training lower sub- ordinate surveyors and draughtsmen for surveyor department, railways, etc. 4. Probationary Subordinate Class for training candi- dates before they entered the Upper or Lower sub- ordinate class. A school was established at Visakapatnam by the College. As an incentive, scholarships were regularly awarded. The College was transferred to Guindy in 1920. Col. H.D. Love retired from service in 1907 and was succeeded by Mr. W.H.James. Mr. C.L. Cartwright, M.I.M.E., was appointed as the Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Sergeant W.C. Old, an Overseer of the P.W.D. was appointed as Instructor in Surveying and Drawing. Under revised rules, sessional examinations were held for the first time in April 1908. In 1910, a class was formed for the training of officers of the Salt, Abkari and Revenue departments lasting for two months. The College rules were again modified in 1911. "The course for the Engineer Class is extended to four years and the Intermediate examination of the Madras University substituted for the B.A. degree as the qualifying examination for entiy. The Probationary Subordinate Class is instituted to serve as a feeder for the Upper and Lower Subordinate Classes". Mr. B. Hanumantha Rao retired in 1912 and was succeeded by Mr. K.R. Ramaswamy Iyengar, M.A., L.T. An important Comes of Age 53 change was introduced by the decision to provide for the teaching staff by the temporary transfer for three-year periods of officers from the P.W.D. Mr.P.V. Manikka Nayakkar, B.A., B.E., was appointed Professor of Civil Engineering in 1914. A hostel to accommodate 50 students was opened in Tiruvateeswaranpet. In 1915, Mr. H.B. Mathews was appointed Professor of Elec- trical Engineering and Mr.F.N. Mowdawalla, the Electrical Laboratory Assistant. The Professor of Mechanical Engineering took the students of the Mechanical Engineer class to Khandalla near Bombay on a visit to the Tata Hydro-Electric Works and this was the first time that a party of students was sent out of the Presidency. A College of Engineering Association was started with the object of stimulating, among its members, interest in general, technical and industrial subjects and also for promoting social intercourse in the College. Mr.H.W. Barket was appointed Professor of Civil Engi- neering in 1916. Three Electrical Engineering scholarships were instituted with the object of attracting the very best class of students. In 1918, Mr. Mowdawalla resigned, and Mr.P. Subba Rao, B.A., a Diplomate of the Indian Institute of Science, was appointed the Electrical Laboratory Assistant. Mr.C.L. Cartwright was appointed Principal in 1920 and the College moved to Guindy the same year. C H E Q U E RE D LIFE AT G U 1NDY 4.1 Move to Guindy T he year 1920 is a turning point in the history of the College. From the Kalasa Mahal or domed palace (at Chepauk, now known as the old Engineering College), the College moved during summer vacation into the present buildings at Guindy, built at a cost of Rs. 20 lakhs. At this point of time, the College was the first and the only College imparting engineering instruction in the Presidency. Initially, the main building, laboratories, power house and residential hostel were constructed. Mr. W.A. James was chiefly responsible for the lay-out of the present buildings, and the present and future staff and students owe him no small debt of gratitude for his skill in the design and equipment of the excellently furnished Workshops and Labora- tories now being used. 56 Survey School to Tech. Temple Although the present imposing structure was commenced ia 1908, for various reasons, especially the delay caused by the War, the structure was finished and opened for use only in July 1920. The College is a grand piece of architecture with a long frontage, and as one approaches it slowly through the long avenues of trees (then palm, but now Asoka) leading from the road to the gardens with their neatly-cut hedges, one cannot but be struck with the rigid solidity, unshakeable mass, measured order and awe-inspiring expanse of the field of Engineering which the building so eloquently symbolises in every one of its lines (including shape E for Engineering) its supremely distinguished glistening bald head crowning the tower of knowledge. On entering the white marble floored hall with great corridors to the right and left, a fine double stair-case faces the visitor. Above the porch was the Principal's office (now the Dean's) in which the first thing that attracted attention was the electric master clock with which the four-faced clock in the tower was synchronised. On this floor are long drawing offices, lecture rooms and offices for the teaching staff. The peculiar plate girders (of Indian iron but English steel) under the ceiling of these rooms and halls are due to the fact that the usual steel joints were not obtainable Glistening College Dome Hydraulic Lab, showing arrangement for testing Hume pipes Chequered Life at Guindy 59 then and these had to be built up in their present form to be, no doubt, a cause for speculation to future generations. It is a master piece in architecture in white cutstone, red sand stone and brick not matched by many structures of Madras. It is so perfect in construction that its plinth or cornice, running to hundreds of metres each, is perfectly level (within half the least count of levelling staff). It is an asset we can only ill-afford to neglect. From the roof, a fine panoramic view is obtained; the grounds, of over 80 hectares, are bounded on the west by the Adyar river, on the east by the Kottur tank (now staff quarters and Tamil Nadu Science and Technology Centre) and on the south by the Raj Bhavan and Guindy deer park. On the grounds are the hostels, the professor's bungalows, and the tennis courts, hockey, cricket and football grounds. The ground floor now has the College office, a drawing hall, Hall of Geodesy and the State Bank of India. The Strength of Materials, the Mechanical, the Hydraulic and the Electrical Laboratories, the Workshops and the Powei House form a group of buildings, to the west of the main building and, all told, they comprise the finest College of Engineering in India. A link building and Science Block were added later on, on the northern side. Realising the importance of engineering institutions, a conference of Principals of engineering institutions was held in 1921. In this conference, the functions of the engineering colleges, the position of these colleges, syllabi and the type of courses to be offered were all analysed in detail. They were clear in mind that adequate staff and provision of equipment would improve the achievements of the Engineering Colleges. 4.2 Staff at Guindy Consequent on the Government sanction of an additional Professor of Civil Engineering, Mr. G. Nagaratnam Ayyar, B.A., B.E., District Board Engineer, Cocanada, was appointed to the post on the 16th of August 1920. The second Professorship in 60 Survey School to Tech. Temple Civil Engineering was filled by Mr. K.C. Chakko D.Sc., in 1921. Mr. C.L. Cartwright became Principal in 1922 for a second, longer spell. In 1920, a single Subordinate Class intended to replace the Probationary Upper Subordinate (U.S.) and Lower Subordinate (L.S.) classes was formed. Two years later, this Class was abolished, reverting to the old system. Mr. P. Subba Rao was appointed to act as Professor of Electrical Engineering in 1923. The year 1924 saw the College furnishing a Platoon for the University Officers' Training Corps (UOTC) under the command of Lt. K.C. Chakko. News was received from England of the death of Col. H.D. Love, RE. who was the Principal of the College for 28 years from 1879 to 1907. During this year, the U.S. and L.S. classes were abolished in the College and were concentrated in the Engineering Schools at Trichy and Vizag. The performance and participation of Indians in the College activities, both academic and otherwise, increased in the following years. All classes and communities in the society had equal access to engineering education, based on merit. It was a great honour when Diwan Bahadur A.V. Ramalinga Iyer, an alumnus of the College (who joined it in 1888) became the first Indian to be appointed as Superintending Engineer of the Public Works Department in 1913, and the first Indian as Chief Engineer in 1923, Indians were on par with Europeans even in academic excellence, but the key posts still eluded them. This was changed when on July 6th, 1925, Rao Bahadur G. Nagaratnam Ayyar became the first Indian Principal of the College. During his tenure, a number of programmes were introduced. Tutorial classes were begun to en ance the value of the lectures. Chequered Life at Guindy 61 4.3 Classes of Study As a result of the assessment of engineering courses, the classes were so organised as to meet the requirements of the Public Works Department, the Revenue Department, Local Boards and Municipalities and tne Railways. They were : 1. Engineering classes to train Civil Engineers 2. Mechanical Engineering Class 3. Lower Subordinate class for training of lower subordinates and surveyors 4. Probationary Subordinate class for preliminary training to join the upper or lower subordinate class 5. Draughtsmen clas's for training of draughtsmen When Mr. C. L. Cartwright proceeded on leave out of India in 1925, Mr. G. Nagaratnam Ayyar took over the duties of the Principal, and he had the unique honour of" being the first Indian and graduate of our own College to get in to this exalted position to guide the destinities of our institution for a period of more than a decade. The sad news of the death of Mr. H.B. Mathews reached in May 1925; and sadder still was the death of Mr. C.L. Cartwright in April 1926. At this time, the Professorships of the College were being filled by Engineers from the P.W.D. The Professors of Civil Engineering were Messrs. N. Durairaja Ayyar and J.M. Frederick and the Professors of Mechanical Engineering were Mr. M.K. Ranganatham, Mr. L. Venkatakrishna Ayyar, Mr. M.S. Tirumalai Ayyangar and Mr. T.S. Venkatarama Iyer. Mr. P.A. Middha, M.Sc, was appointed Professor of Civil Engineering in 1929 and, on the expiry of his five years' contract, Mr. K.S. Sitarama Ayyar was appointed to the post in 1934. Mr. A. Watson was appointed Professor of Mechanical Engineering in July 1930, but he met with an unfortunate death at the end of that month. Mr. J.H.C. Kann, B.Sc. of the Indian Institute of Science was appointed to the post. Mr. W.S. Wales 62 Survey School to Tech. Temple filled the post of Professor of Electrical Engineering in 1929. Mr. S. Paul was appointed the Senior Workshop Instructor and, on the retirement of Mr. J. Webster, who had a distinguished service of 30 years to the College and its Hostel, was selected for the post of Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. Mr. V.H. Sadarangani was given the post of Instructor in Civil Engineering in 1930; and Mr. K. Sukumaran the newly created post of Lecturer in Electrical Engineering. A landmark in the history of the College was made when Electrical Engineering was introduced as a separate course of study for Engineers. Consequent on the advances in the electrical field in the country and in keeping with the times, the electrical departme. . was equipped at a cost of more than 3 lakhs of rupees with all the latest electrical equipment to train the highest class of Electrical Engineers. 4.4 Engineer Class From time to time, changes were made in the qualifications for admission and in the courses. An intermediate pass certificate with Maths, Physics and Chemistry as optional subjects was necessary for admission. Candidates should be under 20 years of age. At the end of the second year, students were divided among the Civil, Mechanical and Electrical branches. Theoretical instruction and practical training were imparted with the B.E. exam at the end of the year. 4.5 Other Courses of Study Till 1940, there were two Subordinate Classes : 1. The Upper Subordinate Class, and 2 The Lower Subordinate Class Apart from this, there were the Probationary Subordinate Class which was a preliminary course to the Upper and Lower Subordinate Classes, and the Draughtsmen Class extending for a period of two years. The duration of the course for the Upper Subordinate Class was 3 years two years in College and one year practical Chequered Life at Guindy 63 training which involved Surveying, Drawing and Workshop. For practical training and inspection work, visits to Mettur and other irrigation works were conducted. The number of pupils in this class was steadily increasing with the increasing awareness of technical education. The Subordinate Engineering Class attached to the College of Engineering, Guindy, was the only recognised School in the Presidency. The duration of this course was 2 years. Entrance tests were conducted in drawing and English composition. 4.6 Pioneering Work As an instituition of standing, several engineering firsts go to the credit of the College. The College was the first in India to introduce a degree course in Mechanical Engineering (1894) and Electrical Engineering (1930). The College was again the first to have a course in Highways Engineering and Tele- Communication Engineering (1945) and, recently, in Printing Technology (1985). When these courses were introduced, several doubts were raised about employment prospects. By the intro- duction of these courses, it was expected that the Presidency would be self-sufficient to meet the demand for higher technical personnel. New courses introduced till 1948-1949 were : 1. Public Health 2. Highways Engineering 3. Irrigation Engineering 4. Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering 5. Production Engineering 6. Reinforced Concrete 7. Aeronautics and 8. Railway Engineering These courses were broad-based to inculcate learning in all. The introduction of these courses, it was felt, would restrict expenditure in sending students to foreign countries. 64 Survey School to Tech. Temple Higher course candidates were prepared for the degree examination of the University of Madras. After the institution of Electrical Engineering in 1930-31, there was a demand for Electrical Engineers from the College. At the same time, in order to distinguish between the engineer class and other classes, a decision was taken to dispense with the probationary and lower subordinate classes in the College. However, nothing could be done in this regard till 1940. After the introduction of the Highway and Aeronautical engineering, many needs of the Presidency were catered to. During the war and the post-war period, the demand for engineers was met by training engineers in this institution. In 1930, a decade after the college moved to Guindy, vast developments took place. Laboratory facilities greatly improved. Applied Science now formed part of the curriculum in Mecha- nical Engineering. There was an increasing awareness of the significance of Technical Education and industrical education. In spite of the progress, it was pointed out in 1931 that there were very few institutions imparting technical education and that the British Government's expenditure on education was minimal. The degree course in Highways, instituted in 1945, was abolished in 1958. A course in Mining was started in 1956 and wound up within a short span of time to yield place to Metallurgy in 1969. But, Mining is back in the College since 1987. 4.7 Practical Training The courses framed in the College were a good blend of academic and practical work. Practical training was recommended during the years 1917-22. Practical training varied from course to course. The Civil Engineers had to undergo workshop training for 6 months prescribed for them. Mettur project on the Cauvery was one of the sites for training. In 1930, 20 Civil and 14 Mechanical Engineers and 32 Upper Subordinates joined the various works and workshops. Other places where training was imparted were the Public Works Department, Madras; Public Works Depart- ment, Dowlaishwaram; Public Works Department, Cochin; Chequered Life at Guindy 65 South Indian Railway and Madras Port Trust, among others. Thus, extensive training was given. The Central and Regional engineering establishments of the AIR, Posts and Telegraph Department and the Directorate of Civil Aviation were places for training. This course was intro- duced in July 1949. The training would enahle the students to develop an appreciation of practical realities. Employment opportunities increased and the number of engineer officers rose. Extensive facilities for training in both these branches existed. Mechanical Engineering students had to undergo training either during the summer vacation or after they completed their college study with a number of railway workshops, mills, factories, electric power station transmissions, distribution system etc. The Madras Electricity Department was said to have had the best organised system of training in the whole country for electrical engineering students. In 1947, the need to increase the work, in practical training was felt. A criticism was levelled in the Madras Legislative Assembly that the College of Engineering graduates lacked practical training and experience. The College .felt that such a criticism was unfounded, as it was doing its best to impart theoretical and practical training. In fact, the old students studying in foreign Universities wrote that the equipment were not inferior to what were seen in those universities. 4.8 Inspection Work Budding Engineers taken to the works assimilate faster. A visit to the important engineering works formed part of the curriculum. Some of the works visited were irrigation works at Krishna, Godavari deltas and the harbour at Vizagapatnam, Electric Works at Kolar gold mines, Bhadravati Iron Works, Mettur Projects, Golden Rock Workshop, and canal works at Tanjore. The aim of inspection work was to associate students with practical engineering. This course of instruction together with that of the Probationary Subordinate Class was for 3 years. Theoretical study was through lectures and practical training consisted of 66 Survey School to Tech. Temple Surveying in the field, of Drawing, and work in the Workshops. Several recommendations to amalgamate the Draughtsmen Class and the Lower Subordinate Classes were put forth. In 1940, a proposal to combine the course of the Subordinate Classes was mooted. In October of the same year, the abolition of the lower subordinate class and the draughtsmen class was ordered. With the two preliminary courses abolished, those who were really interested in pursuing a career in Engineering or allied professions had to join the College. 4.9 Research Work Research was being done in the Engineering College, as early as 1905 by Prof. James. The University of Madras introduced research Degree in Engineering in 1935 and this College was the first in India to provide facilities for research students in Engineering. In order to infuse originality and the spirit of creative thinking, students were encouraged to do research. Dr. JJ. Rudra was chiefly responsible in inducting research with great enthusiasm in the college. His efforts in the early thirties led to intensive research later. In 1945, two scholars of the Electrical Engineering branch were engaged in research. Incentive for research increased. Research plans, in both fundamental and applied research work, of all practical value, both in departments and in the industries, were initiated. A Fundamental Engineering Research Station was started to work in close collaboration with the College. It was Prof. Sukumaran, who got the first Ph.D. degree in the Faculty of Engineering of the Madras University. The College did a lot in industrial research. It was the first to set up a plant for testing producer gas plants for automobiles. It carried out exhaustive investigation on vegetable oils and charcoal gas as fuel in Diesel engines and the results have been welcomed by engineers and industrialists all over the country. The College was also extending facilities to the research staff connected with irrigation in the province. Research work has Rao Bahadur Principal C. Nagaratnam Ayy~ar Dr. Kanoth Sukumaran, Ph.D. Suney Camp at THIRlSEh'JlMALAl Principal Srinhasan visiting Camp (1966) Mr. Sadiq addressing a gathering Cl u- (| i i e i e <l l . i l t- ai ( i u i i u l y li<) been a regular feature ever since and has grown by leaps and bounds during the last 2 decades. 4.10 Post- Graduate Courses A growing need for specialisation was felt. Since oppor- tunities for higher education were limited, attempts were made for promoting post-graduate studies. With the increasing scope for technical and engineering education, post-graduate courses in several branches were encouraged. In September 1955, Public Health Engineering was introduced and 7 students were admitted to this course. Gradually post-graduate courses in Advanced Hydraulics, Dam Construction and Irrigation, Structural Engineering, Electrical Machine Design, Soil Mechanics and Internal Combustion Engineering were begun during the Second Five year Plan. The qualification for pursuing the post-graduate courses was a B.E. Degree from the University of Madras or any other University equivalent thereto. Post-graduate studies have accentuated research and specialisation. 4.11 Women Candidates The College realised the significance of educating women as engineers. For the first time in 1940, two women students were admitted. But the Poona Engineering College took the credit of having the first woman student in India in Engineering. Since then, there has been a steady increase in the number of women candidates. In 1943, both the students admitted in 1940 passed with Honours, one in Civil Engineering and the other in Electrical Engineering. In 1944, another student graduated. Due to consistent encouragement, 12 women candidates passed B.E. and also completed the post-graduate course in Structural Engineering in 1962 and, today, the College has its own women's hostel within the campus.Some of these women students not only picked up engineering degrees from the College but also picked up engineering graduates as their future life-partners from Guindy. 70 Survey School to Tech. Temple 4.12 Facilities and Fora While the class rooms and laboratories impart theoretical and practical knowledge to students, many professional Societies for Civil, Mechanical, Electrical and Electronics Engineers (and others) organise Seminars and Symposia at which papers of topical interest are presented by the students, members of staff and prominent engineers from the field. The College has been publishing a magazine since 1933 with articles of interest from students and staff. The college Magazine was priced at Re. 1 in 1933. However, the magazine was given to students as a free copy from 1935. Unfortunately, the publication has been irregular for some years and is now dead ; a loss to students and staff alike. It is hoped it would receive, like a phoenix, a new lease of life, ere long. There are quite a few students' organisations like the Students' Association, the Arts Section, the Photographic Society and the Social Service League (now National Service Scheme). All these serve to organise and channelise the energies of youngmen into fruitful and satisfying activities. To inculcate in students an interest in Tamil literature, a Tamizhar ,Kazhagam was started in October 1943 (which was renamed Tamizh Manram in 1957). The work done for establishing a strong foundation for Tamil Manram by Prof. A.P. Jambulingam is worth mentioning. Andhra Sahitya Samithi, Kannada Sangha, Malayalam and Hindustani Premi Mandal, which had similar objectives, were wound up, as the number of students speaking those languages decreased over the years, and dramas in those languages also ceased to be staged. During 1939, in the B Block, to cater to the needs of students, the last room was given to a Private Entrepreneur to run a canteen. Looking at the unhygienic conditions three students came out with an innovative idea resulting in the Automatic Dosa Machine. This machine was displayed in a number of Exhibitions in the College and at Parkfair. The machine was also put into use at the College mess for four years. ILP wesripui C>)aivrr)(^(if Best Tamil Debating team in state, won the PSG Rangaswamv Memorial Rolling trophy (1962-63), M.R. Ranganathan, O.A. Sivakumaran. Mr. A.P. Jambulingam Bus Committee Power farm Chequered Lite at (iiiindy 73 A full-fledged canteen came into existence on the 12th February 1949. Badham Halwa and Fruit Salad were served for 2 annas (one anna was roughly 6 paise) in 1951. An attempt to raise it to 3 annas was given up as this was not welcomed by the students ; today, one has to shell out as much as Rs. 6 for these items! The welfare committee came into existence during 1950-51. 13 students from various blocks formed the committee to take care of water supply and sanitation. The transport committee was formed in August 1950 and it had 6 student members elected from various blocks. The college had a 26 seater Ford V-8, 16 seater Morris van, an 8-Seater Morris car. The Ford 8 picked up the students from Saidapet and Mambalam. The committee took care of the transport require- ments of the students for their personal travel also. The mileage cost was 3 annas for the van per mile (one mile is roughly 1.6 km.) and 4 annas for the car. Today, these vehicles no longer exist. They are replaced by buses and vans, but the facilities have shrunk, comforts have diminished and students' involment has just vanished. In 1951, the Hostel Committee bought 5 cows for supplying night milk to the inmates of the Hostel. It may be of interest to note that, in 1940 itself, the student blocks H, F, D, C formed their own Block Unions to take care of the block affairs. The union meeting was held every day, the groups meeting everyday between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. The F Block Union also ran its own Manuscript Magazine. None-of these exists today. The sense of participation, team work, and responsi- bility shown during 1940-1960 is very much missing in today's pressurised environment of high competition. Mr. C. Rajagopalachari, the then Chief Minister, said once in our College Day function that only such extra-curricular activities make an Engineer a full personality as he might not find time for such development once he joined the services. How True! 74 Survey School to Tech. Temple Rao Bahadur Lt. Col. S. Paul, B.K, M.I.E.(Ind) During the days of Principal, Lt. Col. Paul, the College had maintained a Power Farm for a vegetable garden, a Sheep Farm and a Dairy Farm, and was able to supply vegetables, meat and (night) milk to the student messes. There was also set up a jaggery manufacturing co-operative society for tapping the date, coconut and palmyrah palms in the grounds. Vegetables grown in the farm were sold in Mylapore after taking care of the consumption requirements in the Hostels. The famous Drama Hall of those days came into existence during his period by converting a Drawing Hall in the Main Building. Today, there is a very good Auditorium named after Vivekananda and the old Drama Hall houses Survey Seminar Hal), a Lecture Hall and the State Bank of India. To provide musir to the inmates of the Hostel, a Radio Club was started. And today, every mess has piped music during dining hours and every block has a colour TV. The Broadcasting Club provided PA system for the functions of the College, and took care of the running commentary during the matches. The staff of Electronics and Communication Engi- neering School has taken over providing P.A. facility. The Staff Chequered Life at Guindy 75 Club started to function from a Tent pitched outside the staff quarters as there was no room for the Staff Club. Facilities improved later but, unfortunately, there is no Staff Club and no premises allotted for staff activities during the last decade. With more and more women students joining Guindy, there is a fear from boys that the camel and the Arab story may be enacted here! The ladies have started a Camatic Music Club, though it merged with the present Arts Society, which is doing wonders. The students' artistic talents found an outlet from early days through photography. The College had its own Photographic Club, and students held College Photo Competition and won many times Inter-Collegiate Photo Competition prizes. 4.13 Library The library plays a very important part in cultivating an interest in academics among students. It furthers standards of education and facilitates research at the post-graduate level. The College has over the years collected a good number of books and periodicals. In 1930, there were 11,279 books The College has a large technical library with the latest books and journals. A congenial atmosphere is provided in the spacious building to which the library was shifted in 1964, when it had 22,000 books and 400 journals. Seating arrangements f or 350 scholars have been provided. The number of books rose to 80,00 volumes and journals to 1,000 benefitting students, faculty members and research scholars of the College. Microfilm facilities also exist in the library at present. Monitoring through computers and photocopying at concessional rates for the students have been added to the existing facilities. The library has a good team of co-operative staff to help the students. 4.14 Arts Festival The Arts Section was once a part of the College Association and later functioned with an elected Arts Secretary as the group leader. It provided the much-required platform to the students to exhibit their talents in play writing, visualizing, stage manage- 76 Survey School to Tech. Temple ment, direction, acting, etc. The students first staged the drama for the College, the boys taking up female roles and doing extremely well. The services rendered by Prof. K. Sukumaran and Principal Lt. Col. Rao Bahadur S. Paul will need special mention when talking about the history of the Arts Section. The present hall of Geodesy served as the first Drama hall, and later the Old Drama Hall was opened by Mrs. Paul where today's State Bank is located. Later, during the year 1965-66, the Vivekananda Audi- torium came into existence. For the first time, there were an Arts Secretary and an Assistant Arts Secretary in 1965-66. The First Arts Festival in the Vivekananda Auditorium took place in 1966. The support and co-operation of Principal N.R. Sitapati, Prof. P. Purushothaman (now Dean of Engineering, P.G.), late Mr. K.M. Swaminathan, Prof. S. Modi, Prof. V. Ananda Rao and Prof. K.S. Hegde are worth mentioning here. The College had two Arts Secretaries S.A. Khader and M.R. Ranganathan for the first time. The Arts Festival of earlier years had dramatic competition for the dramas presented by various groups (Tamil, Telugu, etc.) and, later, the College started the Inter-Collegiate dramatic competition. The College invited various other colleges to participate in the competition held at Guindy. The Arts Section also staged plays at the Park Fair exhibition. The College calls the Arts Festival as Techofes in recent times. Numerous films were and are screened by the Arts Section. There used to be an interesting seating arrangement in the Drama Hall. The El students (with one more year to complete Engineering) always took the first few rows during the dramas and Arts Festival, and the E4s (First year students with 4 more years to go and normally referred to as E4 Dopes) took the last rows. But this seating arrangement changed when films were screened, with the E4s sitting nearest to the screen. Sitting out of the class boundaries always created problems and fight. There used to be very .good discipline, and even pin-drop silence in the Hall, with an El controlling the E2S, an E2 looking after the E3s, and so on. The fear and the familiarity created during ragging of freshers helped in maintaining discipline, which is often absent now-a-days. 78 Survey School to Tech. Temple 4^15 Sports Guindy was known not only for its famous engineers but also for the excellent athletes and sportsmen it had produced who had participated in the collegiate, inter-collegiate, state and national level sports activities. One of the Spin Trio of the Indian Cricket team, S. Vengataraghavan, who rose to be India Captain, was a student of Guindy. The hero of one-day cricket, K. Srikanth, another Captain, was also our student. The Guindy Boxing teams won the Lalith Shastry Shield for a number of years. The Cricket teams, Football teams, Hockey teams, Basketball teams and Volley ball teams of Guindy contributed to the University teams every year. The college had every year some University Blue or the other. Guindy had one of the largest number of Tennis courts. There were 13 courts. The senior- most players played only in courts' 1 to 4. A Junior always started with court 13. He had to challenge a senior in the next higher court, beat him and then only move to the next higher court. This continued till he reached court 1 or left the College, which ever was earlier (This, again, has become a thing of the past. We have just about 4 or 5 courts now).. The College had its own Boat Club and our Rowing teams always brought laurels to the College. The College also had Chadugudu teams, Tennikoit teams, badminton teams, etc. The College had its own swimming pool with a good circula- tion system. It had the unique privilege of a city college having its own swimming pool. But, in the last few years, some of our dear friends met their watery grave in this swimming pool, and so it has been closed down. Every effort is being taken to re-open the pool this 'year- The College firmly believed that every engineer needs excellent physique. The College had a number of sports facilities and started with an athletic team, and then many others, including boxing. We are happy to include photographs of some of the out- standing Sportsmen and Athletes of the College in this book. The College U.O.T.C (later on to be named as N.C.C.) always had more number of applicants than the Company's strength. The College had Engineers and Sappers unit, Engineers unit, University Blues Tennis Team Chequered life at Guindy 81 Inauguration of our Swimming Pool E.M.E. unit, Signals unit, Rifles unit, Aiming unit, Naval Tech. unit under the banner of U.O.T.C. or N.C.C. The College Principals, Professors and Junior Teaching Staff also participated actively in U.O.T.C. or N.C.C. as the officers of these units. 4.16 Physical Training For those students who did not participate in the U.O.T.C., there was a Physical Training class after 4 p.m and Thursday afternoon was the compulsory Mass Drill Day. During the 1940s, the Drill Master was Mr. Malayappa Iyer, a short man, who always stood on a platform for conducting the class. He did not have adequate knowledge of English. He had his own abbreviations and terms to indicate people and events. Malayappa Iyer wrote in the attendance registers against the name of the students certain abbreviations to refer to a student and his way of doing things. TMC : Trouble Middle Class, Talking Middle Class (to indicate mischief-mongers in the middle of a class) LCBC : Late coming, Bat coming, (to indicate students who used to rush to the PT class from the H.E. inspecting the Guard of Honour 5 th MADRAS V. T. C. : A COY, (ENGINEERS) (Ihequered Life at Guindy 83 Tennis court in the last minute with their tennis rackets.) SBL : Shaking between Legs (to indicate those students who were not steady while doing pull-ups) "Principal Telescoping" meant that the Principal was watching from a distance. The students used to enjoy doing PT under this Man, and they gave one of the biggest send-off parties to him. The Mass drill came to an end with one of the students by name Choudry giving a call in 1942 during one of the Mass Drill Classes to the British to "Quit India". Principal Chakko was transfered to Kumbakonam Government Arts College. 4.17 The Messy Business As against the barracks-type hostels and the tiled hostel blocks of the earlier days, today the College has more than 10 undergraduate hostels, and PG Hostels and an All-Exclusive Womens' Hostel. Womens' Hostel New Block and the PG Block for men and women started functioning in the year 1990. Thanks Heavens, the primitive laboratories and the abhorred "Baroda cans" are a thing of the past now! There used to be more than ten or twelve messes at a time to cater to about 500 hostel students to suit their tastes. They had names like Anglo-Indian, Muslim, Andhra A and B, Smartha A, B and C, Malabar, Andhra Brahmin, Arya Vaisya, Cosmo- politan Vegetarian and Non-Vegetarian, Non-Brahmin Vege- tarian and Non-Brahmin Non-Vegetarian, Brahmin Coconut Oil and Brahmin Gingelly Oil messes, etc. After the year 1941, integration of many of these messes took place, and messes classwise (El, E2, etc.) with broad classifications Vegetarian and Non-Vegetarian (called V and NV messes) came into existence. 4.18 Elections Election in Guindy is yet another big event. In the earlier days, the College Union representatives were elected by the entire student population whereas, to-day, they are elected by the 84 Survey School to Tech. Temple class representatives, who, in turn are elected by the class students. 50 years ago, giving compliments like pencils, pens and notebooks by the candidate was a common practice. Mr. C.T. Radhakrishnan, an alumnus, who passed out in the year 1940, recalls the elections of his days and says that he wanted to contest the elections and, therefore, one year before the election date, he started the collection of compliments. Those days, in Broadway, there were companies like Gem & Co., King & Co., Angel & Co. and M.R. Chandra & Co. He collected compliments for 500 to 600 students from M.R. Chandra & Co. But, finally, he had to withdraw in favour of his Muslim friend from Andhra. There were a lot of factions in the College and the elections were always controlled by these factions. Occasionally, a few brilliant men could win in spite of these factions. These factions also led to post-election fighting and one of those fights in the year 1965 went on till 4 in the morning. The police had to move in to restore order. This fight between El and E2 made the College authorities change the mode of elections from the next year. Though elections are no longer glaring, or blaring, they are peaceful, a welcome feature. 4.19 Toast The history of the College would not be complete if mention is not made of the College Toast. The College Union, at the end of every academic year, organises the College Day. Apart from the regular prize distribution and speeches, one of the most-awaited items in the agenda was the Toast by the final year students to the staff. To make the parting, less painful the toast worked like a social lubricant. The toast used to contain a few true but many fictitious incidents that were supposed to have happened in the lives of the staff. The humour through these incidents made everyone laugh, making the parting less sorrowful. The toast of the students always indicated their ingenuity, creativity, sense of humour love for the College and the staff from the students. Every year, from January onwards, a group of final years form the Toast Committee to write the toast. One of the final year student would be the Toast Master to present this in an acceptable manner. A few samples from one of the College toasts may give an insight into their standards. V Block Hostel First Toast at Vivekananda Auditorium (1966) H6 Survey School to Tech. Temple A well-known Professor of our College in Electrical Engineering went for a selection for an international posting. The selection committee said "Professor, we have read a number of your highly technical papers in various equally highly technical subjects. We wish to know about the phenomenon of Resistance Drop in atomic light". Said the Professor "Gentlemen, why atomic light? Even ordinaiy sunlight would do". He fumbled through his pockets and took out a small resistance, went to the window, opened it allowing the sunlight to pass. He held the resistance between his fingers and said "Gentlemen, here is the phenomenon of resistance drop in ordinary sunlight" and dropped the resistance! The Head of the Structural Engineering Section of the Civil Engineering Department was approached by a group of students with a request for recommending a very good and simple book in Structural Engineering as they were not able to follow his lectures. The Professor said, "Boys, you don't have to worry about it. As a matter of fact, I myself do not follow what I am talking about in the class. However, I will recommend a very good book to help you. This is the book that I have been following even today. It is entitled 'Structural Engineering for Beginners' written bv one Prof. Mahajan, edited by Prof. Mahajan, read by Prof. Mahajan and rejected by Prof. Mahajan". A Lecturer, who was rather fastidious, expecting perfection in everything and everybody used to be highly critical, pointing out even minor slips or errors in students' works was 'toasted' thus: "Give Mr. S. a blank drawing sheet, and he is sure to pick out at least a hunded mistakes". There was a- teacher, who was weak in English and said to have L.T. (language trouble!), reportedly wrote to a pet-shop: "Please send- me one mongoose". He added a post-script: "Please send one more mongoose". While making the supply, the shop-keeper asked why the order for one was in the body of the letter and for another in the P.S. said the teacher: "Language trouble! I don't know the plural for mongoose". Chequered Life at Guindy 87 All these meant fun without malice or wounding feelings, and the greatness of the staff lay in accepting them with grace and in proper spirit. Why was this much-awaited, much-enjoyed event given a go-by nowadays? 4.20 Ragging While interviewing one of our alumni who studied during 1918-1922, the question about Ragging was asked. It is surprising that, during that period, there was no ragging in the college. We are not able to trace when exactly Ragging was introduced in the College. But one thing many alumni remembef is that Guindy was quite famous (!) for the inside-campus and outside-campus ragging. Some recall saying that ragging at Guindy might have had its origin from the times of Major Marlely when Ducking in the College front pond or Rating Tank or Boat Club was a common occurrence. At least, until the last 15 years, there was ragging in the College and, from that period, the intensity of ragging has slowly tapered off. The College claims "No Ragging" now-a-days. Some of the famous raggers, whom the juniors used to look at with fear, later proved to be extremely friendly and helpful. Thus, ragging stayed as an integral part of the College life and the students accepted it with a mixed feeling of fear and fun. 4.21 Dress Regulations Even as late as 1948, there were the following standing "dress order" and the famous "tuft" order: "Every student will wear a turban or a decent cap, a long or short coat, buttoned up to the neck, with (a) trousers, socks and English shoes, or (b) a clean dhoti or mundu. As regards hair, tufts may not be worn pendant; the tuft must be drawn up and covered by the turban or cap. Within the precincts of the College, hair is never to be worn flowing loose. In the case of students who wear their hair in the European style, the cap may be removed indoor. All articles of dress must be scrupulously clean. Students may remove turbans, caps and coats when in the shop or gymnasium. All students engaged with or inspecting machinery are recommended to wear trousers and. other close-fitting clothes, so as to minimise risk of accident". Major Morlely Group taken on the occasion of the Exhibition held in January 1935 Chequered Life at Guindy 89 Still, there was a big exhibition in 1957 when the University of Madras observed its Centenary. Another was organised in 1978 under the theme "Education for Development". 4.22 Exhibitions The exhibitions at College of Engineering, Guindy during 1935-40 were the greatest attractions in the city of Madras. They brought to surface innovative, latent talents of student population by giving them an opportunity to try their hands at planning, organising, co-ordination, as a team, and to use group creativity which made them very good engineers. Later, with students becoming more studious in the highly-competitive days and with semester-system requiring more working days and giving less free time, these exhibitions got discontinued and the student community did not come forward to show much initiative to take up this responsibility, though pleasurable, useful and challenging. Still, there was a big exhibition in 1957 when the University of Madras observed its Centenary. Another was organised in 1978 under the theme "Education for Develop- ment". There is a big one to come in 1992-93 to mark the Bicentennial of C E G. VARSITY IS BORN 5.1 Reminiscences T he Old Boys and Girls of Guindy were interviewed to find out what happened during the transition. According to Mr. N. Thanikachalam. a 1918-22 batch 'Old Boy 1 , the course was of 4 years duration and had one year Practical Training. He remembers the last years of his student days at "Kalasa Mahal" and the first years of the College days at Guindy. At Chepauk, for the 6 A.M. Workshop (do our present-day students get up so early?), the students had to leave their houses as early as 5 A.M. When the students moved to Guindy, they had to stay at the Hostel. There were no buses or electric trains in hose days. The College had 3 tiled blocks as the Hostel. There were in all 30'student.s both Civil and Mechanical put together. Mr. N. Thanikachalam (1918-22) He still remembers the British Principal James who had to be removed because of the students' strike, as the Principal kicked away the Deepavali lamps that were lit in the Hostel. Mr. Nagrathnam Iyer took over as the Principal and the majority of the teachers were Indians, except a few British teachers' like Cartwriglu for Mechanical Engineering, Jieks for workshop, Old for survey, who could be named. The College had a 5-day week. The Medical College in those days had 30 students from the Group II. For the Engineering College, there was not much of competition and the admission was based on district-wise representation. The hostellers, who used to go home during the week ends had to walk or cycle all the way upto or from their homes, as there were no transport facilities. There was "no ragging" in the College. The first year curriculum did not have English as a subject. Some of the subjects were Physics, Chemistry, Maths, Survey, Building Materials, etc. The students had to wear "pith hats" and put their "tufts" inside the pith hats. In the days when a Sovereign of gold was available for Rs. 13 Rs. 15, the food at Hostel was costing Rs. 16 per month with a Varsity is Bom 93 Room Kent of Rs. 4. The students who passed out of the College could join the Department as Supervisor for Rs. 125 per month. The Assistant Engineer could get Rs. 375 and the Direct recruitment AE's (the best student in the class got this offer) used to get Rs. 375 per month. For every 3 Europeans, only one Indian could get AE's post, which was a guaranteed post for the best out-going student of the College.. Mr. Thanikachalam also recalled his posting at Kurnool-Cuddapah Canal Project. He had lived in a house boat. Mazdoors or bullocks pulled the boat in the canal, by ropes by walking along the banks. He received a salary of Rs. 168 and a Boat Allowance of Rs. 50, and paid a boat rent of Rs. 12 per month. A saving of Rs. 100 per month was possible. The College had a system of awarding a Diploma in Engineering apart from the Degree in Civil Engineering. The students had to write <*t the end of ever)' year a final College exam. They also had to write, at the end of the second year, a University Exam leading to F.E. (Fellow in Engineering), and at the end of the Fourth year another University Exam, leading to B.E. degree. The F.E. and B.E. degree examinations covered all portions studied upto that year. The students could fail only once in the College exams. If a student failed for the second time, that was the end of the road for him. The College diploma scroll was large in size and was also good enough to get an employment even without passing F.E. or B.E. So many used to be still writing F.E. and B.E. exams a number of times but would have obtained jobs with the college diploma. Then in 1944, instead of F.E., B.E. and college diploma exams., Annual University Exams, came into force. This was later which later got replaced by the Integrated System of five years in 1959, with entry qualification changed to PUC. This also underwent a change and was replaced by the 4-year semester course with the entry qualification of a pass in plus 2 exams with certain minimum marks. Post B.Sc. and part-time B.E. courses were also introduced for the B.Sc. graduates and for the Diploma holders in 1963 and 1969 respectively, but the former was wound up after a few years. '.14 Survey School to Tech. Temple 5.2 Entry Qualifications In the early days of Topping, students with no prescribed qualification were just selected from the Fort School and others. The only requirement was knowledge of arithmetic and writing. The School offered only a training programme and not an academic course. It was Major De Havilland, who suggested that there should be an entrance exam, for selection of apprentices for the School. Then, during 1820-40, the apprentices were from the Civil Engineers Department of the Board of Revenue and from the European Non-Commissioned Officers and Sappers. The new entrants in 1830 were admitted to the 1-1/2 years ourse after an entrance test. The School offered Upper and -ower Subordinate programmes. Education of natives and Civil Engineering came into focus by 1854. In 1854, the School charged a fee of Rs. 3 and had 20 stipendiary students including N'oh-Europeans, Non-Commissioned Officers and Soldiers of Her Majesty's Indian Regiments. There was also an entrance test. By 1859, the School moved to Kalasa Mahal, and 36 Military and 83 Civil candidates took up entrance test. Out of this, only 20 Military and 26 Civil candidates were Qualified. The first College exams, were held in 1860. The student fee was utilized to buy books for the library. In 1862, the course became a two-year programme leading to a BCE degree and the entry requirements were F.A., Diploma or Matric. exam, pass with a minimum mark. The Diploma course was open to European Commissioned Officers and Soldiers of European Regiments and Civilians. Matriculates were admitted without examination. From 1868, F.A. was made as the standard for admission to the Engineer Class (and not Matriculation). Many scholarships were introduced in 1880. The course duration was increased from 2 to 3 years for Degree and 2-1/2 years for Diploma. 1900 saw the appointment of the Board of Examiners to conduct the final exam for the Graduate Engineers Class. In 1888, 2 years' practical, training was introduced, which was reduced to 1 year from 1895. In 1904, B.A. was made as the entrance qualification for the Degree examination. In 1911, once again, the Inter- Varsity is Bom ' ' mediate Examination of the University of Madras substituted B.A. as the Qualifying Examination for entry into Engineer Class, and the course duration was increased to 4 years. In 1920, one Subordinate or Diploma course replaced U.S./L.S. classes. But in 1922, the old system was again reintroduced. Intermediate Pass with Maths, Physics and Chemistry as main subjects became the criterion for entrance. Later, with the University changing Intermediate Course to PreUniversity Course (PUC) , the entry qualification became a pass in PU with Maths, Physics and Chemistry as the main subjects. The course was changed to 5-year Integrated New Regulation Course. For a few years, the old Regulation B.E. a five years course, where a student was permitted to fail in any class, in any number of subjects, any number of timeswas permitted and the student could to continuously study for five years and come back and write the remaining papers, if any, for any number of years. Under the New Regulation Course, which had annual exams, the student was permitted to fail only upto a maximum of two subjects in the first year if he had to continue II year study without a break. While failure in all subjects in III year was also permitted to continue in FV year, the student had to successfully pass in all III year and IV year subjects before entering final year. Even a student who has failed in the earlier years, but who had completed study without a break in the academic years, became eligible to get a First Class depending on the marks (60%) of his II attempt. This rule came into effect in 1966, and this deprived the bright students, who could have failed by sheer ilMuck in the final year, of the opportunity to get a First Class. The admission to the Five-Year Courses was by means of personal interviews conducted on individual basis by a panel of 3 selectors, who interviewed the students face to face, one by one in separate rooms. The students' academic and extra-curricular performance and aptitudes played vital roles in selection. Later, the interview became a group-oriented interview, and the selection moved once again to Entrance Test Pattern. The entry qualification got changed from PUC to 10 plus 2. To-day's entrance exams mean competition among nearly 20,000 candidates every year. The computers do the evaluation of answers and tabulation of results in a matter of days, in a fool-proof, unbiased manner. qfi Survey School to Tech. Temple 5.3 Unitary University Ushered in On September 4, 1978, Perarignar Anna University of Technology was founded with College of Engineering, Guindy as its principal seat, four Departments of Architecture and Chemical, Leather and Textile Technology of University of Madras and the Madras Institute of Technology at Chromepet merging with College of Engineering (C E G). The name of the Unitary University was later changed to Anna University. Though the merger made Guindy lose its individual identity to some extent, it never reduced the love and affection for Guindy in the hearts of its alumni. Recently, when we talked to Prof. N.R. Sitapati, who was the best out-going student both in his College Diploma and B.E., he traced some of the events that led to the talk of elevating Guindy to the level of a University. Prof. Sitapati served the College as a teacher and later rose to the level of the Principal, Guindy, in 1966. (The Silver Jubilee Principal, this year) Prof. Sitapati started his career with the construction of Saidapet Broadcasting Station as a supervisor at a salary of Rs. 30. Later, through an advertisement in The Hindu, he took up a Research job for WHO Team at Pattukotai for a salary of Rs. 100. His efforts, hard work and daring approach showed WHO that the cost of Malaria Eradication could be reduced from Rs. 12 per person to 11 pies (not the present-day paise) in a matter of 4 years. He also recalled his close association with Dr. JJ. Rudra, who was well known for his passion in Engineering Research. Prof. Sitapati came back to the College as a Sub-Assistant for a salary of Rs. 55 from a salary of Rs. 100 and an annual increment of Rs. 25. When he went to Roorkee Engineering College which, by then attained the status of a University, he could understand, that the colleagues, who passed out of Roorkee and joined on the staff looked upon a "Guindian" for the simple reason he came from a College to a University. Prof. Sitapati started writing, around 1950s, to Hon'ble Minister for Education, Mr. Avinasalingam, on the necessity to elevate Guindy to the level of an independent University. Prof Sitapati said, much later, that with continuous efforts of the Director of Technical Education, the Government of Tamil Nadu, authorities of the University of Madras, the Faculty of College, etc., the College got elevated to the level of our University in 1978, which he felt will be another important milestone in the history of the College. Unitary Ushered in 98 Survey School to Tech. Temple The idea of elevating Guindy to the status of a University was Ilu' bram child ol Padinashii (late) 1. Muthian, the then dynamic Director of Technical Education. Later, through the efforts of Mr. 1'. Sivalingam as the Director of Technical Education (DTE) and Dr. V.C. Kulandhaisamy as the Dean of Post-Graduale Studies, College of Engineering, this idea developed into a dialt proposal, fulfilling the aspirations of many Guindians and Mr. I". Muthian. Dr. V. C. Kulandaisamy who became DTE later pcrsonaly took up this task of drafting the entire proposal fo; submission to the Government of Tamil Nadu, giving a concrete shape to the idea. The proposal to establish a Science and Technology University was accepted by the Government who gave the name as Perarignar Anna University of Technology (PAUT). Mr. P. Sivalingam was appointed as the first Vice- Chanccllor and Dr. V. Ananda Rao as the first Registrar. The I niversity was inaugurated by the President of India, Mr. N. Sanjeeva Reddy on 4th September, 1378-. In 1981, Dr. V. C. Kulandaisamy succeeded Mr. P. Sivalrngam as the Vice-Chancellor after coming back from his U.N. assign- ment. Dr. S. Muthu Kumaran became the second Registrar. Dr. M. Ananda Krishnan succeeded Dr. V. C. Kulandaisamy as die third Vice-Chancellor on 11th May, 1990. Drl Stephen Sandegren was appointed as the third Registrar of Anna University. Prof. W. P. Vijayaraghavan was Principal of CEG for a long period until 1986 when he retired. With College of Engineering, Guindy transforming itself into Anna University, the post of the Principal was changed as Director in 1986. IVof. A. M. Srinivasan and Prof. R. Palanivel served as Director-in-Charge for two and one year respectively. Dr. T.R. jagadeesan became the Director of CEG in 1989. Dr. P. Purushothaman became the Dean of Engineering (PG), Dr. M. Abdullah Khan, the Dean of Engineering (UG) and Dr. G. Ramanaiah, the Dean of Science and Humanities. These institutions were under three different managements, namely, the Government of Tamil Nadu, the University of Madras and the Board of Governors of Madras Institute of Technology. The sen ice conditions, the designations of posts, pa\ scales.. ami method* of recruitment differed from one Dr. V.C. Kulandhaisamy. institution .to the other. The main task to start with was one of bringing a desired level of integration to ensure uniformity in service conditions and pay scales, and a common seniority list for the staff, teaching and non-teaching. 5.4 New Courses There were 16 undergraduate degree programmes in 1978-79. Alter the establishment of the Universtiy, undergraduate degree programmes were added in live new areas of study by way of diversification. They are: 1. Industrial Engineering 2. Computer Science and Engineering 8. Printing Technology 4. Mining Engineering 5. Rubber Technology 100 Survey School to Tech. Temple The University has, today, a very wide spectrum of undergraduate education. The new post-graduate programmes, to supplement 27 earlier ones, are in the following fields of specialisation : P.G. Degree 1. Irrigation Water Management 2. Business Administration 3. Medical Physics 4. Laser and Electro-Optical Engineering 5. Remote Sensing 6. Computer Applications 7. Biotechnology 8. Architecture 9. Footwear Science and Engineering P.G. Diploma 1. Hydrology and Water Resources Engineering 2. Footwear Science and Engineering 3. Post-B.Sc. Diploma in. Computer Applications M.Phil. 1. Mathematics 2. Physics 3. Chemistry 4. Environmental Science "). English Language and Literature 5.5 Advanced Centres In order to promote basic research, applied research, consultancy sen-ices and extension activities, the following new Centres and Institutes were established: 1. Institute of Remote Sensing ~ 2. Crystal Growth Centre 3. Centre lor Biotechnology 4. Centre for Human Settlements ,'). Centre lor New and Renewable Sources of Energy Varsity is Born 101 6. Curriculum and Educational Media Development Centre 7. Regional Housing Development Centre 8. Institute of Continuing and Development Education The Division of Computer Science and Engineering was upgraded to a School of Computer Science and Engineering. The Departments of Electronics and Instrumentation in the Madras Institute of Technology were merged to form a School of Electronics and Instrumentation. A Placement and Training Centre, an Industry-Institution Interaction Cell, and an Entrepreneur Development Cell help to promote student placement, student training, consultancy' services and preparation for self-employment. Substantial assistance has been provided for faculty development by means of deputation under Quality Improvement Programmes, encouragement of part-time registration for Ph.D., deputation for training abroad and for attending seminars, symposia and conferences in India and abroad. The establishment of the Ramanujan Computing Centre in 1984 marked the beginning of an augmentation of computing facilities in the University. The University has, at present, 2 mainframe computers, 6 minicoumputers, 60 personal computers and 2 CAD workstations. In addition, a common computer centre with about 20 terminals/personal computers has been provided for use by the students in 1989. The University Grants Commission has approved^ the construction of a new University Library, and has provided Rs. 76.00 lakhs in VII plan. A new building at a cost of Rs. 1.2 crores is under construction in two phases, the first phase in VII plan and the second in VIII plan. Anna University, though small in terms of student strength, has a good record in sports and games. The additional facilities 102 Survey School to Tech. Temple for which sanction of funds has been obtained comprise the following: 1. Swimming Pool 2. Indoor Gymnasium 3. Open Air Stadium 4. Improvements to Boat Club 5.6 Research Activities Docotral Programme Sixty two research scholars registered for the Ph.D. programme during the year. Theses submitted by forty two candidates, thirteen under the Faculty of Engineering, three under the Faculty of Technology and twenty six under the Faculty of Science and Humanities, were accepted by the University for the award of the Ph.D. degree. Publications More than 440 papers contributed by members of' the faculty from various Departments of the University were published/presented in reputed national and international journals/conferences, seminars and symposia during the year. Research Projects During the year 62 sponsored research projects worth about Rs. 885 lakhs financed by various funding agencies were under execution in the University. Continuing Education Programme The University maintained a high tempo in organizing continuing education programmes, which constitute one of the important objectives of the University. The number of Summer/Winter schools, short-term courses and training programmes organised during the year 1988-89 in different disciplines was 61. 5.7 Developmental Activities During the year 1989-90 the U.G.C. has sanctioned a sum of Rs. 13.17 lakhs as additional sanction for building schemes. Varsity is Bom 108 Hon'ble Shri Vasant Sathe, Minister for Energy, Government of India, inaugurated the B.E. degree course in Mining and laid the foundation stone for the administration building of the Department of Management and Entrepreneurship in the College of Engineering on 1st April 1988. Dr. M.A, Ramaswamy, Pro-Chancellor, Annamalai Univeristy laid the foundation stone for the Student Centre of this University on 12th October 1988 at the College of Engineering. Prof. Yash Pal, Chairman, University Grants Commission, inaugurated the building for the Institute of Remote Sensing (IRS) of this University on 5th January 1989. A Memorandum of Agreement was signed between Anna University and the Colorado State University (U.S.A.) for development of cultural and educational relationships. A Memorandum of Agreement was signed between Anna University and the California State University (U.S.A.) for development of cultural and educational relationships. The Department of Biotechnology in the Ministry of Science and Technology of the Government of India has conveyed sanction for establishment of the User Ceijtre under B.T.I.S. at Biotechnology Centre, Anna University, at a total cost of Rs. 6.50 lakhs. RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT 6.1 Preamble T The transformation from a Survey School of the 18th century to an Engineering College in the 19th century, and then on to a Technical University in the 20th century is unique; too good to be true. But this is exactly what happened in the case of College of Engineering, Guindy-CEG, in short. From a single area of training in Surveying, the College today has multi-disciplinary courses leading upto Doctorate in Engineering. From an intake of mere 8 students, the University today has around 4800 students, 600 fold increase in a span of 200 yearsreally, too good to be believed. Yesterday becomes history for today and today becomes history for tomorrow. Every history marks the beginning of another history. Therefore, the effort to trace the history, | (l<> Sui M' V S t h o o l l o l < ( h . I c m pi t ' naturally leads us to the questionSchool to College to University, and to what next? The 1966 batch took efforts to find out expressions of the people who formed a part of this history and who are going to be part of the history in the years to come. Let's sec some of their reflections. 6.2 Mrs. May George There was a cartoon in the College Magazine about l. r > years ago; the cartoon showed a girl entering the College shivering, a boy looking terrified at a bevy of girls eyeing ihe boys teasingly. The first two eves entered the College in 1941, to be followed by their sisters, almost totalling 800 in number today400 times in just half a century! Where would these soaring figures end up? -"urious to know, we met with Mrs. May George to find out what should be the future agenda for Anna University towards the women students. Mrs. George, who was the fourth Lady Engineer to pass out from the College, recalls how she had to stay at Little Mount in a private accommodation and travel to College by rickshaw and cycle. The present day girls, who stay at a stone's throw (do our girls throw stones?!) from the class room, should consider themself lucky at least in this one area of their student life, as locating a suitable or career path may be a lot more difficult now than what their "elder" sisters of yesteryears found, by not only getting the jobs after graduation but also rising to the level of Chief Engineer. Of course, the elder as well as younger sisters have one thing in commonthe ladies' common room in the first floor of the College main building had never changed its location (and provisions?) from 1939. Mrs. George acted in a French Drama during her first year when Prof. K. Sukumaran was in charge of Arts Section. She was one of the early ones who proved that marriages were not only made in heavens but also in Guindy! Mrs. George, who retired as Chief Engineer, still recalls that her career pa'h had a number of hurdles and delays because she was a lady. She strongly feels that a Lady Entrepreneur is more important in today's context of women entering to the College in hundreds. She says the College should start a Business Centre with project work components, with adequate books, reference material, engineering manuals ladies Hostel and computers to support such project activities. The lady students, according to Mrs. George, should never expect any special consideration because they are women, but gain recognition because of hard work and merit. The girls of the College of Engineering, Guindy in Anna University are echoing Mrs. George's call by taking up top positions in almost all branches and snatching away most gold medals. But, un- fortunately, the College has never had a Lady President (even though India had a remarkable Lady Prime Minister and Tamil Nadu has a remarkable Lady Chief Minister). The girls we interviewed are positive that, sooner than later, one of them would fill the bill in Anna University. The future girls of Anna University seem to expect greater support from industries for providing them job opportunities. The men and women students agree that the College should conduct career development programme at the beginning of the final year of study and also raise its academic standard to match that of I.I.T. students, though it may mean a lot of pressure on the students. Reintroduction of B.E. (Hons), students feel, would be a great encouragement to bright students. The women students feel that, with proper coaching, Anna University could produce some excellent women athletes and sports personalities as well. 1 ()8 Survey School t o Tech. Templ e 6.3 Dr. Manoharan We talked to Dr. Manoharan, presently in I.I.T. as Assistant Professor in Electrical Engineering, who was a student of Guindy. He says that, after the I.I.Ts came into existence, the general feeling was that only those who could not get into I.I.Ts got into Guindy and therefore Guindy's level was lower than that of I.I.T. If Guindy should raise itself to the level of I.I.Ts, Guindy should go in for creating three Fs larger Facilities, better Faculty and greater Flexibility for students. He wants the Red Tape to be cut. But, humorously, he adds that the students from Guindy become better entrepreneurs used as they are to these Red Tape conditions even as students, which, are part and parcel of setting up an industry in India. Mr. Manoharan says that the approach to R&D must become an integral part of students' academic career in Guindy in the years to come. He adds that the spirit of learning as much as possible, even from outside the prescribed curriculum in any field, is the basis of survival and this is well known to, and being practised by, I.I.T. students. The students of Guindy would do well to learn this. 6.4 Prof. K.S. Hedge Prof. K.S. Hegde, who became, Principal in late 1966, also concurs with this, saying that today's private sectors' needs are centred around boys with the bent of mind for innovation and research. In order to take care of this demand, Prof. Hegde says that the College should keep pace with whatever was happening around. Research and Development approach, even at the level of undergraduate programme, he feels, should be a part of its curriculum. Prof. Hegde calls for unified approach in several areas like Remote Sensing, Remote Measurement, Satellite Technology, etc. He also says that, at present, Anna University has built good facilities but, with proper development of Man Power, these fatilities should be used to project the image of the College in the International Academic Circles on par with that of I.LTs Prof. Hegde feels that the alumni of C E G, who are Jpding Professors, Engineers and Scientists abroad could be requested to come to the College and share their knowledge and Retrospect and Prospect 109 see the present- day developments of Anna University, which could raise our image. He urges the linkage of alumni with the College and believes that the fullest use of the alumni should be one of the requirements to build a better future for the Institution. He feels that the lady students who wish to reach higher levels should make use of their knowledge and be ready to take up any transfer, even leaving the kids with their husbands, who also have equal responsibilities. Loyalty to the job over and above that of attachment to the family would be a key'to bright career path for our women students. He is of the opinion that the College should have greater autonomy and less pressure from the Syndicate. He wants greater thrust towards applied research in Anna University. 6.5 Mr. N. Kumar Mr. N. Kumar, an alumnus and presently Chairman of Indchem group companies, says the industry could be -requested to interact with the College by addressing the students on the application of the theories they had learnt. He also feels that the students need a greater exposure to management techniques, as the basics learnt alone may not help. A greater institution- industry-interaction should take place. 6.6 Dr. T.R. Jagadeesan Dr. T.R. Jagadeesan, Director College of Engineering, Guindy expresses his view on the same lines that the industries should provide an exposure to the students of C.E.G. on what is happening in industries and, as a social obligation to industries, colleges could open their laboratories to the industries. Prof. Jagadeesan, who greatly contributes to the idea of University- Industry collaboration, took his Engineering degree from Annamalai University in the year 1960, took his Masters in C.E.G. and Doctorate from I.I.T. in 1973. He was the Principal Investigator in the Government of Tamil Nadu's project on the use of ethanol as fuel in automobiles. Widely travelled abroad, Dr. Jagadeesan is always willing to try new ideas in the field of Technical Education. He feels that Engineers, whose great concern is for economy, could become effective when they I III Survey School to Tech. Temple become concerned about three Es, viz. Energy, Environment and Kntrepreneurship. He feels that Guindy could play a vital role in ail these areas by providing prominent place for the three Es in I lie curriculum, and can") ing <n _ projects and seminars on Environment and designing of pollution-free equipment. Dr. Jagadeesan strongly believes in students' participation in all activities of the College and so feels that the student population, in the years to come, should actively get enrolled in all extra- curricular activities like N.S.S. and N.C.C. Some of the responsibilities in the years to come would be to revive the College Magazine and reactivate the College Swimming Pool. The College is the first Institution at the national level to introduce the Japanese concept of "Quality Circle" in an Educational Institution. The future, he feels, would see the growth of Quality Circle Movement in the College and the establishment of Quality Circle Forum of India (Madras chapter) in Anna University as a part of its Bicentenary celebrations. Dr. Jagadeesan, who was instrumental in getting a number of aids and grants for the College, foresees a number of areas in which these grants could be put to use like the field of Robotics, Fibre Optics, CAD-CAM, Medical Electronics, Communication, t'U. The future would see further strengthening of ties between the University and a number of Educational Institutions abroad, leading to the University being a candidate for the 21st Century Technology Development in the areas of Energy, Computers, Science artel Technology, Workshops, etc. 6.7 Dr. M. Anandakfi shnan Dr. M. Anandakrishnan, the Vice-Chancellor of Ann;i University, says the expected growth should be systematic. !! graduated in the branch of Highway Engineering, started In- lareei as Junior Engineer in 1952, took his Masters from Minnesota University, U.S.A. in 1957 and finished his Doctorate in the year 1960 as the first Ph.D\ in' the Department of Soil Mechanics of the same University. His work with a Consulting Engineering firm in Minnesota gave him an opportunity to malyse I he cause of failure of a million dollar shopping complex's deep piling system, and his report was considered to Retrospect and Prospect 111 be one of the outstanding ones. Dr. M. Anandakrishnan came back to join I.I.T. Kanpur in 1963 and rose to the level of the H.O.D., thoroughly enjoying the I.I.T. culture, which allowed tremendous amount of freedom to the staff. In 19"/4, he assumed charge as the first Service Counsellor of the Embassy of India, Washington D.C. and worked with three Ambassadors Mr. T.K. Kowl, Mr. Kewal Singh and Mr. Palkiwala. His contribution to promote US-Indian programmes in Science and Technology has been highly valued. In 1978, he resigned from I.I.T. to take up an U.N. assignment in the Department of Science and Technology. When Dr. M. Anandakrishnan returned to Madras after retiring from the U.N. for a quiet life, he was given the challenging responsibility of taking over as the Vice-Chancellor of Anna University within 24 hours. He accepted the same to be here till 1993, as he found the new responsibility exciting and rewarding. But, all of us want him for one more term, or at least till the Bicentenary of C.E.G on May 17, 1994. He opines, while talking to us, that the systematic growth must be an institutional process and not an individual dependant, and this would have to start with reorganisation and restructuring of the U.G. and P.G. courses in a drastic way. Staff orientation should be towards those persuasive skill and soundness of logic and not authoritarian approach. The social and economic purposes are the area towards which our energy must be released. The Vice-Chancellor feels that contact should be established with the alumni abroad to bring their expertise and experience to the Institution. Bilateral and multi-national aid agencies must be approached for their support for specific projects. He wants the University to be involved with other Educaional Institutions and Schools. To him, the Institution- Industry-Interaction is the need of the day. By his openness and friendliness, concern for staff and students, eagerness to import the best from Indian and foreign Universities, he has endeared himself to one and all, who expect his tenure to be a golden peroid in the annals of Anna Univeristy, whose alumnus he was. 6.8 Mr. K.S. Shetty Mr. K.S. Shetty, an alumnus of the College is presently the President of the Manufacturers' Association of Ambattur 112 Survey School to Tech. Temple Industrial Estate, the biggest in South East Asia. He says that with nearly 200 years of history, with well-developed infra- structural facilities, the College is the most ideal Institution in Tamil Nadu today to take up the Institution Industry Interaction programme. This 3 Is programme could raise Anna University to the level of M.I.T. and Stanford. 6.9 Dr. Stephen Sandegren The Registrar of Anna University, Dr. Stephen Sandegren, while fully endorsing the views of the Vice-Chancellor on 3 Is, adds that the University has a direct obligation to the society by providing appropriate technology to meet the society's today's and future requirements, which can be done by proper designing of the courses. The social obligation also extends to other areas like organisation of workshops for physically handicapped, etc. The Registrar also feels that the future lies in cutting down the compartmentalisation and integration of all departments, keeping in mind, quality of teaching, research activities, modernisation of facilities, to match one another. Prof. Stephen, who took his Doctorate in the U.K., was also an alumnus of the College during his Masteis. Dr. Stephen feels that the area of consultancy, which is time bound, where a part of our time is sold to the other organisation, should, only take priority after basic excellence in teaching. 6.10 Dr. S.R. Srinivasan Dr. S.R. Srinivasan, Professor of Planning and Develope- ment in Anna University, says, in the long term, Centre for University Industry colloboration should create placement, study and library facilities and provide opportunity for entrepre- neurship. 6.11 Epilogue History, says the lexicon, is a continuous methodical record of important or public events ; study or aggregate of past events ; whole train of events connected with nation, person, thing, etc. Retrtwpect and Prospect 113 A few enthusiastic students and staff ot the glorious College that Guindy is have attempted to pen its history ; paint a modest picture of the hoary traditions, rich heritage of C E G ; of the first engineering academic institution in India as well as Asia and only the second oldest on the earth next only to a polytechnic in France. Just two centuries young, it is at its prime of life. It has grown many, many foldstaff in hundreds, students in thousands, equipment in millions, contributions in billions. C E G's products have shown their mettle all over India, all over the world ; leaving their seal, their stamp. From a simple Survey School for a mere H in Fort St. George, it has become Tech. Temple for over 5 grands in a score of UG programmes and two of PG, in three constituent units in Guindy and one at Chromepet only a few kilometres away. Choose any progressiongeometric or arithmeticthe institution with such an envious, scintillating past is sure to have a covetous, brilliant future. Another Harvard, Massachusetts, Stanford? .With dozens of off-campus centres? With epoch-making, noble-winning achievements? On the eve of the Bicentennial of C E G, we believe so ; we wish tor it. The team that records its saga during its Tercentenary would confirm it. Down the Memory Lane Preamble There is no History sans people and events. The College Magazine was first brought in 1933 and its publication continued for nearly 50 years carrying choicest Technical and General Articles. It unearthed talents of our students and staff, too! to the limelight. The several issues provided us with very valuable resource material giving us an idea of the multifarious activities that took place in the College and the different kinds of people behind them. Some of these articles and essays have relevance even today. The Photographs, though old and weather-beaten, have been copied from the Magazine to the best of our ability and of the sophisticated equipment capability. The Poet, Humourist and Cartoonist in our Engineers have given vent to their feelingswhich found expression through the pages of these Magazines. This Annexure covers areas like yesteryear essays, photographs of people, events and infrastructure, quizzical puzzles, catchy cartoons, humourous articles, and lilting verseslinked with facilities and activities of the day providing a comparison but lucidly portraying the everyoung Guindy Spirit of facing challenges. Though we wanted to reproduce more articles, space and time constraints made us select a few representative samples. The Succession List of Principals 1857-1860 Lieut. Col. George Vivian Winscom 1860-1862 Lieut. Col. John Carpendale 1862-1865 Major-General William Henry Edgcome 1865 Major-General Henry Thomas Roger (Acting) 1865-1871 Major-General William Henry Edgcome 1871-1879 Major-General Henry Thomas Rogers 1879 Lieut. Col. Henry Davison Love, R.E. (Acting) 1879-1880 Major-General Henry Thomas Togers 1880-1887 Lieut. Col. Henry Davison Love, RE. 1887-1889 Captain C.B. Henderson, R.E. (Acting) 1889-1891 Lieut. Col. Henry Davison Love, R.E. 1891 -1892 Major A.W. Smart, R.E. (Acting) 8192-1894 Lieut. Col. Henry Davison Love, R.E. 1894-1895 Major A.W. Smart, R.E. 1895 J.P. Davidson, (Acting) 1895-1898 Lieut, Col. Henry Davison Love, R.E. 1898-1899 J.P. Davidson, (Acting) 1899-1904 Lieut. Col. Henry Davison Love, R.E. 1904-1905 H.T. Keeling (Acting) 1905-1907 Lieut. Col. Henry Davison Love, R.E. 1907-1909 W.H. James, M.Sc.> M.I.M.E., A.M.S.C.E. 1909-1910 F.E. Morgan, (Acting) 1910-1912 W.H. James, M.Sc., M.I.M.E., A.M.S.C.E. 1912 M. Brown 1912T1920 W.H. James, M.Sc., M.I.M.E., A.M.S.C.E. 1920-1921 C.L. Carwright, A.M.I.C., M.I.M.E., M.I.E.P. M.I.E., [India] 1921-1922 W.H. James, M.Sc., M.I.M.E., A.M.S.C.E. 1922-1925 C.L. Cartwright 1925-1936 Rao Bahadur G. Nagaratnam. Iyer, B.A., B.E., M.I.E. (India) 120 Suru' v S< IKMPI i n I i - ch. l i i n p l c 1936-1941 Dr. K.C. Chakko, (I.E.S), D.SC. (Engg.), M.I.E (India), Lieut. Col.IITE. 1941-1945 Dr. J.J. Rudra, M.A., B.Sc, Ph.D., A.I.L.S.C., M.I.E.E. Mem. A.M.E.E. 1945-194(> K.K. Sitarania Iyer, B.A., B.E. (Acting) 1946-1948 Dr. J.J. Rudra 1948-1955 Rao Bahadur, Lieut. Col. S. Paul, B.E., M.I.E. (India) 1955-1958 B.H. Major Morley, B.E., A.M.I.E.. A.M. Tech. 1958-19(51 R. Rajagopal Pillai, B.A., A.I.I.Sc, Mem. A.I.E.E. 1961-191)4 A. Srinivasan, B.E., M.Sc. M.S.C.E.. (U.S.A.), M.I.E. (India) Mem. C.I.G.R.E., Mem. A.I.E.E. 1964-1965 V. Kalyanaraman, B.E., M.A.Sc, (Toronto) 1965-1966 N.R. Sitapathi, B.E., C:.E. (Hons), M.P.H. (Minn) M.R.S.H. (Lond.), M.I.R (India)', (In-chnrgc) 1966-1971 K.S. Hedge, B.E.. M.A. (Engg.) (Stanford). F.I.E.R.E., M.I.E.. A.M.I.T.E. 1971 VV.P. Vijayai-agiiavan, B.E.. M.E., F.I.E. 1986 Mr. A.M. Srinivasan, (Acting Principal) 1988 Prof. Palanivelu 1989 Dr. T.R.Jagadeesan SELECTED ESSAYS "Sparks from our Anvil" V.L.N. February '35 The following yams are not entirely fictitious. Do not tell me that they are not original; there is nothing new under the sun. Old wit tastes like old wine. If you have not heard them before, hear them now, better late than never. And lest you should fail in your duty, let me remind you, that you should laugh, because they are wits, and good ones too. Here they go! Let me start with the victim of all students'jokes the teacher. A certain professor was working out <t stiff problem to the class. He really had a suffer job in moving up and down the massive black-board on its rusty oil-dry pulleys. He finished the fourth full chalk with \ Zi V5 - 1.414 x 1.414= 1.999396 = 2 (nearly) He started coughing out the half- ounce of chalk powder from his pleural cavity when up rose a tufted Kumbakonamite from under the front desks. "The answer is 2, sir". The Physics teacher demonstrated Torricelli's experiments, and then asked the boys to explain "vacuum". No one was able to give a clear answer. "Well, boys, how is it you are not able to express in simple' English such an evident thing like a vacuum?". Voice from the back-bench ! "We know, sir, we have got it alright in our heads, but we are unable to get it out". 122 Survey School to Tech. Temple The car stopped on the way : the driver lifted the bonnet and tinkered with the plugs. "Driver, what is wrong with the car?"enquired the lady occupant rather impatiently. "The engine misses". "Dear, dear, how did you know I was a Mrs.?"'blushed the lady, who happened to be newly married. The Mathematics lecturer was very considerate to his students, and often used to ease the solidity of his geometry by excursions into lighter subjects. One day, he was illustrating the connection between Mathematics and Metaphysics and religion. Z, a devout Muslim defender of his faith, rose up and said "Sir, ours is the only natural religion". The boys started thumping tables. Lecturer "Z, you are perfectly right ." more thumping "but ours is a Super-natural religion". Thumping to the breaking-point of desks. A candidate was being interviewed by the Services Coipiission. Commissioner : You say, you are a native of Madura, but how is it that you have put down Vizag. as the place of your birth". Candidate : "Well, sir, that was a matter in which my parents did not happen to consult me". The same candidate was asked: "What kind of cotton is imported into India". "That kind of cotton which is not grown in India" Needless to say, the canditate is now one of rhc members of the "steel frame". Selected Essays ]9'i Everybody considers the examiner as a merciless slaughter of the innocents, of course, until he becomes one himself. Nobody except the examiner knows that his commodity is 90 per cent bone and 10 per cent flesh. Sometimes he comes across certain ludicrous matter which is neither bone nor flesh. Here are a few samples : "A horizontal cylinder engine is better than a vertical cylinder engine because it is easier to lie down than to stand up". "An Iso-thermal expansion is an expansion which takes place under Iso-thermal conditions", "A Queen-post truss is the counter part of a King-post truss" "Automobile is so called because it works on the otto-cycle and uses mobiloil". Not very long ago, and not very far away, a certain student ran out of stock, or rather had no stock at all, during an examination. He did not want to be conspicuous by leading the exodus out of the hall. Neither did he attempt at enlightening the examiner on politics or similar subjects other than that of the examination. On previous occassions, he had bitten off all his finger nails, and counted the rivets on the roof beams. He made- full use of the water-boy to the maximum limit of his stomach. The atmosphere of the hall which was surcharged with Mathematics induced a brain-wave and raised suddenly doubts in his mind as to the absolute value of that dubious symbol 'pi'. Off he started dividing 22 by 7 to four full pages and, at the end of it, he was not certain whether the value was after all so very indeterminate. It is hoped he will continue his labours t the next opportunity. I know that some of the readers, by this time, have started thinking out their answers for the next ordeal in March. And, to save my skin, I have consulted my lawyer and he issues the following notice: 124 Survey School to Tech. Temple " Whereas, I am given to understand by my client who has published or caused to be published a series of yarns, which it has been his privilege to come across, and whereas, mv client reserves to himself the "copy right" of the here-in-before-menti- oned articles, be it hereby known to all whom it may concern, that anybody who answers to the description of an examinee who copies, or attempts to copy, or makes colourable imitations, wilfuly or otherwise, of the above said remarks, will be liable to pay damages and will be awarded a sentence of "marks" not exceeding "Zero" for each offence, and he will be put in a class denominated by the- sixth and twelfth letters of the English alphabet with the interposition of the first and third vowels in between them" "An Electrical Flame Producer" P.S. RiK). B.A.. A.M.I.Kh... 1)11'.. U.S.. M.KS. MiUfh '37 This Specification describes a portable mains operated electrical flame producer where by an electric arc may be struck and converted into an elongated flame, so that it may be used in lieu of matches for lighting fires, lamps, cigars, cigarettes, etc. or for melting small quantities of metal of low fusing point, sealing wax, solder, etc. The device comprises a pair of electrodes 6 and 7, adapted to be separated to strike an arc there-between, and an electro- magnet 23 arranged with its pole pieces f and f, one on either side of the axis of the electrodes at their point of separation, and adapted to be energised on or just after striking of the arc The electrodes 6 and 7 may be separated to strike the arc by electro-magnetic means comprising an armature 27 attached to the electrode 6, and associated with a solenoid 24 energised from a suitable current supply to move the electrode against a spring 20. The solenoid 24 serves also to energise the flame-deflecting electro-magnet 23 and is energised by the current passing between the electrodes 6 and 7. The circuit is closed by a press button switch so that the arc-flame persists only whilst the switch is held closed, releasing of the pressure of the thumb, the flame becomes extinguished (1st May 1936). The device is simple in construction and Owing to the very low power consumption is very economical. Using current at the rate of 4 as. per unit, the device can be used to light a kerosene lamp, for example, at a cost of 1/1,350 of a pie and compared with the use of matches at the rate of 1/4 anna per box of 40 match sticks, the use of the device is 100 times cheaper than a match. Moreover, owing to the low consumption of current, tnere is no danger of blowing fuses or affecting the voltage of supply. I'jlj SniM'V S< IK,)I lo IVcli l'cui| >lc These Electric fla.me shooters will be extremely useful in kin hens, drawing rooms, offices,'etc., where a portable flame unaUccled by fan or breeze is essential. A patent has been granted by the patent office in U.S.A.. lor the novelty of the invention. (Patent No. 2.065,025 dated 22nd December 1936) My Impression of Japan (The following extracts from two letters received by a well-wisher of the College Magazine have been sent to us for publication). March '37 Near Singapore, November 20, 1934 Respected Sir, As I wrote to you, I left in August last on a tour to Japan and am now on my way back to India. It was very difficult to inspect the cotton mills in Japan, but the introductions I carried gave me some exceptional opportunities and the tour on the whole has been a very profitable one and well worth the expense. I am writing a letter on my impressions on the cotton industry in Japan and am enclosing a copy to you, which will give you an idea. I have seen Europe and have now seen Japan and I can tell you that there is nothing for us to learn in the West. The Japanese people are like us in many ways, like the South Indians and, although they have imitated the West in point of industries, military, etc., they have not given up their national traditions. That shows that we also should be able to do the same thing. There is practically no industry to-day in which Japan is not defying the whole world and Japan has no special facilities, which are not to be found elsewhere. The only thing that Japan has got, which we have not got and Europe has in lesser degree, is their supreme patriotism, their sense of duty and their hard work. Patriotism is above anything else. Religion has a secondary place. It is the call of the country which has induced even the humblest worker to rise and to work hard to improve the exports and to save the country. Take for instance the rice industry. Until a few years ago, Japan was importing rice and to-day she is exporting, in spite of the fact that their population is more and consumption is more. Our Tanjore mirasdars are trying and weeping to stop the Japanese rice. Will they think a while and see how Japan is able to produce more, although their land is only 128 Survey School to Tech. Temple 15% of the total area, fit for agriculture? How many of our mirasdars are working hard, trying to find out how they can increase their production by intensive cultivation? Will they now at least pay a visit to Japan and study their methods? Another instance is the leather trade. Japan has no leather at all. She buys raw hides from India or imports finished leather from Germany and yet the leather goods are so cheap and beautiful and cost only half of what they do in India and are of better quality. The reason is this. The Japanese business men want-only small profits and great out-turn. 10% is all they want and they are satisfied with nothing in depression, if only they can keep their factory going; and they think and find out new ways of manufacture. You will wonder at the value of the leather goods available in Japan. I can give many instances, but I will stop. All that we have now to do is that we must send some of our young men to Japan for study and training. Facilities for study are plenty and also for training. A tour in Japan involving 4 months has cost me Rs. 2,000 but I travelled a lot and it can be managed within Rs. 1,500 and this is well worth for anybody. I saw also technical colleges and institutions. Some North Indian students are already studying there. The difficulty is language and the best thing would be to send our young boys after Matric and keep them in Japan for 6-7 years, so that they can spend the first few months to pick up the language- conversational-4 years for some course and 2 years for training. The fees in the colleges are very low and cost of living for a student will be below Rs. 40 at the present rate of exchange. In subjects like Textile, Electrical Engineering, etc., the teachers follow English books and therefore conversational Japanese is sufficient, which can be picked up in a year at the most. There is absolutely no fear for anybody in Japan. The people are so good and thieving is unknown. The standard of their life is far higher than even the English. The Indian residents in Japan are going to put up a decent Indian lodge for Indian students. There is already one, but rather Selected Unsays 129^ too small. When that is ready, there will be perfect safety for young boys. I saw many cottage industries like Hosiery, Fountain-Pen making. Celluloid-work, rubber balls and shoe- making etc. They involve very small capitals from Rs. 500 to 5,000 and are quite suitable for our unemployed graduate, but how many will have the enterprise to go and learn? Yours respectfully The Student Engineer and his Future T.R. Gancsan E2 Class November '37 The recent utterances of some notable personages here in India and elsewhere, have put the student of Engineering into a thoughtful mood. Dr. A. Lakshmanaswamy Mudaliar, Principal of the Madras Medical College, delivering the recent convocation address of the Madras University, reminded the graduates in engineering about their talents and originality, and laid the necessary stress on the greatness of ancient India. " India is a country which can be proud of its ancient architectures, engineering skill; and the wonders of the Kntab Minar, the Pillars of Asoka, the Madura Temple and the Taj Mahal prove conclusively that the great marvels of engineering skill are by no means new to this country". Major Howard, in his address to the engineers, indulged in a little prophecy as to the engineer's future place in the civilised world. He said 'There are indications that, given an improved education and training both during and after college, the engineer will be the future leader of society". The Premier of Madras advised the graduates to undertake jobs with oppurtunities full of services to one's country and to one-self, instead of merely computing their education in terms of rupees, annas and pies. Another personage of no less public importance, in his address to the Madras University Union on "Education, in the East and West", asked the audience what was the purpose of education. "Is it to make a man successful in life or useful to society?" These showerings of sayings, counsels, and advice are timely to the hesitating students of to-day. The present plight of the students is best described by couplet of Tennyson Selected Essays 131^ "The child crying in the night, The child crying for the light" Then will not the hope of dawn far behind the horizon, awaken the student to think and act accordingly ? The Doctor's glorious picture of the past is as important as the Major's prophecy of the future. Yet one ought not to be drowned in the glorious past, nor obsessed by the brilliant future of the Engineer-Administrator as painted by the able Major. Let us have our inspirations from our ancient monumental. engi- neering skill and let it be kept burning in the altar of service by the hope and ambition of the engineer as the future administrator of State and Society. While we recognise "the pouring opportunities which will open a- wide field for showering the engineers' talent and originality," we cannot give our consent to the war solution of the Major. The Major has been annealed and* moulded in the Great-War days and we should remember we were babies then. The world has seen many changes in the last two decades and it is the privilege of us to to give a correct solution of "War" in the future state administerd by the engineers. We are bold to prophecy that in our (Engineer's) State there shall be no such thing as.war. Order and Peace shall reign the universe of ours. Now what is the duty of the Engineers to-day? With a glorious past in the background and a brilliant future as the goal before, what are the Indian Engineers going to do ? They realise that "there are few countries with greater possibilities of development than India and yet comparatively little progress has so far been made." They are proud that "harnessing the forces of nature for the material good of mankind will be their chief concern" and they are confident of controlling the natures forces such as flood and famine "the twin dangers that have come like a bolt from the blue on the poor unsophisticated rustic population" and' of diverting them into useful channels to the great benefit of their country. "Responsibility is, to the strong, a stimulus, and to the weak, it is a palsy" wrote Lloyd George in his War Memoirs. We, the 132 Survey School to Tech. Temple student engineers, derive a- stimulus on realising our responsi- bility (from our Doctor's address, Major's hopes and the Premier's advice) and that is. because we are strong enough to feel our shoulders equal to the occassionmay we feel well- equipped to carry out our responsibilities by our present training and education. And yet it will remain a problem till there is one young genius amongst us, to find the solution for providing work and food for all our countrymen. And it will be of no wonder, if that young genius, that intellectual giant, is an engineer. But who ever it be, we, the engineers shall take a vow at this minute to cany out the plan when the solution is found out and exposed to society. Engineers ! Forget not that you are torch-beares of society ! Arise, Awake, and stop not till the goal is reached. Survey Camp 1938 at Pallavaram P.S. Krishnaswamy EsC April'38 On the evening of 4th January, after a good Christmas vacation, I found myself under canvas. My friends and classmates had also arrived. Everyo.ie seemed so jolly because the year was only just born. Loud greetings of joy were exchanged between some, and bitter recriminations between others. "What is the d idea of having this d survey camp at this time of the year" remarked a wounded F.E. Soldier. Another doubted whether it would ever be possible for any one to open a book during the survey camp. "I hate this system" cried out a third. It was not a small personality who welcomed us on the morning of the first day. He is himself a great surveyor, Major and Doctor. He has gained universal repute for discovering a method for determining the height of a hemispherical dome and he has also unearthed a G.T.S. station at St. Thomas Mount. He is our Principal. After urging us to do sincere and hard work in the field, he inquired about our personal comforts in the camp and promised to see to every convenience that could possibly be given. But he could not sanction some exorbitant demands. For instance, some wanted all the famous Dietz lanterns, about 36 in number, to be replaced by high candle-powered petromax lamps. A few, assuming it infra dig to "shave one self," pleaded for a shaving saloon to be opened. "Why not a ping-pong table" asked Mr... from the corner. In the midst of these pleadings, in a feeble nasal voice Arba asked whether the repaired clock of the college tower could not be installed at Pallavaram. Mr. M. who was by us turned to him. "Do you possess a wrist watch?" "Yes, Sir, but so many don't have." "That does not matter" replied Mr. M. "meet me at half past six pip emma. I shall give you a gong and a mallet: Fasten the gong to an iron post. From tomorrow onwards you strike the 134 Survey School to Tech. Temple gong at 5.15 and 6.15 ack emma, 2.15 pip emma and as a matter of fact, at all times when I require you to do so. Follow?". Poor Arba nearly fainted for the first time. Jebo shapat! with what vigour did Arba perform his duties?. For the first week, he was so enthusiastic that the gong was sounded at least one hour before the scheduled time. What rhythm he put into his strokes and for what length of time did he strike? On one occasion in his earnest desire to discharge his duties sincerely, Arba did without his morning tiffin. At work, that day, he nearly fainted for the second time. So much for him. His experience was not in vain, however. Hi is a member of Labour Union and is now busy editing a hand book for gong-strikers and bell-ringers. It produced not a little wrath in the entire camp when the cooly sergeant post was filled by direct nomination. We anticipated an election and two candidates vigorously canvassed for votes. When Omchander was appointed to fill the post, invectives in abundance were hurled against this innocent individual and one even heard murmurs of violence. We students never appreciated his work. He allotted to some squads lean, lanky, underfed coolies, to some others short, slow-moving ones and to others still, hard-working strong pailvans. The coolies, one and all, however, had a different,story to tell. They acclaimed him as an easy and kind master. Never did we hear him addressing a cooly in an authoritative tone. He used to approach a cooly in the most affectionate way and say to him, "will it suit your convenience to go to Hill 96?" "Sir, unbearable pain in my feet" the cunning cooly would reply. "All right," says the cooly sergeant, "go to Cowl which is infinitely nearer." Thus the camp began and continued peacefully for a weekone day like another. Rise at 5.15 on hearing Arba's bell. Fall in at 6.15 when the whistle would be heard. Place the instruments on the head of the coolies whom Omchandar was generous enough to give. Walk slowlv to the work spot. Work a part of the time, sing for some time and complain about the treacherous hill climbing for the rest of the time. Return speedily ScU' iU- cl l-'.ss;iv> |.'{."> from the work spot and then to bed to be rarely disturbed except by the occasional braying of the Pallavaram stray donkeys. On the eve of the departure of our L.S. friends, we arranged a camp fire. There were a great number of guests present from the neighbouring houses. It was our intention originally to repeat the performance in the immediate presence of our Principal and Professors at some later date; but the first performance itself was so well doneit was not a -mere rehearsalthat we felt we could not make it more thrilling and so abandoned the idea of staging it again. On the night of 14th January, the U.S.I, students joined us. With their, coming a keen interest in games developed. The courts had to be doubled and trebled in size so that greater numbers could participate. Matches were arranged between "Eggs & Vegs". Pots containing drinking water kept outside tents were always in danger. Owners were duly notified that no demand for replacement would be entertained. Projecting pegs, also kept outside tents, had to be buried to avoid accidents. Despite this precaution the doctor was called in to attend to major injuries. Thus we worked and played till a fine holiday afternoon. Everyone seemed to be very jolly. Suddenly a raucous tone rent the atmosphere. "Tun Shun!Guard of HonourPresent arms" and in trooped a mighty Maharaj. A striking personality. The ruler of a small estate in Tuticorin. His Highness (he was so, we called him Excellency and he considered himself to be his Majesty) was led to his seat and formally declared the sports "open". Yes! It was a sports day for the coolies. Every item in the sports programme produced great interest amongst the spectators. The "obstacle race" over model room tables and below tents was finished in record time. The "Javelin throw" had to be stopped in the middle as there were not enough javelins (ranging-rods) to replace breakages. Two octogenarians (probably) found Mother Earth very hard when their heads made contact with her. 136 Survey School to Tech. Temple The prize distribution ceremony was gorgeous. The Maharaja's speech was similar to King Arthur's address to the Knights of the Round Table. It was extremely difficult for the judges to select the winner in each event. There was always a tienot between two, not amongst three, but amongst allnot in one race, not in two, but in all. Hence the prize money (made up by subscription from the staff and students attending the camp) had to be divided amongst them all The greatest achievement, however, during the survey camp was a brilliant concert engineered by Halex on the night prior to our departure. Many of our friends in College graced the occasion with their presence. Palayam's Indian dance was thrilling. Hako in the robes of the "mesmerist" dumbfounded the audience. M.A., B.A. imitated the poet, the philosopher and the orator. The "artist" staged by R.K. & R. was a great success. And sweet music at intervals helped to rid us of stratagems and treasons. The following evening was our last in the camp. At 8 p.m. the College bus arrived to take us back. The familiar barracks were left behind. Tears trickled from our eyes. Mosque hill was seen for some time and that too went out of view as the bus rounded a corner. "Farewell, Oh! Merry Camp". Electric Lock (Designed by G.V. Ramana Rao, Es Student and exhibited in our Third Engineering Exhibition.) -j March *S9 This is a type of intelligent lock. There are nine push buttons outside the lock. The lock opens when a particular combination of three buttons is pressed, while any other combination results in the ringing of an alarm bell. The main principle is that the circuit of the electro- magnet, which withdraws the lock bolt, is completed and the bolt withdraws only when the particular buttons are pressed together. Explanation of Diagrams Fig. 1 shows the front elevation and section along AA full size of the lock. <b) is a thin metal plate with nine holes drilled in it suitably for the corresponding pins (p). The holes are of such a size that the pins attached to the buttons move freely in them and, at the same time, make electrical contact between the plate and the pins, (c) is made of non- conducting material with nine contact pins fixed into it opposite to the push buttons as shown in detail in fig. 2. Fig. 2 shows the plank (c) separately showing the positions of the pins, the slits that carry Outside the wires soldered to the pins, and the three pins (each marked with a cross PX], PX 2 , PX 3 ), with which, when contact is made, the lock will open. The wires tl, t2, t3 shown in fig. 1 belong to these three pins. Fig. 3 gives the electrical circuit, the bolt arrangement and the switches. Sj is the solenoid which withdraws the bolt against the action of spring (s) which pushes home the bolt to close the lock. U is an iron plate bent to a U shape and covering the solenoid to increase the magnetic force. Solenoid S 2 closes the contacts at Ci and solenoid S s closes the contacts at C 2 - The solenoid S 4 breaks the contact at C 2 . Working Referring to Fig. 3 it will be seen, that when the correct three push buttons PX lt PX,, PX 3 are press, the contacts C! and C 2 are closed by the solenoids S 2 and S s and as the circuit of the solenoid S] gets completed through Cj and C 2 the lock bolt is' withdrawn and the lock is opened. When any of the other buttons marked B, is pressed the bell circuit gets completed and rings the alarm; at the same time, since the circuit of S 4 gets completed, the circuit of Si gets broken at C 2 and the solenoid Sj cannot be energised to withdraw the bolt for opening lock. Advantages 1. The lock is burglar-proof as the alarm rings, whenever anyone tries to open it without knowing the clue. 2. If anyone happens to find out the combination of buttons for opening the lock, the positions of the contact pins (PXj, PX 2 , PXj) can easily be changed so that the lock may be made safe again. 3. When fixed to a door* it also serves the purpose of a door-45ell. Note; By having interlocking arrangements between the three buttons, the lock can be made to open when the buttons are pressed in a particular order, thereby increasing the safety. Increasing the number of push buttons gives greater protection. The Automatic Dosai Machine Designed and made by Hassan Marikar ElM, N.V. Shenoy ElE, Bheta James ElE March '39 After its display in our College Exhibition and the recent Congress Exhibition, the Dosai Machine has become so well- known that it needs hardly any explanation. As a matter of fact, some of the visitors (mostly of the fair sex) knew the various details of the machine so well that they often relieved the demonstrators of their task of explaining its working to the crowds surrounding it. However, for the benefit of those who would like to read about it, the following brief description is given. The main part of the machine is the rotating turn-tablean iron disc 30" in diameterrevolving at about 1 r.p.m. The drive for this is taken from a 1/8 h.p. 1600 r.p.m. electric motor through a double- worm gear.A small charcoal fire box is fixed to the underside of the disc and the plate is well- oiled by an oil container provided with a brush. The brush is kept pressed against the rotating disc by a cam on the main spindle, just as the hot spot passes underneath it, thus eliminating wastage of oil. The liquid flour paste for Dosai, is contained in a can supported over the turn table. The can is provided with a cone stopper at the bottom. When the oven comes right under the cam, a stud fixed to the turn-table trips a mercury switch and closes the circuit of an electro- magnet This raises the cone stopper and the flour paste flows down and evenly spreads itself round into a "Dosai"the size of which can be adjusted by raising or lowering the can. The disc rotates a little further and stops for about a minute- and-a-half to alow the Dosai to bake. It then starts again, and as it rotates the 'dosai' slides over a flag- shapped mining plate that comes in the way. Thus the Dosai stays on the mining plate while Selected Essays 141 the turti table still rotates and-just when the hot part has come over to the other sidethe plate turns through 180 and the other side of the Dosai is baked over the oven. The table then stops for about 45 sec, When it starts, again, an outside arm comes over the Dosai and sweeps it off the disc on to a tray. The cycle of operations repeats, vi?., oiling, pouring, baking, reversing, baking ana removing. The stopping and starting of the disc are automatic. A timed cam raises and lowers the gear wheel on the centre spindle and thus disengages and engages it from the main drive at the proper intervals. An electric counter in front of the machine indicates the number of Dosais made. So the cook jealous of the machine cannot rob you of your Dosais! The following extract from "The Indian Express" of December 28, 1938 will give an idea of the public opinion about this machine: "No less than two Ministers of Madras Government, and one member of the Indian Civil Service have partaken of the 'dosais' prepared on the Automatic Dosai Apparatus devised v by the inventive genius of the students of the Engineering College at Guindy. On Christmas day, Dr. T.S.S. Rajah witnessed this novel mode of making Dosais and tasted one of the products, earlier experimenters being Dr. P. Subborayan and Mr. S.V. Ramamurthy. Opinion, however, is understood to be sharply divided as to the merits of this invention among the lay visitors". Since this report, more Ministers and other distinguished visitors like Sir. C.V. Raman have seen the machine. Innumerable interesting suggestions have been received especially from the lady visitors. And when the reader knows that, of the three thousand and odd Dosais made so far, not one did remain in the tray for morf than a few seconds, he may best draw his own conclusion as to the quality of the Dosais prepared in the Automatic Dosai Machine. Editorial V. Lakshminarayanan, B.E. March '40 Centenary Celebrations! Colleges in Madras, the Christian, the Medical, and the Presidency have all observed their Centenary celebrations. Our College is older than the other institutions by about half-a-century, and is probably the oldest educational (British) institution in India. Here are the dates:- Survey School - First established in 1794 Named Civil Engineering School in 1858 Named Civil Engineering College in 1859 First B C.E., came out in 1864 Affiliated to Madras University in 1877 Named College of Engineering (consequent on the 1887 inclusion of Mechanical Engineering) in First B.E. came out in 1894 Shifted to Guindy in 1920 It is high time we seriously set about thinking of celebrating, say, the 1 r>Oth anniversary which falls in 1944.1 daresay, we can depend upon the enthusiastic support of all the present and the old boys of our College. First Indian Lady Engineer! We heartily congratulate Miss Oosha Devakaran Desai for joining the Poona Engineering College. She has the unique honor of being the first lady in India to join.an Engineering institution. Last year, in our College, an eminent engineer asked why women had not yet joined our College? And we responded, why not? Certainly, the rules do not prevent any lady candidate from applying for admission: and she is sure of getting selected as she will belong to the hitherto unrepresented "Minority Community"and perhaps may get a good "Weightage" in her favour. We hope Madras will not lag behind Poona. Selected Essays 143 In other countries, ladies have taken to the Engineering profession. For example, there are a large number of women architects: and probably they are better fitted to design our houses, as they are more aware of the needs of a home, have a better intuition and a finer aesthetic sense to create the "home beautiful"apart from running it. We hear there are quite a number of ladies employed as "Tracers" and "Draughtsmen"we beg your pardon! Is it "Draughts-women"? In our own benighted land, even lady typists are rare to find: why, even on the stage, men with a shaven beard have to impersonate feminine characters!! The prospect of having lady students is pleasant indeed: it would add colour certainly to the dry khaki of the Civils, or the devilish blue of the Mechanicals. And, oh! what a sight would it be on, say, Thursday afternoons at the Mass Drill! It has been observed in co-educational schools that boys work harder lest they should be beaten by the so-called "weaker sex". If there is any truth in this, such an incentive to harder work is to be welcomed in our own College. But then, a section of our gallant boys may argue that it is not chivalrous to beat the gentler sex. This argument will not hold any water hereafter as modern college girls do not want "chivalry"- if we have to believe the Presidency College girls who said so the other day. They want to shed their "inferiority complex". September Examinations? The Summer vacation means three perspiring months of idleness. Students of other colleges who unfortunately get "ploughed" in their University Examinations may utilise the latter part of the vacation, at least, for their study. But that chance is denied to our students. It will be advantageous if September examinations are held in Engineering too. The failed F.E. in E II class has to ride two horses, as it were, by studying simultaneously both for the F.E. and the College Sessional Examination-and naturally does both in an unsatisfactory manner.If September examinations are held, he can work hard in the first term for F.E; and can make up his class-work efficiently in the course of the year. "Eves in Engineering" Mrs. A. Lalitha, Mrs. Leela George March '41 In response to the kind invitation of the Editor, we are recording our impressions of one year's stay in this College, and why we chose to study Engineering. When last year, he wrote urging women to take to Engineering, probably he was not quite so serious, and struck only a light-hearted note; But we decided to take it up as a challenge, as an experiment, and as an experience to lead our.sisters We are in the first place bound to thank the Principal, Dr. Chakko, but for whose boldness, may we say in this conservative world, sympathy and far-sighted policy, we would not have been here. We must also thank him for his continued interest in lis, so much as to write to the Government for a separate women's block in the hostel. This is the first and foremost necessity for lady students in a residential College with such a strenuous course. May we suggest that even if it takes some time for the buildings to come up, a small portion of the blocks may be reserved for us with all amenities provided in a self-contained manner. First, let us examine the problem of why women should not be shut out of the Engineering world. We form nearly half the population of the world, and can this half, called the better-half by the other half, be denied the knowledge of a subject which is primarily responsible for the present day civilisationthis machine age when the machine does everything for our production, maintenance and destructiondoing the work of the Trinityand has become the one and only Power? During our life, we are either at peace or at waractually in, or preparing for the same. The greatest occupation, (is it wrong to call it profession?) in the world is house-keeping. The majority of women-kind and a lrrge number of men also are employed in this "Domestic" business making it the largest profession. Women do all the drudgery working not less than sixteen hours a day. Men have invented a number of machines, and labour- Selected Essays 145 saving devices to relieve us from manual labour. We are constantly using them; the coffee-grinder, the sewing-machine and the hand-pump . the electric lights, fans, stoves, heaters and a host of mechanical and electrical gadgetsand above all the radiothe women's own possession. If these everyday machines go wrong, we have to wait and depend upon the time and mood of our men-folk to put them in order. During the morning, they are too busy with their news-paper; during day time, they run away to dance before their bosses and, in the evening, the )ridge-table or the tennis court engages them. So these simple repairs are put off for the Sunday; but, then, the cricket match comes and our men run away to roast themselves in the hot sun, eating groundnuts, to watch somebody else hurl a ball or chase it or get stumped. A large amount of time and worry' can be saved if only we are given the rudiments of the mechanical science. Take the case of house-building. The house is essentially for the woman who keeps it: and not for the man who stays out most of the day, and sleeps off most of the time he stay in. How can he be expected to know the needs of a well-planned house? You can see the houses built by the most experienced engineer, and find how he has bungled in the most elementary things. If a house is to be well-designed, and correctly built, the job must be done by a woman. Actually, it is the woman who builds. Every clod of earth from the foundations and every basket of jelly for the concrete is carried by the woman. She carries the bricks and mortar from the foundation up to the highest storey on the ricketiest of scaffoldings. In fact.lhe whole weight of the house she carries on her head. But the stronger sex does the maistri's job driving the women labourers, and does the easier job of laying the bricks. Even in other branches of engineering, e.g. quarrying, road-making or dam buildingthe woman has been made to do forced labour, and the male of the species simply watches on. If the woman can contribute physically towards the building up of structures, she can do the planning and designing equally W :11if not better. |4(i Survey School to Tech. Temple During war time, the service of women in Engineering, Industry, National Defence and, even in the Front, is indispensable and has been well-utilised especially in the present war. When men go away to fight the battles in sea, land or air, we remain behind to look to the production of not only food but also ammunition. The present war has brought the fight to our own doorsand when our men are up in the air keeping back the enemy, he comes under cover of darkness and bombs our homes and aims at all important object like the Power House, Water-works, and Factories and does not spare hospitals, churches or schools. It is a war of the machines and the latter have to be produced by the stay-at-homes, viz. women. How can we produce machines if we do not know the science of engineering? Large number of women have been recruited for driving motor vehicles and piloting aero-planes. In peace time, we are only typing automatons, living components in the Telephone exchange, showcase mannequins or dancing marionettes. But the war has compelled men to give us more urgent and important places in handling machinery. Gifted as we are with equally-sized brainscan we not learn about the principles of machinery and electricity and take our place as engineers in-charge? We may be excused for taking so much space to stress the importance of the' association of women- in the Engineering profession both in peace and in war time. wnen we joined this College, after overcoming the initial excitement which accompanies all new ventures, we felt ourselves quite at home. Lectures are not very different from the Arts Collegesso also the Chemistry and Physics Laboratories. The Drawing classes did not scare usin fact they were to our taste. We have always had better attraction than men towards all forms of artdrawing, painting, handiworks, and even modelling. Drawings come quite naturally to ushave we not drawn the free hand designs in our door-steps with "Kolams" from times immemorial? Workshop classescarpentryhave not taxed us to any great extent. A couple of hours exercising our muscles with Sck'i led Kssays _ _ _ ^ _ _ - the plane and the chisel tones us up and we feel fresher and fitter. Anyway, we are not going to become carpenters or blacksmiths and we have sufficient strength to learn the principles of woodwork and metalwork. The machine shop will give us better advantagesas we can exercise superior patience, skill and finish in machinery operationswhat we lack in physical effon, we can compensate by delicate control and precision workmanship. We are eagerly looking forward to survey classesand we are sure of pulling chains with equal vigour as the boys, and we can certainly promise to show more accurate work with the levelling instrument or theodolite. We are not afraid of a few hours in the sun and work out-of-doors. Our first year's stay is Hearing completion and we can confidently say that we have easily taken to the science of Engineering, and the physical and mental demands of the course are well within our ability. The question may be askedwhat guarantee of employment for us is there? Our answer is that Engineering has to be studied not only from the professional point of view, but also as a science and .branch of knowledgepure and simple. We are confident, given the opportunity, of being as successful as we have been in the teaching or medical profession. Anyway let us not create a problem before it has actually arisen. When we finish the course and graduate ourselves as Bachelors of Engineeringwell, we will tackle the problem of job-hunting in the way it deserves. May we appeal to all our sisters to follow the lead, which has been our luck and fortune to have taken on ourselves. These are times of national emergency. Old barriers are breaking down and the world is on the brink of diving into a new order. Can half the population* of the world afford to be ignorant of a science and profession responsible for the creation and maintenance of the present-day civilisation? It is only when women take their due and honoured place along with men in the Engineering profession, that the country can march with clasped hands towards permanent national reconstruction and regeneration. We hope that the experiment we are making will not be in vain, and we appeal to all sisters to join this College without any hesitation. Mahatma Gandhi's Death S.S. Krishnaswumy Iyengar March '48 The end of January 1948 brought us the sudden and sorrowful news of the death of Mahatma Gandhi, who was assasinated under the most tragic circumstances at Delhi on the 30th January 1948 at 5-12 p.m., while he was on his way to the Prayer Meeting. He was in our midst a Buddha and a Jesus. In his death, the whole world was shocked and disturbed beyond measure. Millions throughout the world offered prayers and fasted on hearing the news. His body was cremated on the banks of the river Jumna at Kajghat. Over a million people including His Excellency, the Earl Mountbatten, India's Governor-General, the Countess Mountbatten, Governors, Premiers and Ministers of the various provinces attended the funeral to pay their last homage to the "Father of the Nation". It was only a few days prior to his death that the Mahatma escaped an equally dastardly attack on his life during a prayer meeting. Even at that time, Gandhiji remained calm and appealed to the people to treat the suspect with compassion and declared that his own life was in fthe hands of God and therefore he had no fear. Condolence meetings were held everywhere and messages of sympathy were received from all parts of the Globe by the Indian leaders on behalf of their people, paying unexcelled tributes to the greatness of the Mahatma. In the world history so far known, such large-scale mourning and offering of tributes from parts of the Globe to any one leader of a country, were unheard of. Even his political opponents in this country and elsewhere were grieved at his death beyond measure. The whole country and many parts of the world were plunged in deep mourning on Gandhiji's death for 13 days and still continue to mourn his death. On the 12th February 1948, the last rites were performed for Mahatma Gandhi when his ashes, sent to different places by prior arrangement, were consigned to the waters of the Holy Rivers and Seas throughout this country, and mammoth meetings were held to offer prayers to the apostle of Truth and Non-Violence, leader and a great soldier for freedom. Selected Kssays 149 It is up to us as worthy sons and daughters of this sacred land of ours to follow the path of duty he has so clearly chalked out for us and to prove to the whole world in no unmistakable terms that the real weapons that we handle to succeed ultimately are Truth and Non-Violence. May God give this land of ours real peace as surely as He has been pleased to take back the great soul to His side! From Here and There P.K. Chockalingam March '57 Mathematics, as seen by a poet: The Geometry of your face. The Algebra of your eyes with their known and unknowns, The Calculus of your personality with their Constants and Variables, The Radii of your charms that encircle me, your very locus The Force of your smiles, that produced becomes The Perpendicular Bisector of my heart And leaves me entangled in The Graph you have plotted around me. An easy way of remembering the value of 'Pi' correct to its 13th decimal Pi is equal to 3.1415926535897 (!) Now here is a sentence to be memorised. Count the number of letters LJ each word of the following sentence and write the numbers side by side in order (from left" to right and you get the value.) " How I wish I could re-collect of circle round. The exact relation Archjmede unwound ". Easy multiplication by factors of 9 (!) 987654321 x 09 is equal to 08888888889 987654321 x 18 is equal to 17777777778 987654321 x 2 7 is equal to 26666666667 987654321 x 36 is equal to 80000000001 Note :- No originality is claimed lor these by the Contributor. So, who can deny " Mathematics is the most fascinating subject of" all times!" Humour in Class-room and ^ Elsewhere A. Srinivasan March '62 A very common complaint of a student is that lecture classes are not lively. But a lot of things that happen in the class-room, provide ample scope for merry laughter outside. The class-room need not be surcharged with high seriousness and sepulchral gravity if the students and the lecturer have any sense of humour. There is many a joke that can be got from the innocent answers of ignorant students or the ingenious interpretations of students with a propensity for mischief. Sometimes, the lecturer has to have a ready wit and resourcefulness to get out of a tight corner, in which he may be placed by some of his waggish disciples. This reminds me of an incident in which a certain Professor X, noticed, on his entry' into the class-room, that on the black-board was written "Mr. X is a donkey". This did not upset him but, instead, with a beaming smile on his face, he took a piece of chalk and simply added the words "driver". Needless to say that the students had nothing but admiration for Professor X, after that incident. But what would that resourceful Professor X have done in the following case, I confess I do not know. A certain Professor Y, as soon as he entered the lecture class, was handed a note informing him of the tragic death of one of their class-mates and with a request that as a mark of respect to the deceased, they may be permitted to stand silent for 5 minutes. The Professor sympathised with them and acceded to their request. Then there was silence for 5 minutes-quite an extraordinary thing to happen! Lo! At the end of that period, came one peal of wails, evidently the genuine expression of uncontrollable grief. As if in response to this whole-hearted demonstration, there walked into the class-room the figure of the student on whose behalf the silence and then the vociferous tribute was paid, and who had only availed himself of the usual "French Leave" of two weeks |r,i> Survey School to lech. Temple after the two weeks of mid-term holidays. The cry of bitter grief now changed into ont scream of shudder, and the puzzled Professor was given the explanation that the figure that walked in was a spectre, as it was sans moustache which the corporeal form of the presumed-to-be-dead-student proudly possessed. I am not aware of the subsequent events, but I surmise that the Professor would have lectured to the apparition as well. While boys generally triumph in the battle of wit, some teachers have a knack for turning tables on their wily opponents. A rather corpulent Professor had been lecturing and, as he left the room, he found that one of the students had dropped into his hat a picutre of a fat swine. He said nothing, but the next day when he stood before the class, he prefaced his lecture with the remark: "Gentlemen, I have to thank one of you for placing his card in my' hat yesterday. He was too modest to leave his name, but the portrait is excellent". Complete silence prevailed.as the boys, found that they had caught a Tartar. There is yet another incident in which the Professor proved to be too wily for the youngsters. A Professor wanted his classes to assemble in a particular hall, and so wrote on the black-board : "Professor..,will meet his classes in...Hall". When he stepped into the class-room the next day, he was greeted by the students with laughter. Perplexed by this unusual form of greeting, he turned towards the blackboard and found that the letter "C" of the word classes was missing. Needless to say, there was a further furore on his discovery. But the undismayed pedagogue gave the youngsters the cold dip by taking the duster and rubbing off the " 1 " also in that notorious word. Grammar classes are usually very unpopular and the type of esteem which the students have for the Grammar teacher can be seen from the ingenious answer to the question of parsing a word "Teacher", occurring in a sentence. "Teacher is an immaterial noun, hopeless case, in apposition with the Head-master, subject to the whims of the Inspector and governed by the preposition D.P.I." The best mirth-provoking letter was got by a former Principal of our College, requesting him to send the writer of the Sclciinl Kssjiys I5.'i loiter an application form tor admission. The letter ran : "I the undersigned have appeared for the Intermediate Examination in Ails and Science of...University, and I expect a creditable pass, and now desire to further my studies in this very famous institution of yours, which is the mirror, Polar Star, and beacon ol all its fellow Colleges, under kind Lecturers and Professors whose vivacious intellect, drained with frequent peruse of great books, has aroused admire and wonder in many circles. So I request you to send me the application form so that I could fill it and send it to you, thus paving a corner stone for a successful career in.your College, etc.". I wonder whether the Principal "paved the corner-stone" for the boy's career! Not infrequently the examination halls also get lively, in spite of the depressing atmosphere. It was a very sultry afternoon in the hot month of March when the not-too-'easy Mathematics question papers of the B.E. Examination were, distributed to the examinees. Hardly five minutes had elapsed, when there came a full-throated call from a certain candidate: "Water Please". The invigilator near-by informed the candidate that he had sent for the water-boy. But the indomitable examinee demanded that at least Chambers' Seven Figure Tables may be supplied to him. Even that was not ready at that moment in the examination hall, and so the disappointed student, not getting any useful return for the fee paid, busied himself for the next 25 minutes by neatly scribing a big "V for Victory" and embellished it with His own design of decorations. The examiner would have had an easy time to value such a paper. But some candidates get into an eloquent mood and write things which are very original, but of course not pertaining to the question. In answer to a question "Write short notes on 'Karimarudu' and Jara Wood', an ingenious student wrote "Karimarudu was the unrivalled champion and the pride and glory of the great Andhra Desa..." Obviously, the student co-related Karimarudu with the common names of Ramudu and Krishnudu and Subrayadu, prevalent in Andhra Districts. But the notes on Jara Wood was the most original invention. "Jara Wood, the wood that is named 'not indeed' after Jarasanda of epic fame, 154 Survey School to Tech. Temple but after the famous Jara, the carpenter". I am beaten if anybody tells me when and where the famous 'Jara, the Carpenter', lived. Another no less original answer was about centrifugal pumps* which will be of special interest to Engineers. "Centrifugal pump is a pump.'It varies in diameter from 1" to 40 feet. These 40 feet diameter pumps are used in "Godavari Delta". The same candidate in answer to a question about Pelton-wheel wrote: 'Pelton Wheel is the wheel that rolls water into energy, Several Pelton wheels a*e installed at Pykhara and many more will be installed in future, for the hydro-electric development. When the world is running crazy with armaments and re-armaments, thank God, we are the most pacific nation in the world, trying to develop our hydro-electric resources". If the examiner had not been too selfish, he would have permitted this ingenious student to reappear for the examination in the succeeding years, in which case the student would have had a lot to say about the wars in general, thereby providing amusement to other examiners as well. Surpassing this in originality and brilliance is an answer by another erudite scholar who replied to the question "where is wooden flooring usually employed and why?" as follows: "Wooden flooring is used principally in Ball Rooms; Dancing, as we all know, is a very healthy exercise, and no explanation need be given why in a place where two souk fuse into one, and for them to sing in unison we require a wooden flooring". Does not this genius deserve a Double plus Alpha?! This plus Alpha reminds me of another intelligent answer to the question in a Mathematics paper: "Prove that in a Quadratic equation the imaginary roots occur in pairs". The student wrote : "when it is the law of nature that everything that exists should be in pairs.there is no wonder that the poor 'imaginary' roots also follow the established law. Just as several things cannot be given a proof, I regret this also cannot be proved on paper". Let me now take you to a poetry Class. The boys were given the task of writing four lines of dramatic Poetry. One boy wrote: Selected Essays 1 "> r > "A boy was walking down the track, The train was coming fast; The boy stepped off the railway track To let the train go past". The teacher said: "It lacks the dramatic". So the boy submitted the following: "A boy was walking down the track, The train was coming fast; The train jumped off the railway track To let the boy go past". I would request our selectors that a boy like that may be admitted in our College so that he may adorn the Poets' and Artists' Gallery of the College. From the Poetry class, let us go to the Science room, where the Science lesson was in progress. "What is the greatest change that takes place when water becomes ice?". "The Price, Sir, replied a scholar leaving the teacher confounded. Stepping into a Physiology class, one heard the teacher discoursing on the human nervous system. The point of his talk was that human limbs which seem to work automatically do not really do so. They receive messages from the brain and they simply obey. One of the boys yawned and the teacher thought he had been dozing, called him to his chair and asked him to stretch his hand to receive a cane-out. The boy would not do as he was bidden and when asked to explain, meekly said, "Please, Sir. I am expecting a message from my brain", Was the boy inattentive? It was a class of youngsters where a harassed teacher was asking the pupils to spell correctly English words. The teacher had no doubt about a particular boy's ability and told the boy, "Spell the word COFFEE, and I will give you a passing grade if you say atleast ONE letter correct". The boy after some hesitation stated, "KAUPHY". One can imagine the consternation of the poor teacher! I.")(> Suivcy School lo I irh. Temple Now, here are some more 'howlers : "Book-keeping is the art of not returning the books borrowed. Algebra is the wife of Euclid. A pacifist is one who had crossed ihe Pacific Ocean. A triangle is three straight lines bent at an angle so that two ends meet. A Black-out is a kind of out in Cricket". Mathematics for Pleasure M. Sadasivam May'69 Yes,, Mathematics also could be for pleasure. Just solve the problems to follow and see for yourself how happy .you feel-if you are successful in your solution, of course! Wish you a week of pleasure-a riddle a day of lasting pleasure! 1. Many of you are crazy about calendars; you hunt for them even 3 or 4 months afier New Year's Day. (Just as the third, year engineering students keep trying for a change of branch even in the middle of that year). See how much you know of calendars! a. How often does Christmas fall on Friday? b. Morarji Desai was born on February 29th. What are the minimum and maximum intervals between his two successive birthdays? 2. Most of you will be having watches. Just as no two doctors agree (as the saying goes), no two watches agree. Watch rate is the rate at which it gains or loses, and it is either a standing rate or travelling rate, depending upon whether the watch is stationary or not. Two watches known for their error have been wound up and set, at one and the same time. An hour later, watch A was found to have gained one minute, while watch B* lost two minutes, when compared with a standard chronometer. Next morning, when they were compared; it was seven O' watch in A and six O' watch in B, What time were the watches wound up? Assume constant, rate for the watches. 3. Many a time you are confused by your teachers in their classes. But never like this! "This is the card room," said John, showing me around his club. "These four chaps playing bridge are all people 158 Survey School to Tech. Temple you'd like to meet. Henry and George are playing against Henry and Arthur. Thomas is, the best of the four." "And which is Thomas?" "He's the chap on Thomas's left." Not too lucid a.statement, was it? I found afterwards that John uses his friends' surnames and given names indiscriminately. The four at the table were George Henry, Henry Thomas, Arthur George and Thomas Arthur. Who was Thomas Arthur's partner? 4. Some are extra-ordinarily good at numbers, like, say, "Kanakkukku oru Sakunthala". See if you are! X and Y enjoyed playing little mathematical games. X wrote down a number and asked Y to guess it. "How about a little information?" asked Y, "The number is exactly twice the product of its two digits", replied X. What was the number? 5. In the present-day pictures, is common the eternal love triangle. Here is a love-sick foursomecockroaches! The female cockroach at the Southeast corner of a square is in love with the male cockroach at the Northeast corner who, in turn, is in love with the female cockroach at the Northwest corner who, in turn, is in love with the male cockroach at the Southwest corner who, finally, is in love with the first cockroach (S E corner). At a given instant, all four cockroaches proceed on a pursuit curve directly towards their beloveds. Just what happens when they meet at the centre of the square is not our concern. Assuming that they all travel at the same constant speed, how far (in terms of the lengthof the side of the square) does each cockroach travel before this meeting occurs? Selected Essays 159 6. The other day Professor Algebra had several friends in to see his garden, of which he is justly proud. In a rather small space he had developed several new strains of tomatoes and at the same time had grown a large variety of flowers. As would be expected, every thing about Professor Algebra's garden (laid before the metric system was introduced) has an integral length in feet. The garden proper is a square surrounded by a paved walk on each side. These four walks are all of different widths (all widths of the walks and sides of the gardens proper are, as said before, an exact number of feet). There is a sun dial in the middle of the narrowest walk, the next wider walk is one foot wider, the next still another foot wider. The entire lot, gardens and walks included, is again a perfect square, with sides an exact number of feet in length. If the area of the entire square lot is 621 more square feet than the area of the square garden, how wide is the strip of walk on the side opposite the sun dial? 7. Certainly you should be able to solve this, the simplest of all. It is eleven hundred miles from Madras to Delhi along the great circle. A plane X leaves Madras for Delhi and flies, as crow flies, at 200 miles per hour. An hour later, a plane Y leaves Delhi for Madras and flies, like the other one but at a velocity of 300 miles per hour. Which is nearer to Madras, when they meet? For Solutions turn to page 176 1973 Selected Essays 161 162 Survey School to Tech. Temple 1979 164 Survey School to Tech. Temple SelectedEnayt 165 166 Survey School to tech. Temple Selected Essays 167 168 Survey School to Tech; Temple Selected Essays 169 1973 Selected Essays 171 Selected Essays 173 174 Survey School to Tech. Temple Selected Sways 175 Mathematics for Pleasure Solutions 1. a. Ours is aJulianCalendarwith Gregorian correction, with acycle of400 years in which there are 303 ordinary years of 365 days and 97 leap years of 366 days, (All century years are not leap years, unless the century number itself is divisible by 4. For example, 1900 was not a leap year, while 2000 will be) This cycle of 400 years will therefore comprise exactly 20871 weeks (of 7 days each). In other words, since Christmas fell on Wednesday in 1968, it will also fall on Wednesday in 2368, in 2768 etc. Since 400 is not divisible by 7, it is obviously impossible for 1/7 of the Christmas to fall on any given day of the weak. Hence the probability of Christmas falling on Friday is not 1/7 or 0.142857, though very near to it. b. There will be a February 29 normally once in 4 years (in 1960, 64, 68, 72, 76, 80, etc). But there will hot be a February 29 in the years 1800,1900, 2100, 2200,2300, etc. as mentioned above: Hence the minimum and maximum intervals between two successive birthdays of those who were born on February 29 will be 4 and 8 years respectively. 2. Every hour, watch A will have gained 3 minutes over watch B, and it would take 20 hours for the two watches to be exactly one hour apart (A fast on B.) During the twenty hours, A would have gained 20 minutes and B lost 40 minutes. Hence the time is 6-40 a.m. It follows that it must have been 10-40 a.m. the first day when the watches were started going. 3. The two Henrys and the two Thomases were on opposide sides. Therefore, Henry Thomas was opposed by Thomas Arthur tected Essays \77_ and George Henry, and thus Thomas Arthur's partner was George Henry. 4. Let the number be xy, with x the digit in tens place, and y the digit in the units place ; then lOx plus y equals 2xy y equals (2y - 10)x or x equals y/2y - 10, where x and y are integers. Obviously, y must be greater than 5. This therefore gives y x 6 6/2 equals 3 7 7/4 equals 1 3/4 8 8/6 equals 1 1/3 9 9/8 equals 1 1/8 y must have been 6, and x 3 Therfore the number was 36. 5. While this problem can be solved by calculus, it can be solved quite readily by simple reasoning. Since each cockroach starts at the same time, and at all times heads directly towards his or her beloved, at any given instant, the four will be located on the corners of a gradually decreasing (and rotating) square. Thus the. path of any particular cockroach is at all times at right angle to the path of the one pursuing it. In other words, the motion of the, say, Northeast cockroach does not alter, in any respect, the distance the Southeast cockroach has to travel in order to reach it. The length of the path each cockroach travels is, therefore, equal to the length of the side of the square. 6. Let the length of one side of the lot be x and the length of one side of garden be y ; then, frbm the last paragraph, we know that x 2 minus y 2 equals 621 Factorising both sides (x plus y) (x minus y) equals 3 x 3 x 3 x 23. ^ Survey School to Tech. Temple Since x and y are integers, (x plus y) and (x minus y) must also be integers. This can only be true if- Case 1: (x minus y) equals 1 and (x plus y) equals 621 Case 2 : (x minus y) equals 3 and (x plus y) equals 207 Case 3 : (x minus y) equals 9 and (x plus y) equals 69 Case 4 : (x minus y) equals 23 and (x plus y) equals 27 Solving these simultaneous equations x equals 311 and y equals 310 Case 1 x equals 105 and y equals 102 Case 2 x equals 39 and y equals 30 Case 3 x equals 25 and y equals 2 Case 4 Cases 1 and 2 are eliminated because there will not be room enough to put walks of the type prescribed by the problem around such a large garden in a lot only slightly larger. Case 4 is eliminated since Prof. Algebra could not possibly have grown all he did in a space 2 feet by 2 feet. It follows that the lot is 39 by 39 feet, and that the garden is 30 by 30 feet. From the fact that the lot and the garden are both square, it follows that the narrowest width of walk V will be opposite the widest side, (w plus 3). Also, the side (w plus 1) feet in width will be opposide the side which is (w plus 2) in width, or (x minus y) ?quals w plus (w plus 3) equals (w plus 1) plus (w plus 2) equals (2w plus 3) or, 39 minus 3.0 equals (2w plus 3) i.e. w equals 3. The strip of walk on the side opposite the sundial is six feet wide. Selected Essays 179 7. Neither. They are in the same place, (if you insist on making a serious problem of thjs arid find out where they meet, the answer is 560 miles from Madras, 2 hours 48 minutes after the first plane left Madras) Vivekananda Auditorium, College of Engineering, Guindy Foundation stone iaicl by Sri R. Venkataraman, then Minister for Industrie;- and Technical Education. Madras Reverie by O.T. Raghavan The Dawn of Freedom (March 1948) Immortal Ladder, by U. Prakasam Which Won the First Prize at Inter-Collegiate Photographic Competition at IIT, Madras (1966) K.S. Sitaraman (1945-46) Dr.J.J. Rudra (1941-45) & (1946-48) Dr. K.C. Chakko (1936-41) A. Srinivasan (1961-64) Slill Waters (Kodaikanal Lake) A Group Photo of the Engineering College, Cricket, Football, Hockey, and Tennis Team (1937) RJ.W. Moses Who won the Annamalai University & Presidency College Tennis Tournaments (1939) POET IN THE ENGINEER Major Marley's Spell (Camp Life at Pallavaram) B.Jayarama Gupta, E2E March '48 By six in the morn, When the Sun is just born, We hear a horn, That pricks like a thorn. Well.when we hear the bell, That sounds like the knell, Rung in the depths of Hell, We, bound by the Major's spell, Start a big pell-mell. In a weather so chill, As to make our voices shrill, And give our hearts a bad thrill, We are to climb the Mosque hill, Up and up until All our patience and skill In Survey drill Come to a stand-still. When the Sun shines slightly bright, Things set themselves right, And we, then, begin to fight The theodolite With our spirits in height. Poet in the Engineer ]gg But soon, On the approach of noon, We, in a virtual swoon, Looking like figures in a cartoon, Wait for the gracious boon, Letting us back to our dish and spoon. Then straight we go to our tent, Place back the instrument, Bathe and eat, though discontent, And kindle the sloth in us latent, Which can lull us to sleep in a moment. Then at 2 o'clock We receive a shock When the bell receives a knock Right on its back. Then the boring 'office work' Which, all as I do shirk, And still pull on the way Plotting all the day's survey. Just at half past five We feel quite alive And go on a drive Soon to the Camp, back to dive. After supper, we sleep in agony and pain Caring not a straw for wind and rain, And up we wake in the morn again, Thus goes our routine once again. Role of Engineers K. Rajagopalan July '54 I. Once on n day in a dewy morn, With a golden splendour newly born, From afar the space and stars thereon, A shining Angel stepped anon. II. With rustling robes of flowing folds, And woofy wings of glittering'gold, And spangled spots in pinkish plume, The innocent Angel, moved as a moon. III. But soon the ground was a sliding slush, And hard to cross with shrubs and bush; Eager and sad at the change of fate, The curious Angel stopp'd its haste. IV. And Lo! a wondrous person came aloof, He cast a layer, so hard and smooth, And paved a way with a hand so deft, The happy Angel, walked ahead. V. But soon nit ground was a painful pit, It cracked with thirst and was brown with heat Pained at the plight and sad at the sight, The kindly Angel stood upright! VI. And again the person came along, He built a wall, big, high and strong; Filled with water, it quenched the thirst; And the parched up earth went green with mirth. VII. When the dreadful dragon, the nimble night, Vanquished the earth and maimed her might, Again the man so tiny and small, He gave her light and solace withal. VIII. The amazed Angel asked the earth, With brimming job and bubbling mirth, "Oh! sister dear; Oh! sister dear!, Who be this man I see much near? Poet in the Engineer 191 IX. "He lays a girdle so rich and vast, On your waist, so long and soft, He gives a vessel with water to drink, When cruel heat had your heart to sink". X. "He adorns, bejewels and lifts you high, Vanquished and helpless when you lie, Like a hapless bull cast off its herd, Forsaken by all and tramped at head". XI. The laughing breeze that lulled the trees, The rippling water in the running streams, All proclaimed "A child of mine", And the Angel thought"- "It is fine". XII. And anon there rushed a band of men, With noise and tumult like roaring lions, They smashed the wall and smote the earth, Snatched the lights and raged ahead. XIII. Gone was the grace and all that were nice, Fumes of sorrow and cries of "Fie", Covered the once good signs of love, And clouds of misery hung above. XTV. The amazed Angel asked the earth, With biting pain and blazing wrath, "Oh! sister dear! Oh sister dear! Who be this band, I saw with fear?" XV. The whining wind that moaned with the trees, The rushing water in the rugged streams, All sighed"A child of mine", And the Angel thought"what pain!" XVI. "Blessed be the child that serves the mother, As for the other, base and bitter, Blessed be the God for the wings he gave" And it flapped its wings and flew away. XVII. Oh! ye brothers! blessed of the world, Destined to serve, to be strong and bold, May we be proud of the role we play, Content and happy, live our day.
D.J.K. Cornelius, B.Sc. July 54 "Remember dear" said He to She "We're out to dinner to night "We'll leave at exactly 7.30 "Ere the moon sends out her light." The time ere now was half after five She ran and turned on the shower The soap it bubbled and took on a jive She merged as fresh as a flower. With winged feet she strayed To her delicate ward-robe perfectes, And ivory fingers sweetly laid On tissues, silks ajid georgettes! The clock whirred and whined Beat and rang and swore The hands flayed and chimed While ivory played on silken gore. "Hubby dear!" cried She to He "Will this pink and black "Show off the skin of ivory? "Or should I wear this lilac?" "My dear" quoth He to She "The time wears on but wear "What you will; for relentlessly "My dinner jacket has a tear!" The lilac matched the ivory The lipstick too was good, The rouge was sheer artistry But how much will be left on food! Poet in the Engineer 193 She rushed up to the mi rror And t hen t or a tissue; The lipstick spread a little A sigh and curse did issue. The rouge looked all a pat ch The base did not set up She wiped of a little blotch And with it all the make up. Ther e appeared upon her eye A tear of despair and pity, She struggled like an unhappy fly In a Flypaper Debut in City! She t urned screaming free At her Hubby cool and calm, When a nail got her saree And ri pped away...the form. She threw her saree from her And yelled, "I' m not going!" She flung t he cream j ar from her The nail her saree atowing! She threw herself upon t he bed And sobbed away to sleep: He smiled and stroked t he head Of his wife a teary heap! He smiled at his own diary: The day was April First, He dared not tell his fairy The di nner was in jest! CARTOONIST IN THE ENGINEER Cartoon by:J. Amrntbraj Murray, Ej.c. THE EMPORIUM SCENE or PLEA FOR DOSAI RATIONING Cartoon by:K. S. Dorairajan, EjM. KS. Dorairajan, ELM "There will be a day when our Professors would dance out our lessons!" (1944) (at the conclusion of dance performance held in the College last year the Principal expressed a hope that in order to make the lectures more impressive, our lecturers may adopt 'Bhava" and 'Nritya' in their lectures.) Our cartoonist's impressions of the speeches made on January 26th, 1948 the Commemoration Day under the "Unity Tree." By B. Bbima Bao. At the Crossroads The puzzle for an E.3. student when he has to choose his branch CHSAP PO W ER. K.S. Dorairajan, El.M Dome Dwellers' A.R.P Cartoon bv.K. S. Dorairajan, E] M. Mistaken Identity! "Station Master, are dogs allowed in these Electric Trains?" Does this make our white-old bachelor professor shun the Electric Train?-Ed Cartoon by:J. Amruthara] Murray, Ei.c, Music hath charm to soothe the savage Breast! Who is it roaring in that room? Of course, it is Balu, the bathroom bagavathar in his usual throes of tuneless music HUMOURIST IN THE ENGINEER The old lady passing the Engineering College stopped a Student who was Surveying, and said, "Can you tell me the time?" The Engineer took out a foot-rule, then fetched a Slide-rule and compass and a T-Square. After fiddling with them for a few minutes, he finally said, "Its just eleven O'clock". "Astonishing" said the old lady, "but what do you do if it's raining and you can't measure the shadow?" "Oh" shrugged the Student, "then I suppose I'll have to look at my watch." "Excuse me, I think we met here a fortnight ago." "Sorry, I do not know you." "I too don't know youbut I recognise your umbrella. "A fortnight ago I had n't an umbrella with me." No, but I had." Quips An engineer, arrested for a traffic accident, was testifying in a court. "Circumstances got beyond my control. The wheels accelera- ted in one plane while the force of gravity operated in an angle to the rotating plane. This produced a rotation perpendicular to the plane of the wheel rotation". Thejudge pondered this one for several minutes. "What does all this flummery mean ?". The engineer answered :"My car skidded". 204 Survey School to Tech. Temple THE GOLDEN NUGGET "Nowadays every mother's son wants to become an engineer and, every father's daughter wants to marry one!" President's Toast to the Old Boys Snippets ".One Who Knows" April '44 1. Pardonable Doubts? a. Can you connect stop-watch in series with an ammeter^ b. Is there a hundred amperes resistance? c. Are there any windage and friction losses for a transformer? d. Is 'Etoope' a mortal? 2. Sleep Usually Acharulu comes to the class five minutes late and sleeps after three minutes. The other day he slept in the bath room! 3. Good at Sports! Our three lady students are all good at sports! In the running race specially held for them, all the three got prizes! 4. Prayer Narayan of ElC is disliked by all the instructors for his intolerable mischief. Once he chanced to talk about religion with Instructor of Mechanical Engineering. Narayan : Sir, I do not have belief in Prayer, or Theism. I.M.E.: I have. But for my daily prayers, you would have taken the Mechanical Engineering branch! 5. Late It was a 'Sunday' night As it was winter, Raman sealed all the doors and windows air-tight and slept. He woke up once and seeing that it was too dark, slept again. When he got out of the room, he found it was too late to go to the College. Somehow he managed to go half-an-hour late. But to his astonishment be found that the College was following Tuesday's time table! Did he sleep throughout Monday? 6. Absent-Minded Reaching the bath room, Mohan found that he forgot his 206 Survey School to Tech. Temple soap-box and towel. He came back to take them and started again. Going half the way, he came to know that he was going to the College. 7. Approximately Gopal knocked at the bath-room door. There came a steady voice from inside the bath room saying '2.67391' minutes approximately! 8. Do Not Know? It was a 'Building Materials' lecture class. In the middle of the lecture, the Instructor caught three students sleeping. He got wild and said, "you fellows sleep even in the class. I do not know how to get sleep in day time!" Then came a somnolent voice from one of the back rows : "Attend Building Material lectures, please." 9. Fifth Columnist Balu does not know swimming, but when he was ducked in '543' he was accused by the students as a fifth columnist. He was swallowing in all the A.R.P. water. 10. Permission In the examination Hall. Supervisor : Why are you opening the desk? Student: I forgot to take the rubber, Sir. Supervisor: Alright, take it. Here after, except writing, you should not do any thing without the permission of the Supervisor. Student: After taking the rubber, turned to the Supervisor and seriously asked, 'shall I close the desk, Sir? 11. Scale Effect A lady was getting her measurements taken for a new dress. The tailor read out the measurements aloud to her assistant, "Hips-35", "Waist-25", "Bust 35". The lady was extremely pleased with the findings of the tailor. "Scale, one inch is equal to one-and-a-half inch" shouted the tailor to her assistant. 207 Snippets 12. The Old Man's Desire "I am sorry, Sir, but I have been making advances to your daughter." "Well, how about something for her old father?" 13. Perfect Discipline During the later days of the last war, the trains were not always oh time and some veteran travellers remember this amusing.contratemp, which took place on the platform-of-one crowded suburban station. "You cannot travel on this train" shouted the ticket collector. "And, why not?" rejoined the passenger. "For the simple reason that this is yesterday's train. Your tickets are for today's train, which won't be here till tomorrow morning. 14. The Professor's Advice A mellowed old College Professor was once asked for some advice by a young Lecturer in the College. His counsel was as follows: Experience has taught me much during the years. You will, no doubt, find during your teaching that, when you are discussing some subject, there will be some lad in the class, who will disagree with you. You will be tempted to nail him down and convert him right, then and there. But don't do it. He's probably the only one in the class who is listening." 15. Vlasoff Affair Huddled together in the freezing cell in Siberia, three Russians were exchanging confidences. "You know," said the first prisoner, who was lean and sharp, 'I was sent here for plotting against Commissar Vlasoff in 1936". "That's funny" said the second, who must have been a portly man in his prime, "The N.KV. denounced me for supporting Commissar Vlasoff 2 years later." The third coughed a little and drew himself up, to his full height. "How very interesting," said he. "Why?" chorused the 208 Survey School to Tech. Temple other two. A hollow laugh ensued. "For the simple reason, gentlemen," said the third man, "that I am Commissar Vlassof'. 16. Lost and Found "Excuse me, I think we met here a fortnight ago." "Sorry, I do not know you." "I too don'tknow youbut I recognise your umbrella." "A fortnight ago I had n't an umbrella with me." "No, but I had." _ GD ? EM MESS September '68 You are all engineers or engineering students who have studied solid geometry sometime back, and have passed the concerned Examination. You are quite capable of visualizing three-dimensional solids. To brush up your knowledge, try a hand at this quiz! An engineer (like you), noted for his ability to visualize 3D structure, was having coffee and vada. Before he dropped a sugar cube into his cup, he placed the cube on the table and thought. "If I pass a horizontal plane through the cube's centre, the cross section will, .of course, be a square. If I pass it vertically through the centre and four corners of the cube, the cross section will be an oblong rectangle. Now, suppose, I cut the cube this way with the plane... '* To his surprise, his mental image of the cross section was a regular hexagon. How was the slice made? If the cube's side is 1 cm. what is the side of the hexagon? After dropping the cube into his coffee, the engineer turned his attention to a south Indian vada (with a hole in "the centre) lying flat on a plate. " If I pass a plane horizontally through the centre," he said to himself, "the cross section will be two concentric circles. If I pass the plane vertically through the centre, the section will be two circles separated by the width of the hole. But, if I turn the plane so..." He whistled with astonishment. The section consisted of two perfect circles that intersected. How was this slice made? If the vada is a perfeeftotorus, 7.5cm. outside diameter and with a hole 2.5.cm across, what are the diameters of the intersecting circles?