Monday, January 20, 2014

Memoirs of Maharaja College, Mysore by Prof S. Naganath

"Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, but 
 to be young was very heaven
                                                               - William Wordsworth


Introduction
Maharaja College, Mysore (1920s)
The college finds its origins in the English-school known as "Maharaja Patashala" established by Maharaja of MysoreKrishnaraja Wadiyar III in 1833, at the request of a British officer, General Fraser. Subsequently it became a High School, and in 1868, after the death of Maharaja was handed over to the Government of Mysore. In 1879, the college was upgraded and became affiliated with University of Madras. The foundation stone of the present building was laid by Prince Albert Victor of Wales during his tour of India on November 27, 1889 in Mysore, during the reign of Chamarajendra Wadiyar XIt was upgraded to the first grade college in 1894. The college remained affiliated to the University of Madras till establishment of Mysore University in 1916 by Nalvadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar and Sir M. Visveswaraya. The college is 180 years old and the University is 98 years old. 

Personal Musings
When I joined Maharaja College in 1969 to do my B.A. degree in English literature &
R. K. Narayan and C. D. Narasimaiah
Political Science as my Major subjects and sociology as my minor subject, it inspired in us great expectations. In the year 1960, after the formation of the new Manasa Gangotri campus, almost all the post graduate departments were shifted to the new campus from Maharaja College. A few years before my admission, J
nanapeeta awardee Kuvempu and Padma Bhushana Prof C. D. Narasimaiaha were principals of this college. Kuvempu during his Vice-Chancellorship promoted Kannada language and literature. 

We had 22 boys and one girl student in major English class and about 80 students in political science. Prince Srikanta Dutta Narasimha Raja Wodeyar had chosen the same subjects and hence he was our classmate. My friendship with him lasted for six years, even after he branched out in Manasa Gangotri to do his M.A. in political science. I remained loyal to English literature and did my M.A. under the aegis of Prof C. D. Narasimaiah. 

To trace the history of Maharaja College and its hoary past, some of these books will be useful. 

  1. "Memoirs of my college life" by V. Seetaramaiah (1917 - 1922)
  2. "Nenapina Doniyali" - Kuvempu's autobiography
  3. "Neralugalannu Bennathi" by Dr C. N. Ramachandra (1954 - 1959)
  4. "Aaptaru Acharyaru” by Dr T. V. Venkatachala Sastry  (2005) 
  5. "Sirigannada Saraswataru" by Prof G. Venkatasubbaiah and also in the writings of H. Y. Sharada Prasad, S. L. Bhyrappa, Dr U. R. Anantamurthy, Dr H. K. Ranaganath and Bapu Ramanna. 

The English Department
Maharaja College, Mysore (B.A. - 1972)
I was extremely fortunate when I joined Maharaja College in 1969 to come across the best English faculty who were of international standard. The English department was headed by Prof S. Gururaja Rao, the well known stage and film actor. I still remember the English play "The Importance of being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde staged by his troupe in CFTRI auditorium. He had acted in such Kannada films as "Chandavalli Thota", "Subba Bhatta" and "Kaadu". He taught us Ben Johnson and Bernard Shaw. Another famous teacher was Dr C. D. Govinda Rao who was the first person to take an English PhD from Mysore University. He had done research on an novel topic "The 19th Century British Fiction as a tool of education". He excelled himself in teaching us the 19th century fiction with reference to George Elliot, Jane Austen and Charles Dickens. I can never forget a classroom quote of his - "Matrimony is a matter of money" in connection with Jane Austen's "Pride & Prejudice". 

Another teacher who impressed us most was Prof S. Anantanarayan. He was a freedom fighter
Prof S. Anantanarayan
who came to college wearing a Khadi panche and Khadi shirt. He was known for his sense of humor and informal relationship with students. He was a well known Kannada poet, essayist, novelist, dramatist and critic. He taught us Ibsen (
An Enemy of the People), Galsworthy and Oliver Goldsmith. Another memorable teacher was Prof Mylari Rao. He took four months to teach us Thomas Gray's "Elegy written in a country churchyard". Through his theatricals he successfully converted Shakespeare's "Macbeth" and "Hamlet" into comedies. After the departure of Prof S. Gururaja Rao as Principal of Yuvaraja College, we received Prof Putmadappa as our Head of the Department.  He was known for his sartorial elegance with his collection of fifty odd suits and a permanent cigar in his mouth. He also owned race horses and was seen in race club. He was a pukka British gentleman. He taught us 20th Century modern poetry with special emphasis on Rupert Brooke, Sassoon and Wilfred Owen. Smt. Sethu Savitri, another lecturer taught us the history of English language. Maj. Ramaswamy another colourful figure taught us George Eliot's "Silas Marner". We had formed an English literary club in Maharaja College. The following guest lectures were arranged by us :-
  1. Prof Chanda on "A Passage to India"
  2. Dr U. R. Anantamurthy on "William Blake"
  3. Prof H. H. Annaiah Gowda on "Shakespeare
  4. Prof Bhagavan (Maharani's College) "Odes" by Keats.
Political Science Department
The Political Science Department was headed by Prof K. B. Y. Thotappa who was also principal of the college. We were most impressed by Prof Rudregowda (who passed away a few months ago) for his erudition, memory and fluency in English. He taught us political theory in first year B.A. In final year B.A. he taught us five constitutions of the world - India, U. K., U. S. A, U. S. S. R and Switzerland. His memory was phenomenal and he would quote every article of the constitution without referring to the text. He was a strict disciplinarian. The department also had Prof Eshwarachar, Smt. Cauvery, Chambi Puranik, Gurumurthy and Ashwini Ranjan. Prof Eshwarachar was a senior experienced teacher with a friendly smile on his face always. 

Sociology Department
It was headed by Prof G. Narayan who came to the class dressed impeccably in his suit. He was known for sober teaching and helping us from the examination point of view. We were also met by Prof Kempegowda and Smt. Sumitra Bai. We admired our charming lady lecturer, who later married my classmate Devanur Mahadeva. The madam was punctual and meticulous in her teaching schedule. 

Kannada Department
Sharath Chandra Chattarjee
It was headed by Prof Nanjunadiah, the doyen of Kannada Classical literature. He made the poetry of Pampa, Ranna and Janna come alive in the class room. His sound scholarship impressed us all. Prof Narayana Shetty taught us the novel "Charitraheena" by Sharath Chandra Chatterjee. Dr Chandriah who was known as English Chandriah because he taught like V. Seetaramiah (Kannada through English). !! He also happened to teach us a book of criticism called "Kavi Kavya Drishti" by V. Seetaramaiah. Prof Anantaram had just then joined Kannada Department and he had visited 1970 Tokyo Expo as a student delegate. Today he writes on various topics including Philosophy. His work on South Canara is a monumental contribution. 

College Library
"Punch" Magazine
The original Maharaja College Library became finally the University library and later it was shifted to Manasa Gangotri. But the college library still held venerable old volumes. The library stacks made of teak wood on one and two tier basis resembled Bodleian library, Oxford. We could have walked in the upper tier aisle looking for a rare book. The college reference library situated in first floor contained rare and precious books. The college reading room used to receive forty newspapers and thirty magazines and fifteen journals. I always enjoyed reading "Time", "Newsweek", "Life", "Illustrated London News" and "Punch". I do not think any other undergraduate library received so many magazines and journals. 

Our Illustrious Classmates & Contemporaries
  1. Prince Srikanta Dutta Narasimha Raja Wodeyar - four times M. P. 
  2. Eshwar Daidota - Journalist and Editor
  3. Magician Shankar
  4. Narasimhaswamy - University Wrestler & Mayor of Nanjangud
  5. Anwar Manipadi - Former Chairman of Minorities Commission
  6. M. K. Shankarlinge Gowda - Additional Chief Secretary to Chief Minister S. M. Krishna
  7. Reginald Wesley - Commandant of Special Protection Group in charge of Security of Prime Minister A. B. Vajpayee and Mrs. Sonia Gandhi
  8. Ashoka Vardhana - Book Seller & Environmentalist
  9. Suresh Kumar Salian - Commercial Tax Officer and Body Builder.
  10. Nadoja Devanur Mahadeva - Well known dalit writer
    Dr K. Shivaram Karanth
Luminaries who visited Maharaja Campus 
  1. Jnanapeeta awardee Dr K. Shivaram Karanth
  2. Jnanapeeta awardee Dr D. R. Bendre
  3. Jnanapeeta awardee K. V. Puttappa
  4. Jnanapeeta awardee Umashankar Joshi 
  5. Jnanapeeta awardee Dr V. K. Gokak
All the great Carnatic Classical Musicians have performed in Maharaja College, Centenary Hall under the aegis of one cultural
organisation or the other. I wish to name some musicians who visited during our student days. 
M. S. Subbalakshmi
  1. Bharata Rathna M. S. Subbalakshmi
  2. Madurai Somasundaram
  3. Lalgudi Jayaraman
  4. Shemmanagudi Srinivas Iyer
  5. M. L. Vasantha Kumari
Sports Environment
In my limited experience, no college in India offered such wonderful sports facilities as Maharaja College. The sports pavilion was a great attraction to students in the evenings. The best sports facilities for the following games were available. 
  1. Akada for wrestlers
  2. Gymnasium
  3. Cricket Pitch
  4. Hockey & Football grounds
  5. Two Basketball courts
  6. Kho Kho
  7. Volleyball
  8. Badminton
  9. Shuttlecock
  10. Table Tennis
  11. Athletics - running track, hurdles long jump pit and high jump pit. 
  12. Swimming
  13. Tennis
In most of the sports events the college boys excelled themselves at the University, State and National levels. 

NCC
In the beginning NCC was compulsory to all students. But 1969 onwards it was made optional. I think Ashoka Vardhana was an under officer in NCC, who excelled in rock climbing and cycling. 

Socio-Political Environment
Jayprakash Narayan
The Maharaja College had on its rolls some three thousand students. We only had fifty girl students. The indiscriminate admission process had brought about a decline in the standard of education. We still had some foreign students like Sena Naike(Srilanka), Joseph MacManyala (Kenya), Olang bode Obobode (Nigeria) and Randir Bucha (Mauritius) etc. Later these students also got disillusioned with poor teaching and most of the teachers were not very fluent in English (apart from English department teachers). In India, during 1960s & 1970s it was two decades of social and political turmoil. The naxalite movement in West Bengal and student unrest in other parts of India was partly fuelled by overpopulation and unemployment. Jayaprakash Narayan in 1970s gave a call for "Total Revolution". The student agitation spread to other parts of India including Mysore. The Maharaja College students were politically more vocal and also had ambitions of becoming M.L.A and M.P. Hence, Strikes and agitations by students became the norm. The college student union elections acquired serious and mega dimensions. The following student agitations affected our education system.
  1. Youth festival agitation
  2. The anti-Hindi agitation
  3. The Goa liberation agitation
  4. The Expo 70 agitation
  5. Gokak agitation
  6. Busa Basavalingappa agitation
Because of these strikes routine academic teaching got affected. Hence my friend Ashok Vardhan calls Maharaja College as Maha - Raja (holiday) college!!! By 1984 all the Universities and colleges in Karnataka banned student union elections. It is also noteworthy that only colleges in Bangalore and Mysore were affected by these agitations. The colleges in Mangalore, Shimoga and Dharwad remained insular. 

Reasons for the decline of Maharaja College
  1. Substandard faculty was recruited in 1960s and 1970s 
  2. Indiscriminate admission of below average students 
  3. No entrance exam for degree courses
  4. Quality was ignored at the cost of quantity
  5. Fanaticism concerning language and region
  6. Reservation vs. Meritocracy
  7. Lack of Vision and Goal
  8. Deliberate neglect of Infrastructure like Library, Laboratory and Hostels.
Summing up
Prof S. Naganath
It is my wishful thinking that my old college must rank as one of the best in the country and the world once again. Except for Punjab University, none of our other Universities and colleges (including IITs) do not figure in international lists today. If good, competent and learned teaching faculty is recruited, they may need another thirty years to make Maharaja College a premier educational institution. A good faculty attracts intelligent and talented students. It is the teachers and students who make an institution great. Can we ever achieve this..? Is there any room for Optimism..? Shortly Mysore University is going to celebrate its Centenary year (2016). I sign off with grateful thanks to my Alma mater.

Yours Sincerely
Prof S. Naganath

Friday, January 03, 2014

Dr H. N. Murthy - Few Reminiscences by Dr (Mrs.) Sharadamba Rao

Dr H. N. Murthy
Dr. H. N. Murthy was an extraordinary Clinical Psychologist, who had a thorough knowledge of Freud’s Psychoanalysis, Jung’s views on racial unconscious and also of neo-Freudians like Adler, who tried to explain the concept of inferiority complex as responsible for abnormal behavior driving one to the mental asylum. Dr. Murthy worked in Hospital for Mental Diseases (HMD) in Ranchi, where I was most fortunate to meet him as a family friend and also as a family member  during the years when he lived with his old parents. We saw him off at the railway station, when he boarded the train to Calcutta on way  to Bangalore and Belgium.

I had access to his bookshelf in his residence near HMD and while
Dr R. B. Cattell
searching for a Bengali Book ”Ramakrishna kathavali” I saw a big book ”Interpretation of Dreams“ by Sigmund Freud, which I read again and again, as it was very interesting. This was the starting point of my desire to study Psychology and also later on to appear for an exam. This culminated in getting M.A. degree in Psychology from Banaras Hindu University. The dissertation as part of the exam was based on data of Schizophrenics. Here was the significant role and guidance of Dr. H. N. Murthy. My research work on 16 Personality Questionnaire led to my contact with Dr. R. B. Cattell of IPAT, Illinois University and my introduction to Culture-fair intelligence Tests. This paved my way to NCERT and my research in Education Psychology, as revealed in my life sketch. My further trip to Leipzig, the birthplace of Psychology as an experimental Science and to Berlin to work on motivation in learning, using an electronic maze  and  relating the learning to personality factors fetched me D.Sc in Psychology. This is again a research in EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY. All this outcome has been possible due to my introduction to Psychology by MENTOR Dr. H. N. Murthy.


"Interpretation of Dreams"
Dr. H. N. Murthy was a philosopher and scholar. He was an introvert by nature in my understanding. He had been a very keen researcher, who wanted to switch over to the scientific method of quantifying the behavior of Schizophrenics and Manic Depressives, in terms of behavior which can be measured as against qualitative method of Psychoanalysis. This is reflected in his effort in constructing various scales to measure the symptoms of severe mental disorders. He could have written books conveying his experimental findings, if he was more worldly during his active professional life. Such a book would have helped the generation of clinical psychologists in treating mental disorders effectively and rehabilitate them as normal individuals of the society. Indeed, the departure of Dr. H. N. Murthy from this world, is an irreparable loss to the field of clinical Psychology.



About Dr (Mrs.) Sharadamba Rao

Smt. Sharadamba Rao
Smt. Sharadamba Rao hails from the district of Tumkur in the Indian state of Karnataka. Born in 1930 to devout Brahmin parents, she had a cultured and intellectual upbringing. She is married to Dr M. S. Subba Rao, a renowned plant physiologist and former vice-chancellor. During her days at Ranchi, she came in contact with Dr H. N. Murthy in her search for Achintya Kumar Sen Gupta’s “Ramakrishna Kathavali” in his library. There she came across Sigmund Freud’s “Interpretation of Dreams” – a find which would herald an exemplary course in the field of clinical psychology. Enchanted by the book, she decided to embark on procuring a degree in psychology. This quest brought her to Benaras Hindu University in search of a Master’s degree in psychology. An M. Sc in Pure Mathematics in her armamentarium helped her a great deal in being eligible to pursue the said Master’s in psychology. It was in these years that Dr H. N. Murthy came to occupy the position of a “surrogate teacher” to an avid, aspiring student of psychology.

In fact, Dr H. N. Murthy would suggest a comprehensive study on a collection of 50 co-
Prof Klix
operative schizophrenics at the Ranchi facility. Sharadamba Rao took up this endeavour in earnest. Her mathematical background aided her plenty in successfully extrapolating meaningful analysis of the vast data. Such a scale of study (on schizophrenics) having never been taken up before, caught the attention of Dr Raymond B Cattell who would extend an invitation to her to the United States. But as fate would have it, a scholarship from Germany (arguably the birth place of modern studies in psychology) saw Sharadamba Rao embark for Berlin to meet the famous Prof Godschaldt. Prof Godschaldt not being in attendance led her to meet Prof Klix under whom she completed her D. Sc. (Post-Doctoral Degree) on the subject of “Motivation in Learning” by doing experimental research with an electronic maze using Dr R. B. Cattell’s 16 factors.

Smt. Sharadamba Rao came back to India and in 1976 settled in New Delhi to work at NCERT. Her work on improvement of UPSC exams was significant. She later relocated to Bangalore, where she worked in bridging NCERT’s ideas and techniques with State Educational Programs from 1984 till 1990 whence she retired. She currently stays with her husband at their Bangalore residence.


P.S.: Smt Sharadamba Rao passed away on the 4th of January, 2014 at her residence in Bangalore, exactly a day after this article was posted on our blog. We extend our sincere condolences to her family members and pray that her soul may rest in peace.