ध्यासपंथातले नायक जसेच्या तसे पत्रकारितेत कदाचित आपल्याला दिसणार नाहीत. पण, अशा लोकांना समाजासमोर आणण्याचा ध्यास असलेली माणसं मात्र नक्कीच पत्रकारितेत आहेत. त्यांची वैचारिक बैठक काहीही असो, असं काम दिसलं की ते समाजसमोर यावं म्हणून ही माणसं कायम प्रोत्साहन देत असतात.
म्हणूनच, ध्यासपंथातल्या काही प्रकरणांतील नायकांची ओळख आधी मी वृत्तपत्रातून करून देऊ शकलो. लोकसत्तामध्ये प्रसिध्द झालेल्या झारापच्या प्रसाद देवधरांवरचा लेखामुळे एका आगळ्या समाजसेवेची ओळख वाचकांना झाली, तर, सकाळमध्ये प्रसिद्ध झालेल्या एका लेखातून, मुंबईत, रस्त्यावर्चा मुलांना आपल्या घराची सावली पुन्हा मिळवून देणाया समतोल च्या विजय जाधवांची ओळख झाली...
(मजकूर वाचण्यासाठी खालील इमेजवर क्लिक करा)


पत्रकार महेश सरलष्कर यांच्या 'शेतकरी, ग्राहक आणि महागाईचे त्रैराशिक' या पुस्तकातील एक प्रकरण -
(Please click on the images)










(इमेज मोठी करण्यासाठी इमेजवर क्लिक करा)


MICHAEL W. BRINDLEY
38 Hall Ave.
Nashua, NH 03064
(603) 759-9703
mwbrindley@yahoo.com
--------------------------------
Professional Experience
Nov. 2004-present – education reporter
The Telegraph of Nashua (N.H.)
17 Executive Dr.
Hudson, NH 03301
- As education reporter for The Telegraph, a daily newspaper with a 27,000 circulation, my primary responsibility is covering news in the Nashua School District and at the local colleges. I also write about statewide education news, as well as trends and issues in the field.
- In addition to coming up with my own story ideas and writing five to seven articles a week, I write a weekly education column, “The Learning Curve,” featuring offbeat and unusual education stories that wouldn’t normally be considered for stories.
- As part of the newspaper’s focus toward the Internet, I have produced multimedia and audio packages to accompany news stories.
- In 2006, my investigation of city credit card records prompted a June 2006 report on the superintendent of Nashua schools’ use of public funds for several out of state trips. The superintendent was put on leave and was eventually bought out of her contract.
- In both 2006 and 2007, I won first place for education story or series in the New Hampshire Press Association Better Newspaper contest.

June 2003-Nov. 2004 – education reporter
Derry News
46 West Broadway
Derry, NH 03038

- During my time at the Derry News, I covered the Derry and Londonderry school districts for this twice-weekly newspaper in Derry, New Hampshire. I also assisted in copy editing, proofreading and page design.

Awards/Honors
- First place, education story or series (daily) 2008 New England Press Association Better Newspaper contest
- First place, education story or series (daily), 2007 New Hampshire Press Association Better Newspaper contest
- First place, education story or series (daily), 2006 New Hampshire Press Association Better Newspaper contest
- Second place, education story or series (daily), 2007 New England Press Association newspaper contest
- Second place, general news story (daily), 2005 New Hampshire Press Association Better Newspaper contest
- Third place, general news story (weekly), 2004 New Hampshire Press Association Better Newspaper contest
- Named to the list of “Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities,” 2003

Education
1999-2003 Keene State College, Keene NH
- Bachelor’s degree in journalism
- Executive editor of the student newspaper, The Equinox
- Graduated with a 3.4 GPA
- Studied both print and broadcast journalism, communications, philosophy and photography

Other skills
- Experience with Quark and newspaper design
- Experience with broadcast journalism and multimedia
- Experience with posting news and photos to the newspaper’s Web site

Interests and hobbies
- Music
- Film
- Red Sox and Patriots
- Philosophy

Below is the letter from Rajya Sabha MP and CITU general sec. MOHAMMED AMIN to Labour minister


Dear Shri Fernandes,

I am writing to you on a serious matter which requires your immediate attention and urgent action.
Newspapers all over India have launched a massive dismissal of journalists and other employees, giving the excuse of the recession hitting theirr evenue. Topping all these newspapers is the Hindustan Times Group that has removed more than 100 journalists and other employees in just one fortnight in January. The Hindustan Times Group has a long historyof the anti-labour practices that peaked about six years ago when over 350 non-journalists and some 50 journalists were thrown out of job overnight. The matter was raised in Parliament and is now pending in the Court.
From the same time, the management is forcing all journalists and non-journalists in regular employment on wage board pay-scales to resign and accept contract employment. Those who opposed were sacked, creating an atmosphere of terror and uncertainty that frightened many to surrender to the whims and fancies of the management.
The Hindustan Times Group is indulging in the same type of malpractices forwhich Satyam is in the news these days. It has been forming companies after companies and shifting employees from one company to another without obtaining their consent or completing the legal formalities, so as to indulge in fudging of accounts and escape the statutory obligations. The malpractice of shifting the regular employees as contract labour that is now not limited to only Hindustan Times and Times of India groups but it has also spread across the newspaper industry as a tool to scuttle the statutory Wage Board awards.
The latest instance of removal of senior journalists from Hindustan and Hindustan Times was the most shocking violation of the trade union and human rights. Most of these journalists were physically thrown out of their offices and that too in less than a month or two of renewal of their contracts for three years. The management has been putting two letters on table - sign the resignation letter and take three months' salary or get dismissed with just two months' basic salary. Most of the victims had no option to sign the resignation to get a little more money as they were not even allowed to think before taking the decision.
One employee in Lucknow suffered heart attack while senior lady journalistS hailbala, who had been serving Hindustan for more than three decades, was manhandled, molested and physically pushed out of office by a senior resident editor, after forcing her to sign on the resignation letter. She has lodged a complaint with Police, but no action has been initiated so far. Among those humiliated, sacked and not even allowed to collect his belongings from the office is Vinod Varshney, the Bureau Chief with 37 years of standing in Hindustan. Those thrown out along with him include Shripal Jain, senior assistant editor, Subodh Mishra, senior news editor, Ira Jha, news editor as also special correspondents and reporters Anil Verma,Rajiv Ranjan Nag, Vivek Shukla, Sandeep Thakur, and Virendra Mehta. Similar incident of sacking of the senior journalists and other reporters is going on in various centers of Hindustan like Lucknow, Patna, Dehradun, Ranchi, Banaras, Muzaffarpur, Meerut, Kanpur and Agra. Those victimized in this manner include 15 from Patna, five each from Lucknow and Kanpur, six from Dehradun, three in Banaras, two each in Ranchi, Muzaffarpur and Agra.Similar malpractices are being followed in the group's two other newspapers - Hindustan Times and Mint. The latest to be thrown out are Rathin Das, special correspondent in Ahmedabad who was asked to fly to Delhi for an official meeting and forced to resign as soon as he arrived, while a very senior journalist of Mint, was similarly rendered jobless.
I therefore request you to kindly look into the matter and take necessary action at the earliest.

With regards,
Yours sincerely,
MOHAMMED AMIN
General Secretary, CITU
Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha)

An Interview with Prof. David Gross

Professor David Gross shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2004 for solving the last great remaining problem of ‘the Standard Model’ of the quantum mechanical picture of reality. He and his co-recipients discovered how the nucleus of an atom works.
He was in Mumbai to deliver 60th Homi Bhabha memorial Lecture at TIFR where Mr. Ibrahim Afghan interacted with him. Excerpts.

Q. You are associated with the research on The String Theory that, hopefully, will unite all the forces in nature. A dream Albert Einstein tried to realize in his last years, to explain the complete reality. Do you think the string theory will be the final answer to it?
Prof. Gross : It may be the final answer or may not be. It can be a step ahead. It may lead you to many more steps in between and maybe, the process just continues forever…
This theory, one must remember, is going deeper and is richer. There are theories within this theory. It is like reaching a peak of Himalaya. You know the peak, so the goal. To reach there, you may have to cross many valleys and mountains, you don’t know how many. Hence, you cannot set a timeframe for its success.

Q. Some senior scientists like Prof. Martin Rees believe that we may never understand the reality of the universe. Like, he said, my dog does not understand Quantum Physics.
Prof. Gross : I do not agree to it. I do not see a reason to believe that human mind is limited. 200 years ago, people in twenties were at the forefront to explore scientific mysteries. Today, even after there is so much to learn, people in the same age are at the frontiers.
Secondly, human mind and that of an animal differ on the basis of language. Even a child creates new sentence, which is an infinite capability human has. People now know much more at the early age. This amounts to believe that there is an indication that we will be, one day, able to know the reality.

Q. One question related to knowing the reality is ‘why do we exist?’ Do you think it is for the physicist to answer or it’s pure philosophical?
Prof. Gross : No, It is a totally philosophical. Even religious. They can take these questions and go nowhere. They have been since long. Right now it is not a question for physicists. May be 100 years from now, it can come under physics.

Q. Taking this string of reality further let me ask you about how this universe is going to end; your belief in the theories associated with it.
Prof. Gross : Latest predictions goes with the observation that the universe is expanding. Actually, it is acceleratingly expanding. So if after billion or so years you look out at night, you will not see any galaxies, only the Milky Way.

Q. One theory also predicts of sudden rip?
Prof. Gross : Yes, but, it‘s very unlikely. The research on the Dark Matter is hence very essential in this regard. (It will keep the physicists busy for next 25 years as behaviour of this dark matter is very crazy and nothing is known about it.)

Q. Coming to the issues in India, do you think that India can compete in Nobel arena in near future? How do you see the science scenario, especially that of physics?
Prof. Gross : India has a long tradition of Nobel prize winners, unlike China, where there is none. Talent here is of first rate. English language is an added advantage.
But, you also need to give good salaries to the professors; they are really very badly paid. To have a leadership position here, you should capture the brains. For that you have to pay. Indian scientists should be encouraged to come back. It is also very important to know that the scientists are not only attracted by salaries; they want to be in a place where action is; A place where frontrunner research is on.

Q. What about the work culture, and freedom to work?
Prof. Gross : Yeah, scientists love to be free. They do not like to be told to them what they should do or should not. In that sense, India is very close to the USA. Democracy here makes a big difference to them.

Q. It looks that the gap between science and common people still exists, whether in India or USA. What role can scientists play to make people think more rationally?
Prof. Gross : It’s a big challenge. Scientists need to explain science to more and more people. People are just scared about science thinking it’s too complicated or they may not just understand it. But whenever we interact with people I see lots of interest. They really want to know more and more about science. Scientists need to go out more often and interact with people to explain science.



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