Prof. E.K. Warrier, T.A. Purushotham, S.Subbaramaiah at the S.V. University (1960)
THE DAY TO REMEMBER FOR LIFE &
THE PRAYERS THAT REMAIN LONG.
‘Acharya Devo Bhava’.
“Guru Brahma Guru: Vishnu, Guru: Sak Shaath Parabrahma:”. Parents are
the first Gurus and I bow to them day-in and day-out and all life for, these
Gurus took my hand , opened my mind, and remained in my heart.
During the childhood there were teachers who taught me alphabets
and who did not spare their rod for being late to the school or for correcting
a mistake! No complaints on the Child Rights for my parents told me that I had
only responsibility and not right at that age, for the right to honourable life
had to be earned the hard way.
K. Keshava Rao, my father’s English Teacher taught me English
Grammar - Wren & Martin was the Bible in front of me in my class IX at the
Mc Lauren High School, Kakinada. Earlier was the most fortunate year when I had
the privilege to learn Telugu language under Indraganti Hanumatsastry in class
VIII. He made me win the District Debating Competition on the subject -- Voting
Right for the Youth, Right or Wrong -- at the inter-school District
Competition.
At Mrs. A. V. N. College, Visakhapatnam, where I studied Intermediate
(1955-57) K. Swaminathan, Lecturer in English, Prof Diwakarla Rama Murthy,
brother of Diwakarla Venkatavadhani (Osmania University fame), Ramhbhatla Lakshmi
Narayana were my teachers in Telugu and how can I redeem my debt for introducing
me the depth and charm of the language that has no barriers in the globe?
Moved to Tirupati for my graduation and post-graduation in Economics. T.A. Purushotham's inaugural address on the opening day of the College defining the words TIME and CHARACTER shaped my life.
Acharya Rayaprolu Subba Rao,
Pingali Lakshmikantam, G.N. Reddy, Jeereddi Chenna Reddy taught me old poetry, modern poetry, prose, and non-detailed text respectively, Prof. M. V. Rama Sarma, E. Nageswar, Mrs. M. Suryakanta, Lecturers in English, Prof. M.S. Prakasa Rao, who earned the title ‘Laddu of Public Finance’ in Pachiappa’s College, Madras, Prof. E. K. Warrier, Dr. S. Subbaramaiah, and B.N. Yugandhar (IAS latter),
were all my teachers in my graduation and post-graduation
at the Sri Venkateswara University College, Tirupati (1958-62) who made me what
I am today.
Dr. C.S. Venkata Ratnam and Prof V. Balamohan Das, of the Commerce
Department guided me into PhD at Andhra University, Visakhapatnam, while I was
at work. Prof. B. Sarveswara Rao, Prof. G. Parthasarathy (EPW fame), were my mentors.
The will to write became part of me because of all these teachers. When I close my eyes, I see their bright eyes, hear their voices, recall their corrections in my essays of the school and college days, the direction they gave me not just on the stage when I acted in a few plays - Galsworthy’s Strife in College Days, and ‘Pedda Manushulu’ in Telugu on Vijayawada and Hyderabad theatres,
but to my life. My teacher Prakasa Rao insisted that whenever I write, I should keep in mind, whether I have a single message to convey couched in understandable language, a story that stays in the readers’ minds for long. He always used to say; “Keep your flame burning” but not to burn you. Watch the word you say and it will save you. I am yet to become a great writer! Not just today, I pray my teachers everyday to give me the energy and thought that enriches the society I live in. The warmth, the affection and the blessings all these teachers who made my life are eternal.
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