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Prof. V.M.K. Sastry in conversation with Prof. Ajit Kolar and Mr. Kumaran Sathasivam

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Prof. Ajit Kumar Kolar: Greetings from IIT Madras Heritage Centre.

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Today at the Centre we are in conversation

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with Professor Vedantam Murali Krishna Sastry

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known as Professor V. M. K. Sastry

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who was here in IIT Madras

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as a faculty member from 1970 to 1998.

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I will give you a brief introduction, and then

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we will have a conversation about the

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history of IIT Madras as Professor

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Sastry looks at it during his tenure in this institute.

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Professor V. M. K. Sastry graduated from the first

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IIT which is at Kharagpur,

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then he did his Master's in Indian Institute of Science

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Bangalore, then his Ph.D. from

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University of Illinois at Chicago Circle Campus, Chicago

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in the area of Heat Transfer

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he worked with Professor James Hartnett:

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highly reputed Heat Transfer researchers of those times.

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He worked in IIT Kanpur for some time,

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he joined IIT Madras in 1970

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in the Department of Mechanical Engineering.

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Particularly, he was associated with the Heat

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Transfer and Thermal Power Laboratory.

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He went on to become the Head of the Department

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of Mechanical Engineering from 1986 to 1990.

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Later, he was the Dean of Academic Research

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and he was the member of Board of Governors

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when he retired in 1998.

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He also is the Founder Professor

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of ETC that is a Educational Technology Centre

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which is now a very big part of the IIT Madras outreach,

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especially through the NPTEL Programme.

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He was Chairman of the Vanavani Committee,

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and also he was Warden of Cauvery Hostel.

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So, Professor Sastry has tremendous...

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A long and vast experience in the IIT system,

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first as a student, undergraduate student in IIT Kharagpur,

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and then ending up as the member of

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the Board of Governors at IIT Madras.

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So he has seen the IITM...IIT system grow

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from its initial...almost the beginning of the 1950s

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up to '98, but then even now, although he is

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officially outside the IIT system for the last 20 years,

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he has been a very keen observer,

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external observer of the growth of the IIT system,

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IIT Madras. So, it is our pleasure to have Professor Sastry today,

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to get his perspective of the IIT Madras

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and IIT system in general. Welcome, Professor Sastry.

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Thank You. We are very happy that you are here...

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Prof. V. M. K. Sastry: Thank you, Professor Kolar. Prof. Kolar: today.

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I would like to start by

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asking you what were the circumstances under which you

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came to IIT Madras from United States,

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especially you joined the

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Heat Transfer and Thermal Power Lab,

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the academic and research environment,

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especially also with respect to Heat Transfer subject,

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kindly say few words about it.

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Prof. Sastry: First of all, after graduating from IISc Bangalore

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that is my Master's,

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I was quite...deeply influenced by Dr. Ramachandran,

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because though I was doing my

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Master's Degree in Foundry Engineering,

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he was actually handling the subject of Heat Transfer to us.

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So I did his project work under him

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and then I worked in an industry for a year,

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but then I wanted to shift it to teaching line.

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So I thought teaching line if I want to

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really contribute, I must have a Ph.D.

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So I was in search of a guide for Ph.D.,

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and in that process I went first of all to

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IIT Kharagpur as a lecturer.

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So I was not very successful in finding a Ph.D. guide.

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So I shifted to IIT Kanpur.

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So there, one Professor Richard Zimmerman from Ohio...

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Ohio State University, he actually accepted me to work under him.

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But because of some policy issues involving

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both Indian side as well as American side,

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you know unlike Germany,

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the assistance from United States was basically a private

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affair; not from the government,

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it is what is called an IIT...the...the...the University Consortium

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of about 9 universities joining together,

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and because of that, there was policy differences,

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and the American side objected

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that until the entire B.Tech. programme is in place,

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you cannot have even faculty members working part-time for Ph.D.

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Prof. Kolar: This was in the early 1960s. Prof. Sastry: This was in 1962.

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So after a year, the American Professor said,

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"Sastry, if you want to really get a Ph.D.,

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go abroad." That is how I ended up in the United States.

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So after my Ph.D., I joined the faculty of the University of Illinois also,

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and when I was there working, 1969,

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I got a letter from Professor Ramachandran

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who was already by that time, the Director of IIT Madras.

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So he said, "Why don't you come and join the

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Mechanical Engineering Department?" So I said "Yes, I can do,

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but I am now working on a NASA project,

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so one more year I need,

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so can I have a joining time of one year?"

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With his, you know, very broad minded outlook.

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He said, "Why not?"

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So that is how I...

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Basically, in those days you know, the people who went abroad,

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they were not willing to settle down there,

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they just wanted to increa...improve their qualifications and then get back.

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That means basically Bharat Mata calling back.

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So that is how the situation was, and I returned.

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So I...was supposed to come

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and join this '70 academic session, July,

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but then my professor and guide,

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Dr. Hartnett, he said that

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"Now you are going to India,

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and we don't really see..."

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He was actually the...the very prominent...

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International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, that is

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the international journal, he was the editor.

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So he said, "We are not really receiving many

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articles...research articles in the

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area of Heat Transfer from India.

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So, for you to really work in this area,

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it may be a good idea, if you meet several of the

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international experts in Heat Transfer."

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So they said...that's why in

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August of 1970, the...there was the Paris

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Fourth International Heat Transfer Conference.

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So he said, "I will introduce you to a lot of

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people there, why don't you come and..."

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Because our paper also was there.

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So, present it and then go.

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So I requested Dr. Ramachandran,

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"Is it ok if I join instead of the

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beginning of the academic year,

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in the middle of the year if I join, is it ok?"

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He jumped at the opportunity and he really,

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you know that shows actually the vision of Dr. Ramachandran.

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Prof. Kolar: And he himself was a Heat Transfer person, basically. Prof. Sastry: He was himself a Heat Transfer person.

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So he said, “That's a very good idea,

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you come and join, after attending those things.”

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So I came here, and because it was in the middle of the

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academic session, I had not much teaching work to do.

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So, in fact, it was a tremendous experience

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for me to interact with him because,

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on the first day when I met him in his office,

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he said, “Sastry, this lab used to be called a Steam Lab.”

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So after I came here, I changed the name

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to ‘Heat Transfer and Thermal Power.’

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This is very important from the history of the Heat

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Transfer research in the country and in IIT Madras,

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it was called a ‘Steam Power Lab,’

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Prof. Sastry: Steam Power Lab. Prof. Kolar: Under Professor Narjes

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But Professor Ramachandran, because

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he was a Heat Transfer person,

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he said, “We should have a Heat Transfer specialization.”

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So he changed the name,

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Professor Narjes was the head

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and then ’70, Professor Sastry came in.

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Prof. Sastry: So, I… Mr. Kumaran Sathasivam: But when had the lab been set up, sir?

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Mr. Sathasivam: How many years had it been running? Prof. Sastry: It was set up in the beginning itself.

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In fact, there was one

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Professor from University of Stuttgart, Professor [indistinct].

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He was also a member of the

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German Committee which established IIT.

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So, he actually was working in…the…in…in

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Stuttgart, it was basically a Steam Lab, you know.

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Mr. Sathasivam: It was a replica of… Prof. Sastry: Replica of that one

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Mr. Sathasivam: The Stuttgart lab. Yes.

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So, I…I came and then Dr. Ramachandran said,

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“Though I changed the name,

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whatever facilities you want, we will try to provide.

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Can you, at least after 4 or 5 years,

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make this Heat Transfer Lab

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a real good Heat Transfer Lab

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which is really doing reasonably good work in…in the area.”

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Sir, excuse me, was Heat Transfer

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being taught as a subject in any IIT or

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other institutions in the country at that time?

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To my knowledge there was…Heat

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Transfer was not being taught at all

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in any institution. Maybe,

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I may be wrong, maybe Professor Sukhatme in IIT Bombay,

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might have started, but I doubt it because as

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undergraduate curriculum, it was not part of that.

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So in fact, that is the one of the reasons why

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Dr. Ramachandran particularly said,

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“First of all let us develop a

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Master's degree programme in Heat Transfer.”

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So, now, that you don't have any teaching load,

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why don't you design a 2 year

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programme…M.Tech. programme,

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in the area…in the subject of Heat Transfer.”

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So, I worked on it for a couple of months.

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So I made a detailed programme,

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the curriculum was completely finalized,

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then Dr. Ramachandran looked at it,

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he approved, and he said that…until that time,

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the Master’s Degree programme in Mechanical Engineering,

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was…was only involving I think two or three areas:

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One is Advanced Thermal Power,

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Machine Design and probably Manufacturing.

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I am not very sure.

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So he said, “Let us have a regular programme.”

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And then when he was quite certain that

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there should be a 2 year programme

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Master’s degree programme in several areas,

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he asked the Department of Mechanical Engineering staff

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there are almost about 10 labs

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in the Mechanical Engineering.

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So he said, “Each lab, each special area,

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you should have a similar programme.”

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So that's why by 1971, Prof. Kolar: Yes.

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You know all the labs of Mechanical Engineering Department,

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each department for example,

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the M.Tech. programme in Combustion

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M.Tech. programme in Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning…like that

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all these 10 programmes actually were developed

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and that's how it started in 1971.

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But more importantly, what

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Dr. Ramachandran suggested is that Heat…

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Heat Transfer is an engineering science,

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it was neither engineering nor science.

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That…it used to be taught in Mechanic…Chemical Engineering also

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as a more of…as a practical thing rather than

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providing theoretical basis for it.

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So, Dr. Ramachandran suggested

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that we should also see that institutions like

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Guindy Engineering College and other

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engineering colleges in the country,

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they also adopt this particular thing.

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So he…I called actually, I arranged a

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summer programme for 4 weeks

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for teachers in the particular Thermal area.

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So, 50 institutions actually participated for this 4…

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So for that, what we did was, we actually

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had this 4-week summer programme for these teachers,

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along with that, we also tried to help them

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by developing a lab manual.

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For example, ‘How many experiments you can

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conduct in Heat Transfer Lab.’

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And that was quite a success because,

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for the next 4-5 years, because in most of these

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colleges you know, they have to go through a…

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long drawn out procedure

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to have any syllabus changes occurring,

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because there should be a university level and all that.

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So that is the reason why it took some time,

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but eventually, a large number of institutions in the country

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started teaching Heat Transfer as a

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subject in the undergraduate programme.

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I remember this very well sir because I

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joined in ‘71 with you

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and I was part of that first M.Tech. course specialization.

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So, the point here is that

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the…Heat Transfer for teaching undergraduate students

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and bringing that into the Master’s programme,

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actually was done by IIT Madras,

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with the encouragement of Professor Ramachandran, and

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Professor Sastry was there and Professor M. V. Krishnamurthy Prof. Sastry: Yes.

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Prof. Kolar: was in the Refrigeration Lab. Prof. Sastry: Refrigeration Lab.

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That's how Heat Transfer took routes

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probably Professor Sukhatme who was a

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Prof. Kolar: student of Professor [indistinct]. Prof. Sastry: [Indistinct] of.

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And then…he is a Heat Transfer man, he had…

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also was…sir, how about Professor A. K. Mohanty,

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did he participate in this…from IIT Kharagpur?

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Prof. Sastry: At that time he did not, but Prof. Kolar: Okay

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basically what Mohanty was doing was,

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he was in the…of course, Mechanical Engineering Department

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in IIT Kharagpur, but when we…to actually

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go ahead with this…1971 when we had this,

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Dr. Ramachandran…you know, he is a…

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in fact, I greatly respect him because he had Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

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tremendous vision of so many things. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

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One thing is this ‘Introduction of Heat Transfer’ as a

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basic core course in the undergraduate programme

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all across the country that is number 1.

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Number 2, he said, that…“How about research?”

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And I am really quite

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surprised that he called me and he said,

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“Now we will take admission for Ph.D. students,

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so, take some.” Then

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Dr. Kolar was one of the first ones.

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So there are 3 students.

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In 1972, again there was a batch of students and I took

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3 students already…under me

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and I was thinking that. you know, it is

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too much for me because,

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he said…he comes and says, “Take two more.

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Take two more.” He said, “That is because…”

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You know, my problem was, I worked actually

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for my Ph.D. programme in a Space Research, Space Heat Transfer.

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In India we were very much on…on the ground. Mr. Sathasivam: Yeah.

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Prof. Sastry: Nowhere near space. Mr. Sathasivam: That’s right.

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So therefore, what happened was that,

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I myself was not really experienced in

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several areas of applications of the Theory of Heat Transfer.

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So he said, “Take two more.”

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His idea was, if I take five students

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in five different aspects of Heat Transfer,

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some initiation of research can take place.

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That…later on I found out the wisdom in that

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because I think we have tried to develop

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a Heat Transfer Lab very nicely because of his guidance.

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Mr. Sathasivam: Sir, did Professor Ramachandran also initiate

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these outreach programmes that you mentioned,

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the Teacher Training Programmes that you conducted in summer,

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in other branches in other labs and so on?

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Actually this summer programme that I conducted

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was not initiated by him

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it was the so called Ministry of…you know

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HRD the…the other… Prof. Kolar: Ministry of Education.

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Prof. Sastry: So called Quality Improvement Programme. Prof. Kolar: Quality.

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Quality Improvement Programme. They wanted to

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actually have this for the…because this is for the teachers,

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for the quality improvement.

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So that is how it actually started.

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But then, his vision was,

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how to make this particular subject

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very important and prominent one in the country,

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because it actually…Heat Transfer is the subject

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that cuts across several disciplines.

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Aerospace it is there, in Chemical Engineering it is there, in…

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of course, Mechanical Engineering obviously.

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so because of that he wanted…

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but…that it should develop actually quite well

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all across, and so, he wanted to…say,

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“Why don't we have a…

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because you have now international contacts,”

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Prof. Kolar: Yeah. Prof. Sastry: “Why don't you invite these

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people from abroad, and then

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we will have an international conference?”

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But then finally, we decided, first of all let us

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find out what is the extent of research that is

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being done in the country,

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before we take this international step.

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So we wanted to have the First

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National Heat Transfer Conference Prof. Kolar: Yes.

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in 1972. And he wanted us to organize this one and

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Dr. Krishnamurthy and myself, we were the organizing secretaries. Prof. Kolar: Yes sir.

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Prof. Sastry: And we start a Mr. Sathasivam: Dr. M. V. Krishnamurthy.

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Prof. Kolar: M. V. Krishnamurthy Mr. Sathasivam: Right.

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Prof. Kolar: So it was in…during the Bangladesh War.

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Prof. Kolar: 1971 December 1st to 3rd in CLT. Mr. Sathasivam: Ah, yes.

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And big names, Professor Hartnett

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Prof. Kolar: Professor [indistinct]. Prof. Sastry: Spalding

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Professor Spalding from U.K.,

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Professor Kadambi from IIT Kanpur,

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Prof. Kolar: [Indistinct] from Uni…Russia. Prof. Sastry: Russia.

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For us…we had just then joined for research, it was a

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big thing that…we had not heard of Heat Transfer as a topic.

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I am dwelling a little bit on this because

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we started Heat Transfer research,

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not only teaching, but research. This conference brought together

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all the research community.

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Sir and I am very happy to tell you, it is running

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very successfully, the next one is being held

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in the December of…every 2 years it changes.

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So, Professor Ramachandran's vision. Prof. Sastry: Vision.

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And the hard work that you and others…Professor

00:18:56

M. V. Krishnamurthy and others put in, has…really [Inaudible]

00:19:00

In fact, 1972 when we had…’71 we had this conference,

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and ’73, we had the second conference in IIT Kanpur. Prof. Kolar: Kanpur.

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Kanpur. And then, Dr. Ramachandran said,

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“Now look…it looks like

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we have a reasonably good work that is being done

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both in the research laboratories,

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education institutions and as well as industry to some extent.

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So, why don't we have a society?” Prof. Kolar: Yes.

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So, he said that, “We will have a…

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we will…we will form an Indian Heat Transfer Society.”

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So he gave me the task of

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memorandum of association… Prof. Kolar: Following the constitution for the…

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Constitution, and all that.

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So we worked on it, and then 1974 we

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established the Indian Society for Heat and Mass Transfer. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:19:58

Prof. Sastry: Heat and Mass Transfer. Prof. Kolar: With our Heat Transfer Lab as the headquarters.

00:20:01

Prof. Sastry: As the headquarters. Prof. Kolar: Even…even today it is so, sir.

00:20:04

Yeah, actually, 1974 onwards, until 1991, I had the

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responsibility of being the secretary.

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So for 17 years…

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because there is nobody else that is willing to take.

00:20:17

Prof. Kolar: Yeah. Mr. Sathasivam: You would have been the Founder Secretary.

00:20:18

Prof. Sastry: Founder Secretary that's right. Prof. Kolar: Yeah yeah.

00:20:20

So, how about that Regional Centre?

00:20:21

This also connected with Heat Transfer and Energy, actually. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

00:20:24

See by that time, Dr. Ramachandran left actually in

00:20:26

1973, to take over as

00:20:29

Secretary, Department of Science and Technology.

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In fact, that's what

00:20:33

I…another thing that I…aspect of Dr. Ramachandran:

00:20:36

he is a an institution builder.

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He went and established the DST:

00:20:43

Department of Science and Technology. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:20:45

And afterwards of course, he…from

00:20:47

there he shifted to United Nations, and he

00:20:49

established the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements.

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Prof. Kolar: In…in Nairobi. Mr. Sathasivam: Yes, yes.

00:20:54

Prof. Sastry: In Nairobi. Mr. Sathasivam: Yes.

00:20:54

So, in that sense he is actually a creator of institutions,

00:20:57

because of his visionary outlook.

00:21:01

So, after he went to DST,

00:21:06

there was actually an International Centre for

00:21:09

Heat and Mass Transfer in Yugoslavia

00:21:11

that was established with the assistance of UNESCO.

00:21:15

So, several of my international colleagues in the area,

00:21:21

they were associated with that Centre,

00:21:23

they said, “Now that…” because these people

00:21:27

have attended the conferences in 1971, ‘73 and

00:21:31

‘75 in IIT Bombay, they saw

00:21:35

the kind of work that is being done.

00:21:37

So what they said is, “Why don't we have…

00:21:40

not only India, but in the entire Asian Region, we will do it.”

00:21:46

So the…UNESCO actually sent a delegation

00:21:51

to tour various countries, of which actually Dr. Ramachandran was

00:21:54

a part of…that delegation.

00:21:57

And then the Yugoslavian Centre's Secretary

00:22:00

General was another member,

00:22:03

and of course, my former advisor

00:22:05

in Chicago, he was also another member.

00:22:08

They toured these countries and then they said,

00:22:11

“Yeah, it is time for us to have actually a

00:22:15

Centre for Asian countries, Asia and Pacific countries.

00:22:19

Prof. Kolar: Yeah Pacific. Prof. Sastry: Again, Dr. Ramachandran had the responsibility,

00:22:24

and by that time he was already in the DST, very busy and all that.

00:22:29

So he asked me to create that Centre.

00:22:34

So, I again drafted the constitution, and also

00:22:38

had several representatives from

00:22:40

Bangladesh and Indonesia and other places.

00:22:44

So we formed the Executive Committee and the

00:22:47

Board of Directors from Japan, for example.

00:22:50

So we created that Centre,

00:22:53

and then Dr. Ramachandran said, “Why don't we

00:22:54

start actually publishing a journal, Prof. Kolar: Journal.

00:22:57

taking into consideration the articles from these things.”

00:23:00

So, I also became the first editor of the

00:23:04

journal, he is the editor, and of course, the Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:23:07

Scientific Secretary of that (clears throat) that Centre.

00:23:12

He said, “Once we start this one, we have to do it

00:23:15

immediately.” He is…he is quite

00:23:17

impatient about getting things done.

00:23:20

So, first journal, should come out by December of 1978.

00:23:26

So we started this Regional Centre

00:23:29

in 1977, [indistinct] approved.

00:23:32

So the first journal should come actually in ’79…‘78 December.

00:23:37

We got it, but in those days as you know very well,

00:23:40

the printing and all that is…the words should be arranged in the

00:23:44

Mr. Sathasivam: Manual typesetting. Prof. Kolar: Yeah yeah yeah.

00:23:46

Mr. Sathasivam: That’s right. Prof. Kolar: Oh

00:23:48

Prof. Kolar: The First Heat Transfer Conference, we were all research scholars,

00:23:50

every day used to go to the printing press for proofreading,

00:23:53

we looked at the equations and said, “What

00:23:56

are all these equations? We don't understand whatever.”

00:23:58

All the research scholars, we had a fantastic

00:24:00

experience of those times. Prof. Sastry: And the printing

00:24:03

press was actually in the old Shopping Centre. Prof. Kolar: Shopping Centre.

00:24:06

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes. Prof. Sastry: In our

00:24:06

Mr. Sathasivam: Yeah. Prof. Sastry: Campus

00:24:07

Prof. Kolar: So this is very nice to hear

00:24:09

from you directly the… Prof. C. S. Swamy: I have one…

00:24:11

Prof. Kolar: Yeah please go ahead, go ahead, yeah.

00:24:14

Prof. Swamy: Now you said that Professor Ramachandran

00:24:17

Prof. Swamy: was interested in starting Heat Transfer,

00:24:20

Prof. Swamy: [Inaudible] to do with his being

00:24:24

Chairman of the Research Council of Defence Laboratory

00:24:28

You know he was Chairman of the Research Council DMR.

00:24:31

In fact, again I want to ask you, ‘72 I think

00:24:36

the Director of [indistinct] Narayanan

00:24:40

came with the delegation, and they wanted the IIT to

00:24:44

sub…submit projects. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

00:24:47

In fact, most of the projects submitted [Inaudible]

00:24:50

Maybe, I had also submitted a project.

00:24:53

Now why I am telling this, there was something about

00:24:56

he was thinking of rocket cones,

00:24:59

and then it was getting…could not be used again, because oblation.

00:25:06

So he said that we can [Inaudible]

00:25:09

So I had proposed something.

00:25:12

So about a coating of ceramic,

00:25:14

and a ceramic metal and a metal.

00:25:17

I said, “The most important thing is, you have to make the [Inaudible]

00:25:22

and we shall have a plasma torch to do this.”

00:25:25

In fact, my project was submitted,

00:25:28

but was not funded, but I

00:25:30

came to know much later that the plasma

00:25:33

torch was purchased by the Council. Prof. Sastry: Okay.

00:25:36

Prof. Swamy: But what I am telling you is, did Ramachandran get

00:25:39

interested in Heat Transfer because of its application in…

00:25:42

Prof. Sastry: First of all, Dr. Ramachandran himself

00:25:44

was actually…he had his Ph.D. from Purdue University. Prof. Swamy: I know.

00:25:47

Prof. Sastry: So in the…in the subject of Heat Transfer. Prof. Kolar: Heat Transfer.

00:25:49

Prof. Sastry: That is number 1. And of course, he was,

00:25:51

you know, Head of the Department in IISc Bangalore,

00:25:54

but more importantly, he wanted,

00:25:57

in fact, now that you mentioned about the

00:26:00

Sponsored Research and Industrial

00:26:03

Collaboration. In 1972-73…

00:26:09

Again Dr. Ramachandran said, “Somehow you know, when we do

00:26:11

something, we should also interact with the industry.” Prof. Kolar: Industry.

00:26:14

Prof. Sastry: “Industry-Institute interaction must be there.”

00:26:18

There used to be what is called RDOEI. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:26:21

Research and Development Organisation for Electrical Industry

00:26:24

In the Ministry of Heavy Industry in Centre, at the Centre.

00:26:30

So, he…the…a request came from there,

00:26:34

saying that, “You know, our…our motors and all these

00:26:38

things are becoming actually very large in size,

00:26:41

electrically we can do all these things, but because of the

00:26:45

cooling problem we are not able to

00:26:46

reduce this size for the same capacity.

00:26:49

So, can you please do something.” Because

00:26:53

because they know that Dr. Ramachandran was…say

00:26:57

expert in heat transfer, and he was Director here.

00:27:00

So they contacted him. Then he asked me and

00:27:06

Dr. Krishnamurthy, V. Krishnamurthy to look into this.

00:27:11

So Dr. Krishnamurthy by that time he changed his interests into. Prof. Kolar: Refrigeration.

00:27:15

Prof. Sastry: Refrigeration and air conditioning. So, we went to Bhopal, and as usual

00:27:22

you know the…the they were all buying the

00:27:25

drawings and equipment and everything

00:27:27

from associate electrical industries

00:27:29

which was supplying the equipment to them, and

00:27:32

they were not really interested in collaborating,

00:27:34

but luckily because of Dr. Ramachandran's

00:27:38

personal connection, Dr. V. Krishnamurthy, at that time. Prof. Kolar: Oh yes.

00:27:45

Prof. Sastry: Yeah. Prof. Kolar: BHEL

00:27:47

Prof. Kolar: top man. Prof. Sastry: BHEL…this thing, top man.

00:27:49

He said, “Let them go…come and look at it.”

00:27:53

But even though the faculty, the staff there were not very

00:27:57

cooperative, there was one Mr. Walker,

00:28:01

a 75-year-old man coming from AEI,

00:28:05

he himself said it’s a good idea if the…

00:28:08

because we don't understand what is happening there,

00:28:10

so theory must be also

00:28:12

matching with the…our experimental work.

00:28:16

So, let them do this. And because of Dr. Krishnamurthy’s

00:28:21

help, they supplied to us

00:28:24

all the drawings and other things like that, then we started.

00:28:28

In fact, that RDOEI industry project in 1972,

00:28:32

that they gave us about one and half lakhs or so.

00:28:34

Prof. Kolar: That is large amount at that time.

00:28:36

Prof. Sastry: That was the probably the first major

00:28:39

sponsored research project that came to us.

00:28:43

To IIT. Prof. Swamy: I see.

00:28:44

Earlier, there might be…you know some…

00:28:48

as far as my knowledge goes, that is the first major…this thing.

00:28:51

That is because of the fact that

00:28:54

there were administrative difficulties later on,

00:28:59

regarding…you know, how to distribute the

00:29:01

money and all that kind of thing, and that is the reason why

00:29:03

they said, we have to make some

00:29:05

policy and there are certain rules.

00:29:07

That is the reason why I am assuming, that that is the first

00:29:12

sponsored research project that came from outside.

00:29:15

So, for 3 years that I was associated with

00:29:19

Dr. Ramachandran 1970 to ‘73,

00:29:23

he started with several different friends,

00:29:27

for example, he also started some interdisciplinary Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:29:35

programmes, but because he was…

00:29:37

he is way ahead of his times,

00:29:39

they didn't really take off.

00:29:41

Prof. Kolar: It took 45 years for them to materialize.

00:29:44

Yeah, interdisciplinary the reason why he was saying

00:29:47

was, because of his intense interest…should be promoted.

00:29:51

Departments should not be…you know,

00:29:55

the walls should not be built around the departments.

00:29:58

There should be constant interaction and exchange of ideas

00:30:01

and collaborative work among the

00:30:04

departments. That's what his intention was.

00:30:07

But it started and he was actually…along with

00:30:10

me, you know Dr. Natarajan and T. K. Bose and Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:30:14

Some others of…the people, he

00:30:17

actually invited them from abroad.

00:30:19

Prof. Kolar: Sir, Professor Natarajan also joined just a year or two after you?

00:30:22

Prof. Sastry: No, in fact, around the same time. Prof. Kolar: Same.

00:30:24

Prof. Kolar: And Professor Bose also. Prof. Sastry: Few months.

00:30:26

Mr. Sathasivam: Actually, who were your colleagues?

00:30:27

Mr. Sathasivam: So, you mentioned Professor Krishnamurthy

00:30:29

Mr. Sathasivam: and Professor Ramachandran himself. Prof. Sastry: Heat Transfer,

00:30:31

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes. Prof. Sastry: Professor…Heat Transfer actually

00:30:33

these are the people, and of course, in

00:30:35

Chemical Engineering, then Professor Gopichand,

00:30:38

Prof. Kolar: Professor T. Gopichand. Prof. Sastry: Gopichand was working,

00:30:40

Yeah, Professor Gopichand was working.

00:30:42

Prof. Kolar: Professor K. Subbaraj. Prof. Sastry: K. Subbaraju.

00:30:44

Prof. Kolar: Of Prof. Sastry: Subbaraju, Subbaraju was working

00:30:46

Prof. Kolar: Dr. Sathyanarayana’s father. Prof. Swamy: Yeah, yeah.

00:30:50

He was the Heat Transfer professor.

00:30:52

So…so there was basically a good group of

00:30:56

people working here, in various departments. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:31:00

But the question is that the interaction

00:31:04

he wanted to develop, and that is the reason why he was

00:31:07

trying his best and he did a very good job as far as I am concerned.

00:31:11

Prof. Kolar: Sir, now that we are in this topic of research,

00:31:13

Heat Transfer of course, now we have information.

00:31:18

When we were research scholars, we saw the…a

00:31:20

Solar Thermal Power Plant in BSB;

00:31:22

this was in the mid ‘70s.

00:31:25

Professor Ramachandran went to

00:31:27

start the department of non…no no, DST as Secretary.

00:31:31

I think he started the Department of Non-conventional Energy Sources. Prof. Sastry: Yeah, right.

00:31:34

Prof. Kolar: So, what was his role in initiating the solar energy research, here?

00:31:37

Prof. Sastry: He actually…as I said, Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:31:40

Prof. Sastry: even the DST when he was Secretary,

00:31:43

with regard to this Regional Centre for Asia and Pacific,

00:31:48

regarding that matter, I visited Delhi, and

00:31:51

I met him in his office. He was so much interested in solar energy. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:31:57

In fact, he said casually, “Sastry, do you think

00:32:01

that, like Atomic Energy Commission,

00:32:04

in this country, should we have a Solar Energy Commission?”

00:32:07

Mr. Sathasivam: Right. Prof. Kolar: These were in ’73

00:32:08

Mr. Sathasivam: Right. Prof. Kolar: ‘74.

00:32:09

Prof. Sastry: This was in 1974-75 time frame. Mr. Sathasivam: Yes.

00:32:12

He was thinking, then…I just casually of course,

00:32:16

because I had this freedom with him to… Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:32:19

Prof. Sastry: have talk, I just…I said, “Unfortunately we should

00:32:23

not…we should first of all develop

00:32:27

a total overall plan for the energy in the entire country.”

00:32:33

For example, energy comes from you know, solar and of course,

00:32:36

from fossil fuels and hydro

00:32:38

and all…what are our resources available in each

00:32:42

one of these areas, and what is our projected

00:32:46

growth rate and what is the amount of

00:32:48

our needs, so far as energy is concerned.

00:32:51

I said, “Already right now, we have…”, actually

00:32:55

at that time, Ministry of Power, Ministry of Water is different.

00:32:59

Prof. Kolar: Ministry of Coal. Prof. Sastry: Coal is different, coal is different.

00:33:02

So, each person actually is…atomic energy of

00:33:05

course, anyway is different.

00:33:07

So, each person actually is having…

00:33:10

and each area is having its own empire, so to speak.

00:33:14

So to say solar energy, wind energy

00:33:18

will become another…Wind Energy Commission.

00:33:20

So, can we avoid that?

00:33:24

He said, “No no, I was just intellectually I was discussing.”

00:33:27

So, what I am trying to say is, Prof. Kolar: He had.

00:33:29

Prof. Sastry: He had that. Prof. Kolar: Absolutely.

00:33:31

You know he was looking into the future, and in that

00:33:34

context only, we also had actually solar

00:33:37

Prof. Kolar: Yes 10 kilo watt thermal power plant. Prof. Sastry: 10 kilo watt station

00:33:41

actually developed here, probably that is the first one

00:33:43

Prof. Kolar: I think so, it is the first one. Prof. Sastry: First one.

00:33:45

Prof. Kolar: Solar energy research, again, to the best of

00:33:47

my knowledge, started in IIT Madras.

00:33:48

Mr. Sathasivam: The first in the country, sir? Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:33:50

Prof. Sastry: Yeah, first in the country. Mr. Sathasivam: Right.

00:33:51

Prof. Kolar: Definitely in the IIT system and the educational institutions,

00:33:54

and there was no…he started the Non-Conventional Energy Centre

00:33:58

which now is MNES. Professor Ramachadran started. Prof. Sastry: Yeah, he started that one.

00:34:02

Mr. Sathasivam: Right. Prof. Sastry: Actually, earlier, there was some…

00:34:07

in the area…in the…in the department under the National

00:34:09

Physical Laboratories and physics area,

00:34:12

some work was supposedly…we have done in the solar.

00:34:15

Mostly there were actually solar cookers, solar

00:34:18

water heaters and that kind of thing.

00:34:20

But not in terms of producing energy. Prof. Kolar: Power

00:34:23

Prof. Sastry: Power. Prof. Kolar: Yeah, Professor Ramachandran was a man of vision,

00:34:29

he initiated so many programmes for the country.

00:34:32

There was slightly shift focus, because you also…

00:34:34

for the Founder Professor of the Educational Technology Cell.

00:34:38

Today, this is a very big thing again

00:34:40

and through that cell we have the NPTEL

00:34:42

Programme which is extremely popular in the country and

00:34:45

now it’s simply expanding, but you are the originator

00:34:48

of that, can you say a few words about it?

00:34:51

Yeah, actually what happened was that…this happened

00:34:53

actually in 1985 or ‘86 Prof. Kolar: Professor Srin…no…

00:35:00

Prof. Kolar: Professor Indiresan? Prof. Sastry: That was in ‘86 and ‘87

00:35:02

because I took over as Head of the Department in 1986. Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:35:07

So one day, in 1987 or something,

00:35:10

one…suddenly just before the financial year comes to an end,

00:35:16

in January or so, we received suddenly a

00:35:20

fax message…the Director received a fax message

00:35:25

saying that they have got additional funds. Prof. Swamy: As usual.

00:35:28

Prof. Kolar: What do you will do with this?

00:35:30

So, we are now giving actually 2 crores

00:35:34

to each of the 5 IITs…to develop an Educational Technology Cell. I see.

00:35:43

So, it came, first meeting actually took place

00:35:46

in Delhi, and I think Professor Raina

00:35:50

from Electrical Engineering Department, he went.

00:35:53

They thought nothing will come out, but then a

00:35:57

few days later, suddenly another fax comes and says,

00:36:00

“Send your representative with complete plan as a fraction.”

00:36:05

So then, Professor Srinath, who was the Director at that time,

00:36:08

he asked Raina, he said, “I am not interested, nothing is

00:36:11

going to happen, nothing.” Unfortunately

00:36:16

or fortunately, I happened to be in Director’s

00:36:20

Office at that time, because I was trying to go

00:36:23

to Delhi for…in connection with my UNESCO Centre.

00:36:27

So, he said, “You go.” Professor Raina said, “You go.”

00:36:33

I said, “What do I do with it, I don’t know?”

00:36:35

He said, “You study, these are the materials, you just

00:36:38

do this. This is what they want.”

00:36:41

So, I worked on it for 2-3 days: tried to at least

00:36:46

bring up some questions, you know what

00:36:48

exactly is going to happen and all.

00:36:49

So we…I attended the meeting.

00:36:52

Then it appeared to be, that they are in a hurry to give funds,

00:36:57

and they did not have much idea,

00:37:00

we also did not have much idea.

00:37:04

So, anyway they are giving the funds,

00:37:06

so, let us create the infrastructure.

00:37:09

And other people later on you know will take it up and...

00:37:12

So, that is how it started.

00:37:14

So, as soon as I came…luckily for me

00:37:18

because I was heading the department,

00:37:21

there was space constraint you know, nobody is willing to

00:37:24

give any…for studio and all that.

00:37:27

So, because of the Mechanical Sciences Block, you know

00:37:30

I was the Head of the Department…under our control,

00:37:32

there was one 356. Prof. Kolar: MSB.

00:37:35

Prof. Sastry: MSB 356 room number. Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes.

00:37:38

Prof. Kolar: It was there for a long time since we shifted to this place. Prof. Sastry: Yeah, it was actually a drawing…this thing,

00:37:42

because by the time, 5 year programme

00:37:45

became 4 year programme, a lot of drawing

00:37:47

instruction was cut from the B.Tech. programme.

00:37:51

So, several of these drawing halls became actually… Prof. Swamy: Yeah, yeah.

00:37:55

vacant, and luckily for us, you know I was able to put it

00:38:00

in the department, and the department very

00:38:02

generously agreed; they did not contest, they said, “Okay,

00:38:05

you take that one”, and then we prepared that studio.

00:38:09

I remember a lot…how much time you spent on getting

00:38:12

the equipment from Japan, the Sony equipment.

00:38:14

You also had the first recruits from that.

00:38:17

Prof. Kolar: Our Ravindranath Mr. Sathasivam: Yes.

00:38:19

Prof. Kolar: was one of the first recruits at that time. Prof. Sastry: It had to go to the

00:38:21

board because basically what they

00:38:23

said is, “Okay, you are creating certain…you know, cameraman, producer

00:38:26

these are not names not normally not available in the IIT system.” Mr. Sathasivam: That’s right.

00:38:33

Prof. Sastry: IIT system. So, what is their career growth?

00:38:36

Supposing you take somebody else, how is he going to grow?

00:38:40

I said, “I don't know.” Prof. Kolar: At that time…

00:38:43

But that time…but with luckily because of

00:38:46

the you know, the generosity of the board as well as the

00:38:50

Director and all the people concerned,

00:38:52

they said…they said, “We will give you just three people:

00:38:57

one cameraman, producer and some other…”

00:39:01

Mr. Sathasivam: So, they were…were you producing videotapes of courses or? Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:39:05

Prof. Sastry: Yes, courses basically. Prof. Sathasivam: Because it was pre-internet and so on.

00:39:07

Prof. Sastry: Yeah, basically, the idea was to Mr. Sathasivam: Yes.

00:39:08

Prof. Sastry: get for example, lecturers and professors from

00:39:11

various departments, make tapes

00:39:15

on the subject matter, that is basically…

00:39:17

take a subject, you know like a Physics.

00:39:19

In that you would…for example,

00:39:21

undergraduate programme, there is a first year or second year Physics,

00:39:25

the person…the professor actually gives some series of lectures.

00:39:30

So you, for…for a semester, let us say total

00:39:33

about 30-40 lectures you give.

00:39:36

So you make them into about 20 or so, lectures. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:39:43

So that the concepts can be explained

00:39:46

by the experts, and send them to various other engineering colleges

00:39:50

if they want to…practically for free.

00:39:54

Mr. Sathasivam: So, these copies were disseminated to colleges. Prof. Kolar: Colleges, yeah.

00:39:57

Prof. Kolar: So this was much before NPTEL came in. Prof. Sastry: That is the

00:39:59

before NPTEL, that is the idea. Mr. Sathasivam: I see.

00:40:00

Prof. Kolar: Yeah, yeah [Inaudible] Prof. Sastry: So, that is

00:40:03

That is how the first…I think the

00:40:05

Professor V. G. K. Murti, Professor Roshan and

00:40:07

Prof. Kolar: Lots of people. Prof. Sastry: few others started…

00:40:09

Prof. Swamy: …50 rupees books.

00:40:11

Prof. Sastry and Prof. Kolar: No no, tapes.

00:40:13

Prof. Sastry: Video tapes.

00:40:15

Prof. Kolar: This was in the…there is a studio that was there in the MSB.

00:40:18

Mr. Sathasivam: The legacy is still there I think.

00:40:20

Prof. Sastry: In fact. Mr. Sathasivam: I think there is still a studio there.

00:40:21

Prof. Sastry: Studio there and it also…we soundproofed it.

00:40:24

We have to…we had to bring experts to soundproof it. Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes sir.

00:40:29

Sir, now we are on this topic of Centre,

00:40:31

you are also aware that the Industrial

00:40:33

Consultancy Centre, which is now the ICSR

00:40:36

was started, and also there was Engineering Design Centre.

00:40:39

Prof. Sastry: Yes. Prof. Kolar: Today we have a Department of Engineering Design.

00:40:41

So, these two are ahead, I mean. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

00:40:44

Prof. Kolar: You started this, can you…your experience with this?

00:40:47

Prof. Sastry: Actually, when I was heading the Department,

00:40:51

the Engineering Design Centre in the…

00:40:53

there was an Engineering Design Centre in the

00:40:55

Department of Mechanical Engineering.

00:40:58

And I don't know the starting time,

00:41:02

probably, it was there for a long time,

00:41:04

because basically 1970…’70

00:41:09

when I joined it was still…it was there at that time.

00:41:11

It was there. What that Engineering Design Centre had was

00:41:17

people from Physics background

00:41:20

and Mechanical Engineering background

00:41:23

and the people from the Physics Department

00:41:27

are also basically in the area of optics.

00:41:30

Optics. So, when…1987 or so,

00:41:38

Professor Srinath said, “What is this,

00:41:40

what is this Centre doing here?”

00:41:42

So, let the physicist go to the Physics Department

00:41:47

and the other people go to Mechanical Engineering Department. Prof. Kolar: Mechanical.

00:41:52

There was obviously, you know, there is a

00:41:55

Prof. Kolar: Different opinions at that time. Prof. Sastry: Different opinion

00:41:57

kind of thing with the Physics Department…our department, [Inaudible]

00:42:01

but we…we have to put through the

00:42:04

Departmental Consultative Committee, we did it

00:42:06

and finally, with the understanding that

00:42:10

the each departmental staff strength

00:42:13

will not be affected. These people were allowed to Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:42:18

Prof. Sastry: shift two departments. Prof. Swamy: Because that is Professor Sirohi

00:42:20

Prof. Sastry: Professor Sirohi. Prof. Kolar: Professor R. S. Sirohi,

00:42:23

Prof. Kolar: then Dr. Chennabasavayya from Mechanical Department. Prof. Swamy: I know, I know, I know.

00:42:26

Prof. Sastry: Chennabasavayya came…Kalam Prof. Kolar: Kalam…Kalam was there.

00:42:30

So, these people came to Mechanical Engineering Department.

00:42:34

So, they joined the Machine Design group and so forth.

00:42:36

So, that is how the…but Engineering Design Centre

00:42:41

used to work for some time,

00:42:43

but their collaboration with the industry

00:42:47

in most departments, was basically very very

00:42:50

Prof. Kolar: Yes. Prof. Sastry: small at that time because

00:42:52

the culture still did not develop to that extent right,

00:42:57

like for example, today. Prof. Kolar: Today.

00:42:59

Absolutely. How about the inter…ICC

00:43:03

Professor Wagner was the first person. Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

00:43:05

Professor Wagner was the first person,

00:43:07

I think the second person who…to take over

00:43:10

from him was the…Professor Narayanamurthi.

00:43:12

Prof. Kolar: Narayanamurthi. So this was when Professor Ramachandran was there

00:43:15

Prof. Kolar: or after that? Pandalai. Prof. Sastry: Professor Pandalai. Professor Pandalai was there.

00:43:19

Because Pandalai took over in 1973, I think.

00:43:23

Prof. Kolar: Yes. December 10th. Prof. Sastry: November or December. December, December.

00:43:27

So, he…during his tenure only,

00:43:33

the Heads of Departments, you know the deanships

00:43:37

were created and all. They were not called ‘Dean’ at that time,

00:43:39

it was called ‘Professor-in-charge.’ Prof. Swamy: Yeah.

00:43:42

Professor-in-charge of Industrial Consultancy Centre.

00:43:46

Professor-in-charge of academic courses, like that. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:43:49

So, then later on it…it formally became

00:43:53

Prof. Kolar: Dean. Prof. Sastry: Dean. So, the

00:43:55

senior most Heads of Departments actually

00:43:57

were requested to occupy these

00:44:01

new Professor-in-charge positions.

00:44:03

And Professor Narayanamurthi became the

00:44:06

Prof. Kolar: He became. Prof. Sastry: Professor-in-charge at that time.

00:44:07

So, I think this took place around ‘75 or ‘75. Prof. Kolar: ‘5.

00:44:12

Prof. Kolar: Professor Pandalai was the Director at that time. Prof. Sastry: Pandalai was the Director at that time.

00:44:15

Now as you know it has grown into a very big Centre.

00:44:18

So, lots of the…the seeds for today's Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

00:44:21

activities of IIT Madras,

00:44:23

obviously, in ‘70s and ‘80s because of some

00:44:26

very visionary people and their efforts.

00:44:28

So, slightly shifting focus,

00:44:30

you were also Chairman of the Vanavani Committee.

00:44:32

Prof. Sastry: Yes. Prof. Kolar: What, what was the situation?

00:44:34

What were your contributions there? Prof. Sastry: Yeah, Professor Indiresan

00:44:37

actually…one day called me and he said,

00:44:42

“Will you take over the Vanavani School?” Prof. Swamy: Okay.

00:44:44

So, I said, “It so happened my children also were going to

00:44:50

Vanavani and Vanavani actually had a very good reputation

00:44:54

in the city at that time…was one of the best schools

00:44:57

because…primarily because Mrs. Peter was the principal.

00:45:02

The…excellent principal. So,

00:45:04

she brought up the reputation like anything.

00:45:07

So I thought, okay, but unfortunately,

00:45:11

the funds availability was not very high, number 1,

00:45:14

second thing is the employees…

00:45:18

there was a rule in Vanavani School

00:45:20

that 50 percent of the children must be from…from the IIT,

00:45:27

and every child must be every child

00:45:30

requesting admission to Vanavani from within IIT,

00:45:36

he or she…she should be provided.

00:45:38

So you cannot deny the admission.

00:45:41

So that was the condition.

00:45:43

So, usually we used to have approximately

00:45:45

about 1800 to 2000 children.

00:45:48

So about 1000 or so, used to be from

00:45:51

within IIT, and 1000 from outside.

00:45:55

So, what happened was, there was a

00:45:57

large demand from the Employees Association

00:46:03

that earlier there used to be ISC system

00:46:08

the Union School Certificate… Mr. Sathasivam: Yes.

00:46:10

Secondary Certificate System. But they wanted to

00:46:16

make it into a State Board.

00:46:21

So…so…so there was a big problem because

00:46:25

the State Board means, the…they said they had

00:46:29

alternatives: either to run it as a private school

00:46:32

with State Board this thing,

00:46:34

or hand it over to the state government,

00:46:37

in which case the teachers employed…

00:46:40

all these people will be employed.

00:46:41

Control will be completely only by them,

00:46:43

the transfer the…this thing, and second…thirdly,

00:46:46

more importantly, the medium of instruction should be Tamil.

00:46:51

And because of the nature of our

00:46:55

institution, lot of people were not willing to have the

00:47:01

Tamil-medium instruction in the school. Prof. Kolar: I see.

00:47:04

So therefore, what to do?

00:47:07

So we have to have it, and the

00:47:11

funds availability was not very high.

00:47:14

So, prior to taking over as Chairman,

00:47:16

I was on the Management Committee for 2 years.

00:47:19

So I knew the problems. So therefore,

00:47:23

what we tried to do is, I introduced the thing which is…

00:47:26

initially there was some resistance;

00:47:27

basically what I said was,

00:47:30

“For providing all this infrastructure, you know,

00:47:33

free electricity, free water, free furniture,

00:47:35

free buildings and everything from the IIT

00:47:38

is a perquisites that is being given for the staff of the IIT.

00:47:43

But why should the outsiders

00:47:46

enjoy these things at the same tuition fees?”

00:47:50

So I said, “Tuition fees we cannot

00:47:52

differentiate: outsider or insider.”

00:47:56

So what I said is, “The establishment fees

00:47:59

we charge the outsiders. 150 rupees per year

00:48:05

per year.” Prof. Swamy: I see.

00:48:06

So if 1000 people were there, 1.5 lakhs was coming.

00:48:10

So I said okay, we now… Prof. Kolar: That was a…that is a large

00:48:12

Prof. Kolar: amount of money at that time. Prof. Sastry: That is a large amount in those days.

00:48:14

So that, we can increase the infrastructure. Mr. Sathasivam: When you say

00:48:17

those days it is the 1980s or

00:48:20

What period was your association with? Prof. Sastry: It is ‘80 to ‘84.

00:48:25

That was when the question of the mode arose

00:48:27

as well. the ‘81 or so, the period when…

00:48:29

Prof. Sastry: Which one? The… Prof. Kolar: Mode…that problem with the

00:48:31

Mr. Sathasivam: The ISC or the State Board...

00:48:33

Prof. Sastry: Yeah, in fact, which I changed…the system only from Mr. Sathasivam: That was the time.

00:48:35

Prof. Sastry: this previous one to State Board. Mr. Sathasivam: Yes, yes, yes, yes.

00:48:38

Prof. Sastry: State Board, that means ‘plus 2’ so called plus 2. Prof. Swamy: Yeah yeah yeah

00:48:41

Prof. Swamy: Of course. Prof. Sastry: Plus 2. And also around the same time,

00:48:45

the IIT also from a 5 year programme,

00:48:48

It changed to 4 year programme. Mr. Sathasivam: That’s right.

00:48:50

So, because of that, there was some surplus

00:48:55

lab facilities and here I must really

00:49:00

thank actually Dr. R. Srinivasan who was Physics…

00:49:03

he was Deputy Director at that time.

00:49:05

Deputy Director. He was very very cooperative, very nice.

00:49:10

He said, “Some of these experiments and all these things…

00:49:13

now that there is a plus 2,

00:49:16

let the school kids, you know, have the

00:49:19

advantage of these experiments.”

00:49:21

So he shifted actually some of this

00:49:24

equipment and all that…that

00:49:27

for Chemistry, Physics experiments.

00:49:30

He allowed us to use…the…

00:49:33

So that way, we were able to develop the

00:49:37

science labs in Vanavani.

00:49:41

In fact, which became a…which caused tremendous envy to

00:49:47

a large number of external examiners

00:49:49

Prof. Kolar: Yes. Prof. Sastry: Who were coming to examine our…our students.

00:49:53

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes. Prof. Sastry: Because each student was given actually one particular lab,

00:49:57

I mean, table, experiment, 48 students were there

00:50:02

in each section and each person actually had a…

00:50:06

under the table there is a shelf and everything,

00:50:08

they can put their stuff there.

00:50:09

We created that one.

00:50:11

So the establishment charges are 150,

00:50:14

what we tried to do was to…

00:50:18

how to…how to I wanted to

00:50:21

separate the primary school, secondary school,

00:50:24

and higher secondary school, in three units.

00:50:28

So for that primary, we wanted to shift from the

00:50:31

same place to another building which was there.

00:50:34

So, we wanted to have a top floor to construct that one.

00:50:38

Luckily for me, our managing committee

00:50:40

had Mr. Malayalam…was the Prof. Kolar: He was the

00:50:43

Prof. Sastry: Executive Engineer. Prof. Kolar: Executive Engineer.

00:50:44

So, I requested him, “Can we borrow some

00:50:48

bricks and cement and sand…things like that,”

00:50:52

Then there used to be Centre for Rural Development.

00:50:55

Prof. Kolar: Yes. So, Centre for Rural Development Head,

00:50:57

Dr. Radhakrishna I asked him…

00:51:00

they were doing some research about the Fibre-reinforced

00:51:03

concrete: FRC. Fibre-reinforced concrete,

00:51:07

which is a cheap material,

00:51:10

relatively speaking, compared to Portland cement.

00:51:13

So they were actually…

00:51:15

So they said, “Okay, why don't you use it?”

00:51:16

In that, the chicken mesh

00:51:18

you know, is the reinforcement, not the steel.

00:51:22

So, using that, we constructed. I think

00:51:25

today, still it is standing.

00:51:26

So, that we constructed, made rooms,

00:51:30

and the primary section was shifted there.

00:51:33

Mr. Sathasivam: Now this is within Vanavani, sir? Prof. Sastry: Within Vanavani.

00:51:35

Mr. Sathasivam: Right. Prof. Sastry: So basically, we borrowed the material from IIT,

00:51:39

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes. Prof. Sastry: Money, so far as these establishment charges

00:51:43

from the outsiders. With that, we were able to

00:51:46

bring the financial health of the school

00:51:51

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes. Prof. Sastry: to a reasonably good level.

00:51:54

Mr. Sathasivam: Yeah. Prof. Kolar: Sir, it’s interesting you mentioned CRD

00:51:57

because we were also there at that time.

00:51:59

Professor Indiresan started. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

00:52:00

You mentioned Dr. Radhakrishnan. He…you were…you were

00:52:03

talking about this son of Professor Bhagavantham Prof. Sastry: Son of

00:52:05

Professor Bhagavantham, yes. Prof. Kolar: who was in charge of the CR…

00:52:07

Prof. Sastry: He was Physics professor here.

00:52:08

Prof. Swamy: Hostel. Prof. Kolar: Yes. So, can you say something about the Centre?

00:52:14

The idea was… Prof. Sastry: The idea…

00:52:17

Prof. Kolar: From from Professor Indiresan at that time. Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

00:52:19

Prof. Sastry: Basically, the reason is that, you know

00:52:23

the…the national political situation

00:52:26

was such that you know, people wanted to have

00:52:29

always something connected to rural, rural, rural, rural area.

00:52:33

So, Professor Indiresan wanted to have a Centre

00:52:37

for Rural Development in the…in the there,

00:52:40

how to use for example,

00:52:42

whether for cooking purposes, or for

00:52:45

house building purposes, or whatever.

00:52:48

What kind of experts in our technology…

00:52:52

technological institutions? How they can actually

00:52:55

help the rural people

00:52:56

using the local substances and materials?

00:53:00

How we can improve their living conditions?

00:53:03

So as a part of that, they were taking several projects.

00:53:07

In fact, the energy also they were doing

00:53:09

something…wind energy also later on came because of that. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:53:12

And then they were trying to

00:53:14

have this for cheap construction.

00:53:20

They were developing this particular

00:53:22

Fibre-reinforced concrete. They were doing some experiments.

00:53:26

And Dr. Radhakrishna said, “You know, it…it…it

00:53:28

stands and there is…we have already experimented, it is okay,

00:53:32

so you can certainly use this.

00:53:34

and… Mr. Sathasivam: It was also known as ferrocement...I und…I remember, yes, yes.

00:53:38

Prof. Kolar: So we will come to academics and research.

00:53:41

I see that you were associated with 7 Directors

00:53:45

starting from Professor Ramachandran

00:53:47

up to Professor Natarajan, Prof. Sastry: Natarajan.

00:53:48

Prof. Kolar: during your stay here.

00:53:51

And quite a few changes happened in academics and research.

00:53:54

As you recall, in your experience, what would you say

00:53:57

in the…from the academics point of view?

00:53:59

Some important developments took place?

00:54:03

The…the academic side, basically as I was telling the

00:54:10

the…the creation of the deanships.

00:54:17

For example, the…the academic courses and research. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:54:23

So, there is a Board of Academic Research,

00:54:25

and Board of Academic Courses.

00:54:27

So therefore, there is a…every department actually

00:54:30

is represented in each of these boards.

00:54:33

And they determine what will be the kind of…

00:54:36

the curriculum or the research material

00:54:39

that you can have; research atmosphere.

00:54:43

For example, when I became Dean of Research,

00:54:48

Prof. Kolar: That was 1990. Prof. Sastry: 1990. ‘90 to ’93.

00:54:51

During that period, the…

00:54:55

for one of the first things that I tried to do,

00:54:57

because at that time, the students were taking

00:55:00

a long time to complete the Ph.D. and the

00:55:03

reason for this long time was primarily because,

00:55:07

from the time of submitting the synopsis and Ph.D.,

00:55:10

by the time they get the reports and all that,

00:55:12

that used to take a long time.

00:55:16

So therefore, of course, because of the difficulties

00:55:21

of equipment and funds and all that kind of

00:55:23

thing, anyway some delay was taking place.

00:55:26

But more than that, even the processing of the work Prof. Kolar: Thesis.

00:55:29

Prof. Sastry: Thesis, was getting delayed.

00:55:32

So I tried to first of all, collect over the previous

00:55:35

several years, what was the time that is being

00:55:37

taken by each department in terms of…

00:55:40

because we thought, I thought the…after all the person

00:55:45

completes his Ph.D.

00:55:46

he should enter the profession as early as possible.

00:55:49

It’s a…it's not fair for us to keep the student for too long.

00:55:53

Prof. Kolar: After submitting the Ph.D. thesis. Prof. Sastry: After submitting the Ph.D. also.

00:55:57

So, when I did that, I found certain

00:56:00

lacunae in the processing.

00:56:03

So we tried to first of all improve that one,

00:56:05

and I think fairly…we were able to

00:56:09

do this number 1. Number 2 is the quality of the Ph.D.,

00:56:14

because a large number of Ph.D.s coming out at that time.

00:56:19

In fact, at that time the number of Ph.D.s coming out

00:56:21

was itself very small. Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:56:23

For example, in mechanic…in…in the entire engineering areas,

00:56:26

it was only 29 or 30 per year.

00:56:30

Whereas, much more…much larger number in the…

00:56:34

from the Science and the Mathematics Departments. Prof. Kolar: Science, yeah sciences.

00:56:37

So, the question is, what about the quality?

00:56:42

So the quality is…one way of determining the

00:56:44

quality is the…out of the thesis,

00:56:48

how many papers are being published, Prof. Swamy: Yeah.

00:56:51

in refereed journals. So I found that

00:56:57

that number was not very great.

00:57:01

So we tried to propose Prof. Kolar: Sir, in fact, some Ph.D. thesis went…

00:57:04

passed without any publications also. Prof. Sastry: Without any…

00:57:07

Prof. Sastry: there are several, in fact. Prof. Kolar: No it is very important because today there are

00:57:10

many…big guidelines for theses pub…even submission.

00:57:15

So, it…it started at that time. Prof. Sastry: At that time.

00:57:17

Because basically what I proposed was,

00:57:19

I discussed it extensively in the Board of Academic Research

00:57:22

and then we tried to find out, okay,

00:57:25

when you submit the thesis, the synopsis,

00:57:28

by that time, you should have published:

00:57:33

two journal papers, whether international or national

00:57:36

doesn’t matter, should publish.

00:57:38

In the Board of Academic Research,

00:57:40

they said, “It’s too tough.”

00:57:41

So we said, “Okay, one journal publication

00:57:45

and one conference paper.” Prof. Swamy: Yeah.

00:57:47

So finally, the Board of Academic Research agreed,

00:57:51

So we put it before the…and I…

00:57:54

we…I went to the…Professor N. V. C. Swamy who was Director. Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:57:58

He said, “It’s a good thing, we should…

00:58:01

but it…when it came to the Senate, Prof. Kolar: Yes.

00:58:03

It ran into opposition and they said, “No, no”

00:58:07

because a large number of cases in engineering particularly

00:58:12

the…the data collection itself will take a long time

00:58:16

to prepare the unit itself,

00:58:20

the experimental unit itself in the

00:58:22

fabrication and all that, it takes a long time.

00:58:25

So it's not possible to do this, but anyway,

00:58:27

finally, what was decided was,

00:58:29

at least one paper in a journal or a conference,

00:58:34

internat…refereed conference, Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

00:58:37

it should be published.

00:58:38

So that is how it started.

00:58:40

So the quality improvement of the thesis,

00:58:43

we tried to at least introduce,

00:58:46

but I think nowadays, I think it is very common…

00:58:49

lot of…nowadays and moreover the

00:58:52

availability of resources also is much more now,

00:58:56

compared to…at that time.

00:58:57

Prof. Kolar: Also, earlier times, if you send a paper,

00:58:59

it would be take two weeks to reach. Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

00:59:02

And they would take months for…you know

00:59:05

peer review, and then we have to again go back

00:59:08

to them. It could take even year or even more than that.

00:59:11

Why, for example, in our subject, the Heat Transfer,

00:59:14

the International Journal of Heat Transfer

00:59:16

used to cost 125 dollars per year.

00:59:21

But the…just imagine, in those days,

00:59:26

if you submit in an United States, for example,

00:59:28

if you submit a paper, by the time it is reviewed

00:59:31

and all this kind of a thing and it see…it comes in

00:59:33

the print, it used to take about 9 months to 1 year.

00:59:36

Prof. Kolar: Oh even there, in those days. Prof. Sastry: Even there, in those days.

00:59:40

Now, that particular journal comes by sea mail.

00:59:44

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes. So it used to take 4 months or 5 months sometimes.

00:59:49

And first of all, this is one journal; international journal.

00:59:53

They are not enough funds here, because I was

00:59:55

Dean of Research, I was also in charge of the library. Prof. Kolar: Oh I see.

00:59:59

Mr. Sathasivam: The library committee was trying to

01:00:02

Mr. Sathasivam: you know economize some of the. Prof. Sastry: Economize.

01:00:04

Mr. Sathasivam: Yes, I remember that Prof. Sastry: In fact, I was

01:00:05

Prof. Sastry: I was the Mr. Sathasivam: Yes, that’s right.

01:00:06

Prof. Sastry: Chairman of that committee: Library Committee.

01:00:08

Departments were asked to prioritize

01:00:10

the journals, if I remember right. Prof. Sastry: Prioritize

01:00:11

Prof. Sastry: prioritize for example, Mr. Sathasivam: Yes, that’s right.

01:00:13

even the…the…what is that…chemical index or something.

01:00:15

Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes, engineering index. Engineering…engineering index.

01:00:18

Prof. Kolar: We are…all the journals. Some of those things

01:00:19

you know, they said, you know,

01:00:20

“Why don't you have this one?”

01:00:21

Consequently, what I am trying to say is,

01:00:23

the funds availability was low,

01:00:26

in addition to that, even if for example,

01:00:28

I submit in…in…in…in Heat Transfer

01:00:30

let us say there half a dozen,

01:00:32

I can submit only…I can only subscribe

01:00:34

only to one journal; this one.

01:00:36

This also comes after one and a half years.

01:00:38

In other words, the…the subject

01:00:40

if I am looking at, in the journal,

01:00:42

is actually one and a half years old. Prof. Kolar: Old. Mr. Sathasivam: Yes, yes.

01:00:45

So, these are the practical difficulties

01:00:47

in research, and we were trying to somehow, you know…

01:00:52

but the idea was there that

01:00:53

we recognize these problems,

01:00:55

and we were trying to find some solutions.

01:00:58

And in that sense I think

01:00:59

there was a lot of cooperation.

01:01:02

Occasionally there will be some

01:01:03

difference of opinions. Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes.

01:01:04

But generally speaking, we had very good cooperation

01:01:08

in terms of…for example, the…the library.

01:01:13

The alumni said, at that time,

01:01:15

“We will construct a diff...library.

01:01:19

We will give you for construction.”

01:01:22

I tried to argue with the Professor…

01:01:25

Director at that time, Professor Swamy.

01:01:28

Library is not the building, it is the books inside.

01:01:33

Now as Library Committee Chairman,

01:01:35

I am cutting down the…

01:01:38

what is the point in having a big building?

01:01:41

Prof. Kolar: And there is no money to buy the books. When there is no money.

01:01:44

So is it possible, please consider

01:01:46

whether you can have a fund

01:01:48

that the alumni gives,

01:01:50

out of which you know, you can

01:01:51

spend for the journals.

01:01:54

But of course, for the…it could not materialize,

01:01:56

but what I am trying to say is that,

01:01:58

that used to be the difficulties Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:02:00

in…in…in Prof. Kolar: Absolutely.

01:02:01

in conducting research or…

01:02:04

these are the difficulties.

01:02:05

So…but anyway, it was basically,

01:02:07

it has come a long way now.

01:02:09

So in terms of academics,

01:02:11

I remember during those times

01:02:12

the credit system was introduced,

01:02:15

‘Best Teachers’ awards were being given,

01:02:17

and you were…you received that,

01:02:19

and also student feedback. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

01:02:21

So could you say something about this? Prof. Sastry: Actually

01:02:23

the…it was not very…in an organized way,

01:02:28

but I think Professor Pandalai was the

01:02:30

first person to…to think of

01:02:33

some kind of a teacher evaluation.

01:02:36

He was the first person.

01:02:38

So he apparently…I don’t know

01:02:42

how he did it, but he collected

01:02:43

a lot of information from

01:02:45

some of the very good students

01:02:47

in each department. In each…at…at…at every level.

01:02:52

And after getting that information,

01:02:54

he identified some people from

01:02:56

each department as ‘Best Teachers.’

01:03:01

And he put up these names

01:03:02

before the board, and the board

01:03:04

said, “Yes, it is a good idea,

01:03:05

and… Prof. Kolar: Because there is no committee,

01:03:07

Prof. Kolar: there is no other parameters. Prof. Sastry: So, there is no committee and all that.

01:03:09

Prof. Sastry: No no. Prof. Kolar: We don't know about that.

01:03:10

But Pandalai sent individual letters

01:03:13

to…”Glad that you know you are…you are…you are deemed to be a…”

01:03:19

Prof. Kolar: It was called the ‘Best Teacher Award.’ ‘Best Teacher Award.’

01:03:21

‘Best Teacher Award.’ ‘Best Teacher…’

01:03:23

Prof. Swamy: Excuse me, this was not known to everybody.

01:03:26

Prof. Kolar: Everybody. That's what I am saying,

01:03:27

that's what I am saying.

01:03:27

So, I don't know. Prof. Kolar: It was an almost individual thing

01:03:29

Prof. Kolar: that he did Prof. Swamy: I came to know of it

01:03:32

Prof. Swamy: because I started reading the board minutes.

01:03:34

Prof. Kolar: Okay. Prof. Swamy: Otherwise, I would not have known.

01:03:35

See that is the…that is…

01:03:37

that is why I said, Prof. Kolar: That’s all

01:03:38

it has come actually as a…we don’t know.

01:03:42

So in that process for example,

01:03:44

people like you know, V. G. K. Murti

01:03:46

and…I also got one letter and all that,

01:03:48

but I really didn't…

01:03:50

but ulti…formally it was started by

01:03:52

Professor Indiresan. Prof. Swamy: Yeah.

01:03:55

Professor Indiresan used to

01:03:56

issue a weekly newsletter. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:03:59

It come…used to come on Friday,

01:04:02

and in that newsletter,

01:04:03

giving all the other news about the IIT,

01:04:07

what is happening and all that,

01:04:09

at the end of the semester,

01:04:12

at the back of that newsletter,

01:04:15

They used to be a list of the Prof. Swamy: Correct.

01:04:17

best teachers in the order of ranking,

01:04:21

or…but each…not ranking as such,

01:04:23

but these are the best teachers,

01:04:25

and he created a criteria;

01:04:28

he asked for the feedback from the students. Prof. Kolar: Oh, okay

01:04:32

And some 7.5 or so

01:04:35

out of 10, whoever gets,

01:04:37

only they will be recognized as good teachers.

01:04:41

So that kind of system he developed

01:04:43

and he…it ran for quite some time,

01:04:45

I think several years it was…

01:04:47

but it is…at least open and it is a feedback.

01:04:51

That is…it was organized,

01:04:52

better organized. Prof. Sastry: Organized way in a

01:04:53

Prof. Sastry: systematic fashion Prof. Kolar: Today also

01:04:55

we have, some ‘Young Teacher and Scientists Awards’,

01:04:58

there is endowments from…not endowments,

01:05:00

some alumni have contributed

01:05:02

to recognize the best teacher. Prof. Sastry: Yeah,

01:05:04

Prof. Sastry: best teacher Prof. Kolar: Couple of them.

01:05:05

Prof. Sastry: In fact, on Teachers’ Day,

01:05:08

…in fact, I was there

01:05:10

as a Teachers’ Day Prof. Kolar: Oh…oh…oh you are

01:05:11

Prof. Sastry: chief guest you know in 2012,

01:05:13

Prof. Sastry: so I gave…gave the awards to

01:05:15

Prof. Swamy: Yeah he…he came as chief guest. Prof. Kolar: Oh, okay.

01:05:18

Prof. Swamy: He gave the awards to… Prof. Kolar: Sir,

01:05:20

how about the credit system?

01:05:21

It was a very major change. Prof. Sastry: Credit system

01:05:23

also was introduced by Professor Indiresan. Prof. Kolar: Okay.

01:05:25

Professor Indiresan. In fact, the

01:05:27

so called…the time table smart slot system. Prof. Kolar: Okay.

01:05:30

You know, ABC slots

01:05:32

and the credit system was introduced by…

01:05:35

Professor Indiresan is you know, is a man of

01:05:37

you know…is a very…constantly coming up

01:05:40

with ideas and it's very…

01:05:43

that way, he is also very dynamic.

01:05:46

CRD also was his idea.

01:05:48

CRD…[Inaudible]…CRD although which did not.

01:05:50

Prof. Sastry: Yeah, yeah. Prof. Kolar: For a long time it didn't work,

01:05:52

Prof. Sastry: Yes. Prof. Kolar: but the idea was…

01:05:54

Because I remember, as I had just then joined only,

01:05:57

I think. Indiresan was leaving. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

01:05:59

We thought CRD was…as…resource…

01:06:01

I mean, young faculty members, it’s a good idea,

01:06:04

IIT should be developing technology for India. Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

01:06:07

And if the rural people require

01:06:09

you know I remember they were talking about

01:06:11

developing a cart with tyres or something like that,

01:06:16

so that it’s easy for the farmer to use these things.

01:06:19

We thought, as very new faculty,

01:06:22

it's a very nice Centre,

01:06:24

but for a period of time for several reasons,

01:06:27

Prof. Kolar: it was Prof. Sastry: But yeah,

01:06:29

Prof. Sastry: he was very conscious of the Prof. Kolar:…stopped.

01:06:31

you know, how to interact with the society

01:06:34

and rural areas, and how to transfer

01:06:37

this technology to the needy…

01:06:40

this thing…particularly using the

01:06:42

local resources and local materials. Prof. Swamy: Yeah

01:06:45

Sir, you saw the documentary

01:06:46

in the beginning; we talk a lot about

01:06:49

Indo-German cooperation,

01:06:51

and we take pride in saying,

01:06:53

“Ours is the only institute

01:06:55

which still continues to have good

01:06:57

collaborative programmes with Germany.”

01:07:00

What was your experience,

01:07:02

and…either on your own

01:07:04

or as a witness to some of these things?

01:07:06

In a way this…this…out of all this

01:07:11

international cooperation in the establishment of IITs,

01:07:16

the German experiment is the best.

01:07:20

Not only because that…see for example, in IIT Kanpur;

01:07:25

they had only a 10 year programme,

01:07:27

and after 10 years, they stopped. Prof. Swamy: Yeah.

01:07:31

Prof. Kolar: I see. Prof. Sastry: Stop…there is nothing

01:07:33

no further…see at a mutual level

01:07:35

there may be exchange of

01:07:38

Prof. Kolar: Based on personal contacts. Prof. Sastry: Personal contact,

01:07:40

but as institutionally there is none.

01:07:42

Whereas, as you know very well, that

01:07:45

after the programme of first 10 years…

01:07:47

then they continued for another 3 years,

01:07:51

but most importantly, after some time

01:07:54

I think it’s about…see that

01:07:57

next three 3 years is extended,

01:07:59

and one more I think…2 years or so

01:08:02

they extended on the basis of

01:08:04

Joint Research Programmes.

01:08:05

Prof. Swamy: So we had even in 1987…

01:08:08

Indo-German projects…Indo-German projects. [Inaudible]

01:08:10

But the thing…in that, the

01:08:13

basic thing is that they explicitly recognize

01:08:19

that a Professor from Germany,

01:08:21

and a Professor from IIT,

01:08:23

they are basically equal people,

01:08:25

in other words…in that sense, that is the…

01:08:27

Prof. Kolar: I see. Prof. Sastry: very important aspect

01:08:29

in other words they said, “Okay,

01:08:31

now IIT Madras has developed to such a level

01:08:35

that we can consider them as actually…” Mr. Sathasivam: Partners.

01:08:38

Prof. Sastry: a part. So that is a very good thing,

01:08:41

so in that sense it was continuing,

01:08:43

of course, at the individual level

01:08:45

there is always there…that cooperation,

01:08:48

but it was formalized

01:08:50

and continued for a long time

01:08:51

and that experiment only was in

01:08:56

in…Germany experiment. Prof. Kolar: IIT Madras

01:08:58

Prof. Kolar: Indo-German cooperation. Prof. Sastry: For example, as I said

01:09:01

earlier you know in IIT Kanpur,

01:09:04

the IIT Kanpur Director at

01:09:05

that time, Dr. Kelkar when I was there,

01:09:08

he was all for young faculty joining

01:09:12

you know, to continue their Ph.D.,

01:09:15

but the American side said no.

01:09:20

So the kind of…you know, cut and dried kind of thing

01:09:28

was not here, because they said

01:09:30

they understood what exactly needed,

01:09:32

and how it can be gradually transformed,

01:09:36

taken to a higher level,

01:09:39

and during all this time

01:09:40

they continue the cooperation.

01:09:41

So in that sense I think it’s a…

01:09:43

the most successful experiment.

01:09:46

Because…because of my association with

01:09:48

both IIT Kharagpur and Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

01:09:50

Prof. Sastry: Kanpur. Prof. Kolar: IIT Kanpur.

01:09:52

In fact, one more IIT you missed;

01:09:53

I also taught for some time at IIT Chicago.

01:09:57

[Laughter] Oh, oh I missed out on that!

01:10:02

Then immediately after Ph.D., you were there for

01:10:05

Prof. Sastry: No no, when I was a faculty member

01:10:06

Prof. Sastry: at the University of Illinois, Chicago,

01:10:08

Prof. Kolar: Oh you taught… Prof. Sastry: I was teaching evening

01:10:10

classes at IIT Chicago.

01:10:12

Prof. Kolar: So you have had experience with IIT Kharagpur,

01:10:14

Kanpur, IISc Bangalore, IIT Madras,

01:10:16

and before UICC you were in

01:10:18

Prof. Kolar: some other university which had been shifted Prof. Sastry: Actually I

01:10:21

Prof. Sastry: joined this thing only Prof. Kolar: from

01:10:22

Prof. Sastry: University of Delaware, so my Prof. Kolar: Yes exactly.

01:10:24

Ph.D. formally actually is only

01:10:26

from University of Delaware.

01:10:28

But my Ph.D., because

01:10:29

that is another st…that has got nothing to do with this,

01:10:32

because my guide Professor Dr. Hartnett,

01:10:37

extremely competent person, very famous person,

01:10:40

Prof. Kolar: Yeah. Prof. Sastry: But highly short-tempered person.

01:10:43

And because of a difference of opinion with him,

01:10:46

as Head of the Department,

01:10:47

and the President of the University, Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:10:50

Suddenly he said, “Oh you invited me

01:10:52

to come to this place…

01:10:53

now if you are ask…you are inviting

01:10:56

me to go out I will go out.”

01:11:00

So he resigned and went.

01:11:01

so. And he started the energy centre in Chicago.

01:11:03

Prof. Sastry: Energy…no, Energy Engineering Department. Prof. Kolar: Engineering Department.

01:11:06

Prof. Sastry: That is another story, of course about Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes.

01:11:08

Prof. Sastry: the University of Illinois…this thing, Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:11:10

but that is a…there were not conventional

01:11:12

engineering departments, there were

01:11:14

actually 4 departments in engineering college

01:11:16

at that time, that was started in 1965:

01:11:19

Energy Engineering, Information Engineering,

01:11:23

Systems Engineering and Materials Engineering.

01:11:26

These four were the departments.

01:11:29

They were all supposed to be

01:11:31

interdisciplinary kind of thing.

01:11:33

Prof. Sastry: So Energy is a…department was there. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:11:36

After some time you know, because,

01:11:38

like everywhere, when you have this degree

01:11:41

from Energy Engineering, their employability;

01:11:43

the graduates employability will be a problem.

01:11:46

So they…after a few years

01:11:47

Prof. Sastry: they reverted back to conventional names: Prof. Kolar: [softly] Streams.

01:11:52

Mechanical, Civil and Electrical and so forth.

01:11:54

Sir, so, I want to have an overall picture.

01:11:57

You started as a student in IIT Kharagpur,

01:12:00

and ended in IIT Madras,

01:12:02

but in the last 20 years also

01:12:04

you have kept…you are observing

01:12:06

how…what is happening.

01:12:07

So what is your overall picture of

01:12:09

especially research in IITs? At that time,

01:12:13

how they developed and what it is today?

01:12:16

Obviously, there is a tremendous growth

01:12:20

that has taken place in IIT Madras,

01:12:22

both in terms of quantity as well as quality.

01:12:27

So far as the quality is concerned,

01:12:30

earlier it was generally of a lower quality

01:12:34

mainly because of lack of resources.

01:12:36

Was it a…really a problem, sir?

01:12:39

Prof. Sastry: As I said. Prof. Kolar: Because we always complain…lack of funds.

01:12:41

As I said earlier, for example,

01:12:43

the journal that we were talking about:

01:12:47

it takes about one and half years to get here.

01:12:50

Prof. Sastry: Now, what is happening in Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:12:53

Prof. Swamy: Information Prof. Sastry: anywhere else in the world

01:12:56

is a matter of a few minutes.

01:12:57

The click of a button,

01:12:58

you can just get the information.

01:13:00

Prof. Swamy: Information was not available Prof. Sastry: So information availability

01:13:02

So therefore, in those days, you pick up a problem primarily from

01:13:09

Prof. Sastry: what is happening elsewhere. Prof. Swamy: Yeah.

01:13:11

Prof. Sastry: And that too, that is old information. Prof. Kolar: Old information.

01:13:14

And that naturally affects the quality.

01:13:17

Whereas now, instantaneously

01:13:19

you can get what is happening,

01:13:20

you are on top of this thing, plus,

01:13:23

now I see that a large number of

01:13:25

people are returning also from abroad.

01:13:27

In those days when I came back from India,

01:13:29

In fact, when I went actually after 4 or 5 years

01:13:33

to America for 3 months, to spend summer,

01:13:37

all my friends at that time were asking me…

01:13:41

they wanted me to say

01:13:44

that I was a stupid going back.

01:13:48

“How could you do that kind of a thing?”

01:13:50

So in other words, the…that was the feeling.

01:13:54

But…so in other words, coming here

01:13:56

Prof. Sastry: was actually very rare kind of thing, Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

01:13:59

in fact, even large number of faculty here

01:14:01

and also some of the students, final year students

01:14:03

who are applying for universities abroad,

01:14:06

they used to come and say,

01:14:07

Prof. Sastry: “Sir what…why did you come?” Prof. Kolar: “Why did you come?”

01:14:10

So now, but that has

01:14:13

become actually much more…people are now…

01:14:17

less number of people are going,

01:14:19

and more people are also returning,

01:14:21

which is a very good

01:14:22

Prof. Kolar: So, you must be very happy that today… Prof. Sastry: So,

01:14:24

that also increases the quality of the work

01:14:26

that is being done now, compared to that.

01:14:28

Today IIT Madras is number 1 in the country

01:14:32

for the la…in our scheme of things.

01:14:35

So in that sense it obviously,

01:14:36

you know, with time things will improve,

01:14:40

but they are improving actually quite nicely.

01:14:43

at a very good rate also,

01:14:45

because of the changes that are occurring

01:14:47

in the technology itself.

01:14:49

Mr. Sathasivam: Now what are the factors you see

01:14:50

Mr. Sathasivam: driving the directions of research now,

01:14:52

Mr. Sathasivam: so now that everything is level as it were.

01:14:55

Earlier the…you mentioned that

01:14:57

Mr. Sathasivam: there were restrictions Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

01:14:59

because of the availability of

01:15:01

Mr. Sathasivam: information and so forth. Prof. Sastry: Yes.

01:15:02

So now, the things are changed…

01:15:03

The things have changed. For example,

01:15:05

right now, the…the way I understand,

01:15:07

because I don’t know much about

01:15:08

exact individual cases, but generally speaking,

01:15:11

there is no lack of resources.

01:15:13

Even at that time, there was no lack of resources.

01:15:16

For example, when Dr. Ramachandran took over

01:15:19

as Department Science and Technology Secretary…

01:15:23

he is a Director, Dr. Gururaja

01:15:25

Prof. Sastry: who was also my classmate in IISc Bangalore. Prof. Kolar: Gururaja was there.

01:15:28

He came one day to…he said,

01:15:32

“Dr. Ramachandran is asking you know,

01:15:33

why there was no proposal from you?

01:15:37

I have got 7 crores with me,

01:15:39

so why don’t you take some projects?”

01:15:42

I particularly avoided writing any proposal

01:15:45

mainly because, you know, people will simply say

01:15:46

that you know, “It’s…he’s is a very close

01:15:49

student of Dr. Ramachandran,

01:15:50

so that is how he got the…”

01:15:52

so I was avoiding that.

01:15:54

So what I am trying to say is, that

01:15:55

basically the resources for IITs

01:16:00

in those days also was not a problem.

01:16:02

Resources…financial resources I am talking about,

01:16:05

but in terms of other resources are require to do research,

01:16:08

whether in terms of…

01:16:11

for example, getting something…some…some…some

01:16:15

piece of equipment done.

01:16:18

In those days restriction was, you have to first of all

01:16:20

go to the Central Workshops.

01:16:23

Prof. Sastry: You have to get it done. Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

01:16:25

Nowadays for example,

01:16:26

you can just go out and get it any time you want.

01:16:28

Yes sir. That is what we did as research scholars.

01:16:31

Prof. Kolar: We got everything done here. Prof. Sastry: Yeah everything done here.

01:16:33

See, in that connection, for sake of record again,

01:16:37

can you say something about the Gavi scheme?

01:16:41

The Gavi scheme I…

01:16:43

Prof. Kolar: This is a Indo-German Prof. Sastry: Yeah yeah.

01:16:45

Prof. Kolar: scheme for buying equipment from

01:16:48

Prof. Kolar: Germany for Indian research scholars…IIT Madras. Prof. Sastry: For Indian research scholars.

01:16:50

Yeah, I don’t know much about it,

01:16:54

I don’t know much about it, but only thing is

01:16:56

that sometimes it you know, led to some unnecessary

01:17:00

Prof. Swamy: Yeah. Prof. Kolar: Okay, yeah.

01:17:02

Prof. Sastry: complications and Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

01:17:04

I was…I asked…I said that

01:17:07

because as a great benefit, me and others,

01:17:10

we got our Hot Wire Anemometers

01:17:12

through that, I got the hot wires themselves,

01:17:14

Prof. Kolar: lot of equipment and all those Porous Plates. Prof. Sastry: Yeah.

01:17:17

As a single research scholar,

01:17:19

I was…greatly benefited. It…

01:17:20

I didn’t have to go to another place for funding.

01:17:23

Through our lab, we applied with his signature

01:17:25

and it took time, but we got them.

01:17:27

Lot of research scholars were benefited

01:17:30

through that scheme. Later of course, it was…

01:17:32

Actually, as I was telling you earlier,

01:17:34

this RDOEI project that we got,

01:17:38

and that actually became very significant

01:17:41

because, not only being the first you know

01:17:44

major sponsored research project,

01:17:46

but in 1974, the BHEL Corporate R and D was established…

01:17:53

Prof. Kolar: In Hyderabad. Prof. Sastry: in Chennai…in Hyderabad

01:17:55

Prof. Sastry: Hyderabad…in Hyderabad Prof. Kolar: In Hyderabad.

01:17:57

And the first General Manager was T. V. Balakrishnan.

01:18:03

So…he actually, you know, they all

01:18:05

came from the manufacturing side and practical side.

01:18:08

So when R and D was established,

01:18:11

now he had lot of problems:

01:18:13

How to…first of all start the work and how to staff the

01:18:18

people who are competent researchers.

01:18:22

So he is found somewhere…that this RDOEI project

01:18:25

we made something in Heat Transfer Lab here.

01:18:29

So he came to me and he said,

01:18:32

“What is this? Can you help us?”

01:18:36

So, we actually made for the cooling purposes

01:18:39

Prof. Sastry: and all that…what is called RC network analyser, Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes.

01:18:41

huge thing. And he said, “Please, you know, help us in this thing.”

01:18:49

So we were associated with this,

01:18:51

Prof. Sastry: and I think 3 of our Ph.D. scholars were actually Prof. Kolar: Yes, yes.

01:18:55

Prof. Sastry: taken by him. Prof. Kolar: Yes.

01:18:57

Prof. Sastry: And… Prof. Kolar: K. V. C. Rao was the first one, maybe.

01:19:00

Prof. Sastry: Yeah. Prof. Kolar: He was the faculty

01:19:01

Prof. Kolar: He did his Ph.D. on that Prof. Sastry: Ph.D. here.

01:19:03

So basically, that particular thing actually continued,

01:19:07

that first project…sponsored research project

01:19:09

continued for several years even afterwards.

01:19:12

With BHEL Corporate R and D in…this thing.

01:19:16

So, those are at least some good experiences

01:19:20

for us in terms of interacting with the institutions outside

01:19:25

the educational institution and…

01:19:29

Sir, very nice, any…any other?

01:19:31

We can go on talking to Professor Sastry for a long time but

01:19:34

Prof. Kolar: we have covered quite a few areas. Mr. Sathasivam: Yes.

01:19:35

Prof. Swamy: No, no, no, I just want…we have not told why Professor Sastry always cuts jokes. [Laughter]

01:19:44

Well I…yeah,

01:19:45

Prof. Swamy: Give a chance to… Prof. Kolar: I have been greatly benefited by my association

01:19:49

with him for last 47 years;

01:19:52

I was one of his first research scholars.

01:19:55

I just want to add to this, sir;

01:19:57

when I came from IIT Kharagpur after M.Tech.

01:20:02

So Heat Transfer was a new area,

01:20:04

and we were only 2 Ph.D. scholars

01:20:07

that day for interview: Professor Srinivasa Murthy and myself,

01:20:10

and you and Professor MBK were in this MSB.

01:20:13

I just…I walked towards you, and Srinivasa Murthy

01:20:17

walked towards MBK and that was it.

01:20:19

It was over evening we were…we had said, “We were selected.”

01:20:22

And all that…but when I joined,

01:20:24

I was so excited about the work that was going on

01:20:27

in the lab. I came from Kharagpur

01:20:29

where it would be a lot of experimental work,

01:20:30

but the research environment was great.

01:20:33

And I was doubly blessed that

01:20:36

Professor Ramachandran was the Chairman of the

01:20:38

first Registration Committee.

01:20:40

All the facu…Professor Subbaraju, Professor Gopichand,

01:20:43

Professor T. K. Bose. It was for me, you know,

01:20:45

for a new…I was hardly 21.

01:20:48

It was a very exciting thing that

01:20:50

I am in the midst of these, you know, great people.

01:20:53

And Ramachandran, in fact, he…he suggested

01:20:57

an answer to me when somebody asked a question,

01:20:59

I was not able to answer, he said,

01:21:00

“Why don’t you say this”, you know, and he remembered it

01:21:03

after several years, he said, you know,

01:21:04

“How are you doing? Your free conviction Ph.D. is over.”

01:21:07

I was greatly…I was a great admirer of him.

01:21:12

I talked about him in the one of the earlier…

01:21:15

and you were associated with him

01:21:16

and with 7 Directors. You held different positions.

01:21:21

So, you have so much, of course, to share with us.

01:21:26

The small…this thing:

01:21:28

Dr. Ramachandran used to have a room in our laboratory,

01:21:33

Prof. Sastry: and that room was occupied by Kolar. Prof. Swamy: Yeah, yeah.

01:21:36

Prof. Kolar: I…I…yes…yeah [Laughter]

01:21:38

Prof. Kolar: I said that. Prof. Swamy: He has told about it.

01:21:41

We would…just to add to that sir,

01:21:44

we knew when Professor Ramachandran is visiting the lab,

01:21:46

there is so much of activity,

01:21:48

Professor Sastry running around,

01:21:49

Professor Natarajan will come from there

01:21:51

T. K. Bose will come from there,

01:21:52

MVK, he won't stand,

01:21:54

he would just walk all over the laboratory

01:21:56

and talk to technic…everybody, “What…what are you doing?”, you know.

01:21:59

Prof. Kolar: He was such a great force. Prof. Sastry: But…but

01:22:02

you might have got the impression, that

01:22:04

Dr. Ramachandran was interested only

01:22:05

in the Heat Transfer Lab and department,

01:22:07

Prof. Sastry: but actually, what he was doing was… Prof. Kolar: Yeah.

01:22:09

9 o’clock is the Director’s…

01:22:11

normally he goes to the office.

01:22:14

8 o’clock he starts in his own car,

01:22:17

Prof. Sastry: you don’t know which department he will go to. Prof. Kolar: I see Prof. Swamy: he had come to our…

01:22:20

Prof. Sastry: Yeah, which department? Prof. Kolar: Unannounced

01:22:22

Prof. Kolar: he would come Prof. Sastry: Unannounced.

01:22:23

So there is no question of…any show or anything.

01:22:26

So he comes there, and talks to people,

01:22:29

many of them were actually faculty members

01:22:31

working for their Ph.Ds.

01:22:32

So basically you know, lecturers and so forth.

01:22:36

And he under…tries to learn from them

01:22:38

what topic they are working and all.

01:22:41

Probably to go to that lab, he may get a

01:22:43

chance only after several months.

01:22:46

But then when he goes there,

01:22:47

Prof. Sastry: “Last time you were doing this”, you know, Prof. Kolar: Yes

01:22:49

He remembers. His memory was phenomenal.

01:22:52

Prof. Kolar: Absolutely. Prof. Swamy: He used to meet students also.

01:22:54

Prof. Kolar: Yes sir. Prof. Sastry: Because I had the opportunity,

01:22:56

lucky opportunity of working with him

01:22:58

Prof. Sastry: even in the United Nations. Prof. Kolar: Yeah

01:23:00

Prof. Kolar: We didn't cover that actually. Prof. Sastry: Yeah

01:23:02

…in the United Nations.

01:23:03

And the…the respect that he commanded

01:23:06

you know, with the entire staff…in the…that is unbelievable.

01:23:11

Even Centre for Human Settlements in Nairobi.

01:23:13

Prof. Sastry: So basically, he is a different kind of person. Mr. Sathasivam: Right.

01:23:18

Professor Sastry, sir, thank you very much

01:23:22

for taking your time. You are very close by,

01:23:24

Prof. Kolar: so whenever we want, again we will come and talk to you. Prof. Sastry: Okay.

01:23:28

You have shared with us, lots of important things,

01:23:31

which are significant aspects of the IIT Madras history,

01:23:34

and that has come to us with your personal experience

01:23:37

and your own perspective. On behalf of the Heritage Centre

01:23:41

here, thank you very much.

01:23:43

We will try to keep in touch with you,

01:23:44

and…you have not yet visited the Heritage…this is the first time,

01:23:47

so maybe we…go around. Thank you very much.

01:23:50

Thank you for the opportunity

01:23:51

and I was not really a great important player

01:23:57

in the…in this thing, but at the same time,

01:23:59

you know, whatever my experiences and personal

01:24:02

Prof. Sastry: feelings and perceptions, I have tried to share with you,

01:24:08

Prof. Sastry: and thank you very much for the opportunity.

01:24:10

Prof. Kolar: Thank you. Mr. Sathasivam: Thank you, Professor Sastry.