Monthly Archives: August 2007

This is one of the several mails that I’m used to receive daily, but this perhaps reflects best the state of anarchism that prevails in India’s No. 1 engineering institute, though at somebody’s cost. More comments after the mail …

Dear Friends,
Please go through the following mail which was received by us in the
morning. I thought that it is imperative that we as a part of the campus
community knew what is going on. What good are rules (of whether or not a
person is to be treated in HC) if they lead to death of a child?

--

This is to share an incident which reflects the state of affairs for the
disenfranchised in our Institute of excellence. I suspect this incident
would not be reported by anybody in authority in the Institute and hence
would not reach most of us. In this case too we got to know of it just by
chance, as would be evident from the account, which makes us believe that
occurrence of such incidents may not be a rarity after all, but that is
just not shared with the community. A similar incident happened a month
ago and the sequence of events are much similar. This account is to inform
the community of this incident, acknowledge a feeling of collective shame
that this could occur in an Institute which claims to be the best, and
hopefully to evoke some collective action to prevent such occurrences in
future. I am sure of the facts, as I got to know of it from a first person
account and yet would not name anybody to avoid unnecessary personal
vilification. This is the system and not the individuals involved.

On Sunday morning at about 4.15 am one of the canteen owners of one of the
Halls was going back after work when he chanced upon a crowd of migrant
workers at the security crossing near the Motor Transport/ air strip road.
Apparently a boy, whose family had been employed in the construction site
of the Environment Engineering building had been bitten by something
poisonous (they were not sure whether it was a scorpion or a snake), in
his sleep. The workers including the family consisting of the father a
brother and a younger sister (his mother is no longer alive) had come to
the SIS for help. The boy who was around 12-13 seemed to have been bitten
around 3 in the morning and was alive though unconscious. The SIS guards
(there were around 20-25 of them there) kept urging the  workers to take
the boy to the city hospital but refused to extend any help. The group of
migrant workers did not know anything about the city, and this is usual
because they are brought from far of  places like Malda  and Chhattisgarh
by the contractor and are herded back at the end of their term. The
canteen owner requested the SIS to lend their jeep for transporting the
boy to the Health Center. The SIS guards refused to ask for their jeep
(though several of them had their walkie talkie) and instead told this man
that the boy would not be treated in the Health Center and hence has to be
taken to the city. At this point the Canteen Owner decided to take the boy
in his motorcycle, along with another worker to hold the inert form, to
the Health Center.

At the Health Center, the person at the desk refused to entertain the
case, when he came to know that the boy was not related to an Institute
employee and was neither a student. The canteen owner tried to impress
upon the person that the case was very serious and the boy may just
survive if only the hospital intervened and the formalities and the
expenses could be handled later. He also volunteered to get the health
card of his father who is an Institute employee, as treating guests is
routinely done in the HC. The attendant at the desk refused to comply but
conceded to give the phone number of the doctor on duty. He told the
canteen owner that he may call up the doctor to check if she would treat
the boy, but not to mention that he was calling from the HC, but tell her
that he was calling from one of the Halls.

The canteen owner called the doctor, who when she realized that it
involved the child of worker, was extremely annoyed and said that this
facility was not available to them. When the canteen owner pleaded that
the case was serious and may turn fatal she apparently shouted 'which
language do you understand?' and slammed the phone down.

After that the canteen owner decided to take the child to the city and
requested the hospital attendant to provide the services of the ambulance
so that he could be taken as soon as possible and anyway it is extremely
difficult to negotiate the GT road with an unconscious person. But he was
refused even that. The boy was still alive till that point.

The rest of the story in short - the canteen owner took the boy to a
nearby nursing home in Kalyanpur but that setup was not equipped to handle
snake bites. Then he drove with the unconscious boy all the way to the
Hallett (medical college) - the doctor on duty was much more prompt and
immediately attended to the boy, but unfortunately he had already died.
Then this canteen owner drove all the way back to the campus with a dead
child in the pillion. As he ended his account 'bilkul kuch achcha nahin
lag raha hai tab se - health centre hote hue ek chote se bachche ko marne
de sakten hain - kyun ki woh ek mazdoor ka bachcha hai sirf isiliye?'

--

Who sent this mail is immaterial. The point is do we as the community have
an answer to this? It's not about just shouting out loud against the
people who ignored the poor child's state. It's about identifying what
makes people so insensitive and taking measures so that such inhumanity is
not showcased again. I still hope we are human.

Firstly some full forms to make the above mail more comprehensible …

HC — Health Center, SIS — Security Intelligence Services, GT Road –Grant Trunk Road (Connecting the institute concerned to Kanpur city)

One more thing which has not been said about in the mail is that apparently even if the doctor at HC would have agreed to attend the boy, the boy would have been killed sooner as there are only eight General Physicians at this HC who perhaps do not even qualify to be General Physician … one more incident … last week itself one of the doctor at this HC told one of my batchmate that he was sufferin from malaria, only to be brushed aside by the outside “practising” docs. [:x] … Then, we proudly claim ourselves to be one of the world’s best institute … an institute par xcellence … compare ourselves to MIT and Princeton … the strength of the campus is around 10000 … even going by the Govt. of India’s norms about setting up hospitals based on regions’ population, we should be havin a little better HC than one with only eight General Physicians.

If this isn’t height of anarchism, then plz let me know what else it is?

I am trying to do some stuff in LaTeX, in which I wanted to insert figures into my amsart documentclass … Naturally, I could not find that in any standard book and went bout googling for it … still there was not a site which explained it in full although Piet van Oostrum’s documentation about picins was quite helpful. I am writing out here one possible way of doing the same which worked for me, there are other ways too like using wrapfig package. The .sty file can downloaded from here, and put it where your LaTeX compiler looks for packages, then in your .tex file do the following things:

documentclass{article}%I have seen it working wd amsart also
 . . .
usepackage{... , picins, ...}%where ... indicates other packages

then write the following command wherever you need you figure to be there

parpic(width,height)(x-offset,y-offset)[Options][Position]{Picture}

All parameters except the Picture are optional. The picture can be
positioned left or right, boxed with a rectangle, oval, shadowbox,
dashed box, a caption can be given which includes it in the List of
figures.

If the width and height are not given [in which case also no offsets
can be given] or if they are given as 0pt, the actual size of the
Picture is used.

Options can be (default is l):
l – put picture on left side of the paragraph
r – put picture on right side of the paragraph

f – frame the picture
d – put a dashed frame aroud the picture
o – put an \oval around the picture
s – put a shadowbox around the picture
x – put a 3D box around the picture
Max one of each group can be given

Position:
l – put the picture left in the box
r – put the picture right in the box
t – put the picture in the top of the box
b – put the picture in the bottom of the box
Default is centering. It only makes a difference if the width and
height given are bigger than the actual picture. If offsets are
given Position is not used.

Picture can be any LaTeX construct.

I have just now “tested” that the \piccaption option for writing caption to such an inline figure doesn’t work properly and isn’t properly typesetted. The other options mentioned in Piet’s documentation viz. \piccaptioninside, \piccaptionoutside, \piccaptionside and \piccaptiontopside doesn’t work at all on my computer. Also, even without captions, this seems to be an only somewhat satisfying solution and does throw lots of problems like improper alignment of text … text over text, text over figure, problems with size adjustment of figure and so on.

Please note that I have borrowed most of the material from Piet’s documentation itself and have written here so that it might appear on search results more easily. Please comment freely as if this information was of some use to you and if you would like to tell us of some new improvements in a non-technical language, of course :-)