Chaithanya Bharathi Institute of Technology (CBIT) – a name to reckon
with!
(512)
January 1st of 2000
came and went. Nothing new happened. No earth shattering events. The world did
not end. I was not very sure whether Poornima was happy or sad! It was business as usual. All of us slipped
back into our own very mundane and regular work schedule. Class Preparation,
classwork, assignments, tests, paper corrections, declaring the results and so
on. Time was slipping away.
Chaithanya Bharathi institute of
Technology, CBIT as it was popularly called was one of the first privately managed
engineering colleges in the erstwhile state of Andhra Pradesh. Due to its
premier status it attracted bright students and equally bright and competent
faculty.
Located at Gandipet it was the dream destination of young engineering
aspirants who wanted to carve themselves a name in the field of Engineering. As
a well thought our strategy CBIT added Management education to the array of
educational services that it provides. School of Management studies (SMS) as it
was popularly called was established in the year 1996 and I was offered a faculty
position at SMS in the year 1997.
CBIT alumni have excelled in many
fields. Envious of their success one student from another engineering college
had once commented “You CBIT GUYS! You are so many in California that the area
that you reside should be called CBIT Avenue”.
Shekhar Kammula remains one of
CBIT’s favorite son. A mechanical engineer by profession, Sekhar Kammula is an
ace director who immortalized CBIT throughout the world with his movie “Happy
days (2007)”.
CBIT’s principal at that time was
Prof Ramachandra Reddy. Prof Ramachandra Reddy was a stickler for rules and behaviour.
Impeccable and nattily dressed Prof Ramachandra Reddy would indulge in his
daily routine that the students feared – the beat!
The beat would commence at 0940
hours and he along with some other faculty members, would slowly go around the campus and catch
errant students who were bunking the classes. Under graduate students of B.Tech
would run helter and skelter the minute they saw Prof Ramachandra Reddy. If
they were caught, they had it. They were made to stand in front of the principal’s
office, their ID card was confiscated and their parents would be called and
informed about their ward’s behaviour.
But our Post graduate students of
MBA were made of sterner stuff. They would retreat deeper and deeper into CBIT
(CBIT’s campus was spread over 100 acres). But Prof Ramachandra Reddy had a very
dogged determination. He would pursue them and it was a cat and a mouse game.
One day when I was part of the beat, Prof Ramachandra Reddy cornered three or
four students in their lair, the canteen.
No comments:
Post a Comment