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Pundalik Dattatreya Gaitonde (3 July 1913 – 13 November 1992) was a surgeon from Goa and an active participant in the Goa liberation movement. [1] Along with Antonio Colaco, Gaitonde was nominated by the President of India to the 3rd Lok Sabha in 1962 [ 2 ] following the incorporation of Goa, Daman and Diu into India on 19 December 1961.
Bhausahebanchi Bakhar is a narrative of the Third Battle of Panipat fought in 1761 between the Maratha Empire and the Durrani Empire of Ahmad Shah Durrani.It is written in the Marathi language.
V. S. Gaitonde was the first Indian contemporary painter whose work was sold for ₹ 9 million (US$100,000) at a 2005 Osians art auction in Mumbai. [5] In 2013, one of Gaitonde's untitled painting sold for ₹ 237 million (US$2.7 million), set a record for an Indian artist at Christie's debut auction in India.
Suniti Solomon (née Gaitonde), was born in a Maharashtrian Hindu family of the leather traders in Chennai. She was the seventh child in a family of eight and was the only daughter. [10] [11] [12] In a 2009 interview she said she became interested in medicine from the yearly health officer visits to their home for vaccinations. [10]
Vasudeo Gaitonde, born 100 years ago, is considered one of South Asia's greatest abstract painters.
YR Gaitonde Centre for AIDS Research and Education (YRGCARE) is a non-profit organisation in India working in the domain of HIV/AIDS. The organisation was founded by Dr Suniti Solomon in 1993. As reported in 2018, YRGCARE had provided HIV prevention and treatment related services to about 21,000 people in India who were infected by HIV.
Name Affliliation Notability References H. C. Verma: Former professor, Nuclear physics Authored several school, undergraduate and graduate textbooks, the most popular being the two-volume Concepts of Physics, co-founded Shiksha Sopan, a social upliftment organization for economically weaker children living near the campus of IIT Kanpur, Padma Shri recipient
Dr. Herbert Kleber, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University and director of the New York State Psychiatric Institute’s Division on Substance Abuse, argues that the robust black market is a sign that the benefit of the medication outweighs the risk. “There is no medication without risk. People die every year from aspirin.