Tuesday, 5 December 2017
Monday, 4 December 2017
Countdown for 12th Global Commn Conclave begins
PUNE, India: With the preparations for the 12th
Global Communication Conclave at Pune on March 9 & 10, 2018 going in full
swing, the countdown for the event conducted by Public Relations Council of
India (PRCI) has begun.
PRCI - the premier body of
PR, media, advertising, HR, marcom professionals and mass communication students
and academicians – has altready announced that it will hold the Conclave at the
conveniently located venue, All Spice, Shantai Hotel, near Camp, opposite
Ashoka Pavilion.
The theme for the Conclave
is: TRANSFORM
OR PERISH.
Apart from the rapid
developments in technology, life around us too is changing fast – faster than
the speed of thought. What we think today may not be relevant tomorrow. Some of
these rapid developments would need a total transformation, and not a mere
change.
PRCI will also present its
much sought-after signature awards under the Chanakya series and induct achievers into the PR Hall of Fame. And,
we will present the popular PRCI collateral awards – a talent recognition for
communication professionals.
PRCI: Headquartered
in Bangalore, PRCI has Chapters across close to 30 cities and towns and a
dedicated youth wing called Young Communicators Club (YCC) that galvanizes the
mass communication students at various universities and colleges, pan-India.
The Conclave is also a
unique opportunity for communication and marketing students to listen to
mentors, global experts and learn from their experiences.
PRCI and YCC periodically
hold a series of knowledge forums in association with media organizations like
Press Clubs and universities/colleges.
Daughters’
Day:
PRCI celebrates Daughters’ Day on June 1 – the official date of birth of late
Indo-US astronaut Kalpana Chawla – to focus attention on girl children’s
education. The Council has adopted few girls through various established NGOs
to ensure their uninterrupted education till at least SSC, High School.
WCC:
PRCI has recently promoted a global platform – World Communicators’ Council
(WCC) – with Chapters in UAE and Sri Lanka. Soon, WCC will spread its wings to
many other countries, including Australia, UK and the US.
World
Communicators’ Day: Realising that we Communication
professionals do not have an international day of ours, PRCI initiated World
Communicators’ Day to be celebrated on October 28 – the day the world’s first
Press Release was shot out by Ivy Lee in the US in 1906. We had a series of
events, pan-India, including sessions on the art of press release writing.
Social
Communication: In a yet another unique initiative, PRCI
launched a Social Communication campaign to deal with issues of concern to the
communities around us. Our campaign – Mission Mumbai Local – has been adjudged
as the PR Milestone of The Year at America’s PR World Awards. The campaign
focused on the plight of suburban train commuters of the island city and the
need to improve.
Similarly, the organisation
met with great success in our campaign
#IamParsikHill, IamDying as the plundering of the hills on the outskirts
of Mumbai has been stopped. The NGT ruled that no quarrying can be done without
environment clearances.
The Pune conclave, thus,
promises many takeaways, apart from being a good meeting point to share
thoughts and ideas to be able to face lurking future challenges.
The 12th Global
Communication Conclave schedule is:
|
Day 1 – March 09. 2018
|
Day 2 – March 10, 2018
|
|
|
PRCI has worked out the
following early bird delegate fee structure which, we are sure, you will
appreciate and quickly send in your confirmation of participation, along with
the attached Registration Form.
|
Fee
Type
|
PRCI
Member
|
Non-Member
Professional
|
Student
delegate
|
International
Delegate
|
|
Delegate Fee
|
Rs. 3,500
|
Rs 4,500
|
Rs 1,000
|
US$100
|
- This
fee covers Entry to Conclave on both the days, One lunch, One gala
cocktail-dinner, two High Teas
- The
offer closes on February 15, 2018.
- On
the spot registration, subject to availability of seats, Rs 5,000 per PRCI
member delegate, Rs 6,000 for non-member and $150 for International
delegates.
- Pl
fill in the attached Delegate Registration form and send it to PRCI.
PRCI
has negotiated a good deal with Shantai Hotel for room tariff:
|
Room type
|
Single Occupancy
|
Double Occupancy
|
|
Standard A/C
|
Rs 2,500 + taxes per night
|
Rs 2,800 + taxes per night
|
|
Delux
|
Rs 3,000 + taxes per night
|
Rs 3,300 + taxes per night
|
- Please check attached Room
Reservation form addressed to Shantai Hotel.
- The payment will have to be made DIRECTLY to the hotel as per
their terms and conditions.
- PRCI will not be responsible
further.
- The rooms come with complimentary
lavish breakfast and Wifi connectivity.
- Shantai Hotel is just 1.5 KM from
Pune Railway station and 12 KM from Pune International airport.
For
room reservations, the delegates are requested to fill in the attached form and send it to the Hotel,
marking CC to PRCI as mentioned in the form.
Sunday, 26 November 2017
TRANSFORM or PERISH: 12th Global Communication Conclave theme
PUNE, India: Public
Relations Council of India (PRCI) – the premier body of PR, media, advertising,
HR, marcom professionals and mass communication students and academicians – has
announced that it will hold the 12th Global Communication Conclave
at Pune on March 9 & 10, 2018 at the conveniently located venue, All Spice,
Shantai Hotel, near Camp.
The theme for the Conclave
is: TRANSFORM
OR PERISH.
Apart from the rapid
developments in technology, life around us too is changing fast – faster than
the speed of thought. What we think today may not be relevant tomorrow. Some of
these rapid developments would need a total transformation, and not a mere
change.
Come, let’s discuss and
share our knowledge and experiences which are much richer than text messages or
twitter posts.
Come, let’s listen to expert
speak and discuss with them our future course.
PRCI will also present its
much sought-after signature awards under the Chanakya series and induct achievers into the PR Hall of Fame. And,
we will present the popular PRCI collateral awards – a talent recognition for
communication professionals.
PRCI: A
word about 13-year-young PRCI with Chapters across close to 30 cities and
towns: We have a dedicated youth wing called Young Communicators Club (YCC)
that galvanizes the mass communication students at various universities and
colleges, pan-India. So, the Conclave is also a unique opportunity for
communication and marketing students to listen to mentors, global experts and
learn from their experiences.
PRCI and YCC periodically
hold a series of knowledge forums in association with media organizations like
Press Clubs and universities/colleges.
Daughters’
Day:
We celebrate Daughters’ Day on June 1 – the official date of birth of late
Indo-US astronaut Kalpana Chawla – to focus attention on girl children’s
education. We have adopted few girls through various established NGOs to ensure
their uninterrupted education till at least SSC, High School.
WCC: PRCI
has recently promoted a global platform – World Communicators’ Council (WCC) –
with Chapters in UAE and Sri Lanka. Soon, WCC will spread its wings to many
other countries, including Australia, UK and the US.
World
Communicators’ Day: Realising that we Communication
professionals do not have an international day of ours, PRCI initiated World
Communicators’ Day to be celebrated on October 28 – the day the world’s first
Press Release was shot out by Ivy Lee in the US in 1906. We had a series of
events, pan-India, including sessions on the art of press release writing.
Social
Communication: In a yet another unique initiative, we
launched a Social Communication campaign to deal with issues of concern to the
communities around us. Our campaign – Mission Mumbai Local – has been adjudged
as the PR Milestone of The Year at America’s PR World Awards. The campaign
focused on the plight of suburban train commuters of the island city and the
need to improve.
Similarly, we met with great
success in our campaign #IamParsikHill,
IamDying as the plundering of the hills on the outskirts of Mumbai has been
stopped. The NGT ruled that no quarrying can be done without environment
clearances.
The Pune conclave, thus,
promises many takeaways, apart from being a good meeting point to share
thoughts and ideas to be able to face lurking future challenges.
The 12th Global
Communication Conclave schedule is:
|
Day 1 – March 09. 2018
|
Day 2 – March 10, 2018
|
|
|
PRCI has worked out the
following early bird delegate fee structure which, we are sure, you will
appreciate and quickly send in your confirmation of participation, along with
the attached Registration Form.
|
Fee
Type
|
PRCI
Member
|
Non-Member
Professional
|
Student
delegate
|
International
Delegate
|
|
Delegate Fee
|
Rs. 3,500
|
Rs 4,500
|
Rs 1,000
|
US$100
|
- This
fee covers Entry to Conclave on both the days, One lunch, One gala
cocktail-dinner, two High Teas
- The
offer closes on February 15, 2018.
- On
the spot registration, subject to availability of seats, Rs 5,000 per PRCI
member delegate, Rs 6,000 for non-member and $150 for International
delegates.
You
will be happy to know that PRCI has negotiated a good deal with Shantai Hotel
for room tariff:
|
Room type
|
Single Occupancy
|
Double Occupancy
|
|
Standard A/C
|
Rs 2,500 + taxes per night
|
Rs 2,800 + taxes per night
|
|
Delux
|
Rs 3,000 + taxes per night
|
Rs 3,300 + taxes per night
|
- Please do not forget to quote PRCI Conclave Tariff while
booking.
- The payment will have to be made DIRECTLY to the hotel as per
their terms and conditions.
- PRCI will not be responsible
further.
- The rooms come with complimentary
lavish breakfast and Wifi connectivity.
- Shantai Hotel is just 1.5 KM from
Pune Railway station and 12 KM from Pune International airport.
For
room reservations, please fill in the attached form and send it to the Hotel,
marking CC to PRCI as mentioned in the form.
Limited seats and limited
accommodation!
Please, therefore, rush in
your confirmation by return mail to allow the Conclave Secretariat to plan
logistics.
Looking forward to meeting
you at the 12th Global
Communication Conclave, Pune, on at 2 PM on March 9, 2018.
Thursday, 23 November 2017
Have we forgotten Indira Gandhi?
Many Indians
love Indira Gandhi for what she stood for and what she did. Many Indians shun
her memory for what she did between 1975-77.But her imprint on
post-independence history of India is indelible. In the government policy
area, the shadows of her polices linger though unacknowledged. Her signature
was leadership, writes S Narendra, former adviser to PMs and ex-Spokesperson, Govt of India. A PRapport exclusive! (Pictures from Congress party website)
|
display advertisement on
Indira Gandhi by the Congress party announcing on 19th November her
birth centenary.The party in its present form,under dynastic
leadership,continues to exist solely because of Mrs Gandhi’s daring and
successful confrontation against the old guard in 1969. The party’s credentials
as a pro-poor, secular outfit with pan -India appeal are based largely on her
record. Even posthumously her name earns votes. The half page newspaper tribute
is one more evidence of theabsence of
imagination and leadership in the party.
Purely in utilitarian terms, Indira Gandhi’s centenary was a great opening for reminding the post -1991
Liberalisation generation of the unquestionable contribution of Indira Gandhi
in putting India first in several fields. This was also a missed opportunity to
come forward with the leadership’s vision
fora youthful India, especially when Rahul Gandhi is likely to replace
his mother as party president.
Like all political leaders who wielded
enormous power about whom posterity reads in history books, Indira Gandhi’s
record was mixed.As an adversary,she was formidable and the present ruling
establishment has lots of causes to despise
her. But we as a nation have to thank her for a lot of things that may be
politically inconvenient for the present rulers. Again.as a nation, we cannot
forgive her for imposing ‘her political emergency’ in 1975,abusing the
Constitution. Nothing prevented Indira of
those days from preceding Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and many others who declared
themselves to be heads of their governments for life. But She redeemed herself
by abruptly ending the emergency and opting for election in early 1977. And,Indira
should be remembered for this act alone, If not for other reasons I am about to
list.
I was more upset to see the Congress tokenism,
because if in power, the party would have splurged government money on ‘celebrating’ Indira’s centenary and made it a political
event. In 1969, the party and Indira politically exploited Mahatma Gandhi’s
birth centenary and claimed impliedly that she was out to fulfil Gandhi’s
dream of wiping the tears of the last man in the line[ the talisman]. In 1989,
an election year, Rajiv Gandhi’s government opened the government purse to
observe Nehru centenary for a year to tell the nation that his grandson
deserved to be rewarded by the electorate.
In 1969, the Nehru family’s hold on power was
about to slip out. Indira resolutely rescued the dynastyand made the Congress a
family owned party, against daunting odds.She, thus, set the trend of dynastic
politics. Regional leaders-Karunanidhi,Jayalitha,Mulayam Singh Yadav, Patnaik, Devegowda
to name a few,later only followed her example of promoting dynasties.
What all did the Congress party miss out to
tell? The present government is presenting its successful confrontation against
China at Doklamas an example what strong leadership could achieve.No doubt that
must be noted and applauded.The successful face-0ff against China was facilitated
by Indira’s gutsy master stroke in making Sikkim a part of India in 1975, where
the Indian army ,at present ,is deployed in strength. For those unfamiliar with
Doklam geography, it is atthetri-junction between Sikkim,Bhutan and China, a
highly contested territory, important for
India as it helps in protecting the narrow(24 km wide) Siliguri corridor
that connects the north east states to the rest of India.If Sikkim were not
part of India, it would have placed India in a precarious situation.
The Sikkim annexation was not the only
peaceful expansion of India’s territory. Indira was also responsible for the
ground work that entitled India to a piece of territory in the Antartic, one among
half a dozen countries to set up
research stations there.Not only that India’s exclusive rights to explore
polymetallic nodules from sea-bed in central Indian ocean basin have been
extended by five years in August 2017.These rights are over 75000 sqkms of area
in international waters allocated by International seabed Authority for
development activities for polymetallic nodules. How did that come about?.This
was possible because the government set up a separate Ocean Development
department in 1981 and encouraged it to pioneer in developing seabed survey and
research, including the technology for seabed mining.The Ocean department and
the Indian navy cooperated in carrying out the sea bed survey in 2000, that
entitled India to claim seabed territory.
ISRO,India’s space agency is globally
hailed for its innovation in the satellite technology business.The Space
commission and ISRO took shape in 1969 and Aryabhata satellite went up in
1975.Satellite TV broadcasting was introduced throughSITE experiment; this was followed by
satellite telephony experiment. Indira was criticised for spending money on
fancy projects. In a congratulatory message to ISRO, Indira had said;’
expensive high technology was low cost in the long term when harnessed for
development’. ISRO’s Chandrayaan and other odysseys have made the country
proud.
Pokharan-II nuclear explosions in 1998 made
India a nuclear power, and in 2009 India shed its status as a nuclear pariah
when the Indo-US nuclear cooperation agreement was signed .The efforts of the
present government to gain the
membership of NSG, pacts for nuclear cooperation with Japan and with others
would not have been possible without Pokharan-I in 1974.
Coming to the strides made in agriculture,rural
development, poverty reduction and Make
in India, the humongous contribution of the nationalised banks must be
acknowledged.When Mrs Gandhi nationalized the 14 commercial banks on July 19,1969,their
total number of branches was less than 2000 and their total deposits was less
than Rs3000 crores.Of the total bank lending, barely 1.75 percent went to
agriculture.When the present government is taking credit for announcing the
earmarking of highest bank credit (10 lakh crore) for agriculture, it has to be
noted that this would not have been possible if the banks had not been
nationalized.India now can boast of being a leading producer of milk,vegetables
and fruits and agri- products. Impartial research would show that the farm and
rural directional change in economic growth and development was ushered in by
the 1970 budget. Prime minister Indira Gandhi had presented this budget as the
finance minister. A document accompanying the Budget-titled ‘growth with social
justice’ had launched the small farmers development agency, dry land
development agency and many others with self-employment avenues (dairy
farming,poultry, animal husbandry) assisted by nationalised bank finance. This
white revolution is noted but its author is less remembered. Indira’s CSRE
{1972} or crash scheme for rural employment has now turned into MNREGA, aboon
to landless labour in drought seasons. The government’s direct intervention for
reducing poverty, distress in agriculture took off ina big way. Of course, lots
of money has been syphoned off by politicians of all hues from such schemes but
Mrs Gandhi cannot be blamed for the leakages. Politics teaches its
practitioners to tap into any and every government programme with a kitty.
This 1970 budget also tightened the
‘Licenceraj’, under which many industrial houses,new and old flourished. And,
crony capitalism spawned big businesses.Owners of some of them today are making
it to the list of billionaires in the Forbes magazine.
Her finest hour, and that of India, was
December 16, 1971 when the Pakistan army surrendered to the Indian army at
Dacca in Bangladesh and the latter became an independent country.
![]() |
| Then PM and statesman Vajpayee paying tributes to at Indira's Samadhi - Shakti Sthal |
On that
occasion ,the poet in Atal BehariVajpayeeji came out to anoint her as ‘Durga’. This
powerful and benign ‘Durga’ , unfortunately showed to the future prime minister and to her other
political rivals her dark face in 1975.
The opposition and the regional parties
also must thank her for breaking the cycle of simultaneous elections to Lok Sabha
and the state assemblies in 1971. The argument advanced then was that the
issues in play in a parliamentary poll are national in nature,unlike in
Assembly elections in which regional and local issues are agitated. This one Indira
move incapacitated the Congress juggernaut from steam-rolling into power across
states.Smaller and regional political outfits had very little chance of coming
to power if simultaneous polls were held for the Lok Sabha and assemblies. Strangely,
now there is talk of undoing this in the hope of establishing a political
monolith on the lines of the Congress party before 1967.
History has mysterious ways of revisiting
itself. Unlike her father, Jawaharlalal Nehru, after India’s victory over
Pakistan in 1971,Indira`veered towards the cult of personality. Wikipeadia explains
it thus:’cult of personality arises when a regime uses mass media,propaganda or
other methods such as government -organized demonstrations to create an
idealized, heroic and at times worshipful image of a leader,often through
unquestioning flattery and praise. Her party president Devkant Barooah became famous
with his quote ; ‘Indira is India’. Indira was irritated by media criticism and
began to ignore media.She had said that the media represent 0.001 percent of
the population and public opinion. Editors like B.G.Verghese who were critical of her policies and centralisation of power ,came under their
newspaper owners’ pressure and were sacked. Her contempt for free media not
unexpectedly showed up as media censorship during the emergency. However, her
contribution to media development was significant.Under her instructions, the
TV training was added to the Film and Television Institute in Pune in 1974 and
the institution became a full -fledged visual media training facility with full government support. The film
documentary wing as well as the film development corporation for financing
creative films flourished.The newspaper industry starved of news print due to
global scarcity let out a sigh of relief when the government responded to its
appeal for producing newsprint by government mills.
Indira Gandhi when she became PM after the
sudden death of prime minister Lal Bahadur Shastri initially did not have
power; it was wielded by her appointees in the party. But she acquired it by
sheer dint of her determination and wielded it demonstratively. The academic
literature on Power states that power is rarely given;It has to be acquired and
exercised and make other feel it in action.She brought that into full play in the months leading upto the
Indo-Pak confrontation over Bangladesh. The crisis was an opportunity for
Indira Gandhi to established herself as a leader to be reckoned
internationally.Her face off with US President Nixon and secretary of state Henry
Kissinger are well documented. The Indo-USSR 20 -year agreement for peace and
friendship singed a little before the Indo-Pak war of 1971 was a diplomatic
coup that unsettled both the US and China that were siding with Pakistan. This
pact, according to some commentators, stopped the US from sending a contingent
of its 7th Fleet into Indian ocean to brow beat India.
Many Indians love Indira Gandhi for what
she stood for and what she did. Many Indians shun her memory for what she did
between 1975-77.But her imprint on post-independence history of India is
indelible. In the government policy area, the shadows of her polices linger
though unacknowledged. Her signature was leadership.
Wednesday, 1 November 2017
Don’t Underestimate The Power a Good Press Release!
- PRact workshop at Mumbai Press Club draws huge response
![]() |
The workshop on The Art of
Press Release Writing organized under the aegis of PRact – a joint platform of PRCI and
IPRF – at Mumbai Press Club on the occasion of the World Communicators’ Day has
evoked a tremendous response with over 60 paid delegates participating.
Communication professionals
from corporate, consultancies and individual practitioners attended the
workshop.
PRCI observes October 28 as
the World Communicators Day since it was on this day that the world’s first
press release was issued in 1906 by Ivy Lee in the US.
PRCI national president B N
Kumar, who is also Executive Director of Concept PR, kick-started the interactive workshop at which
PR veteran Jitender Bhargava, former
Executive
Here are the key takeaways from
the workshop:
- A Press Release begins with a catchy headline
- Then follow three or four bullet points that highlight key aspects of the release
- The most important points should come in the first two or three paras, else it will be junked.
- PR practitioners should follow the inverted-pyramid formula – the most important aspect on the top and the least in the bottom.
- We should also remember the 5Ws-and-1H formula.
- Newsrooms may ask ‘So What?’.
- Hence justify the release.
- Everybody wants the release to appear in The Economic Times and The Times of India
- The key is get journalists interested in the release
- News is no more about North-East-West-South.
- What’s new makes the news.
- Remember KISS – Keep it Short and Sweet.
- Grammar is very important in which ever language you write a press release.
- Use social media posting to popularize your press releases
- Some releases on product launches may not get media attention – however hard one may try.
- Use social media and once the post goes viral, the print medium will be interested in it.
- Mention contacts whoich are available for media queries – and not those who happen to be on leave or travelling.
- The idea of issuing a press release is to facilitate a journalist to write and not to harass him with irrelevant stuff.
- Clients and bosses might want to see their press releases in key media.
- They must be made to understand the functioning of media.
- Media familiarization workshops for clients are a must to keep their expectations at reasonable levels.
- Know your media well, make lists of various beat journalists, keep updating them for improved productivity since, for instance, there is no point in sending a business development story to a political journalist and vice-versa.
- Think like a journalist.
- Check the result of your press releases
- Check the wires which carry your release; check for the style, presentation and the art of writing.
- Your job becomes easier, if you follow and observe journalistic style of writing.
- It doesn’t happen overnight.
- But will sure happen with practice.
- For any more queries/clarifications you can contact B N Kumar at mailbnk@gmail.com
- He is available 24x7
World Communicators Day Focus on The Art of Writing Press Releases
- PRCI event at Punjab University
CHANDIGARH: The
School of Communication Studies at Punjab University, along with Chandigarh
Chapter of Public Relations Council of India (PRCI) observed the World
Communicators Day by organising a workshop on The Art of Press Release Writing October
30, 2017.
PRCI
observes October 28 as the World Communicators Day since it was on this day in 1906
that the first formal press release was issued by a Public Relations practitioner
Ivy Lee in USA following a train accident. It also marked the beginning of
formal PR and the birth of Crisis Communications.
Dr.
Archana R. Singh, chairperson of School of Communication Studies, said that
such
workshops
and interactive session give a practical exposure to students and help
them
when they step out to work for the industry.
National
Executive Committee Member of PRCI and a PR consultant C.J. Singh, conducted
the workshop citing various examples for pitching the press releases for various
media. He informed about various elements required for writing a press release.
He informed that the release needs to be projected in inverted pyramid style.
He talked about the importance of ethics and credibility for professionals.
Earlier
Ms. Renuka B. Salwan, Director Public Relations, PU and PRCI National Vice
President
– North, pointed out that Council is a premier non-political organisation of
professionals in the field of Public Relations, Communication, advertising and
many other allied services. It has been actively perusing the spread and
popularity of communication and Public Relation in India with 30 chapters pan-India.
She
said that press release is an important source of information for the media
that helps them reach out to their readers with news where their teams cannot
reach. She gave tips for building stories into news by finding a right slot in
media. She urged them to blend action with issue while writing the press
release.
Over
30 students participated in the workshop on press release writing. The students were given certificates of
participations.
Thoolika Lit Awards Presented on World Communicators’ Day
ERNAKULAM:
Celebrating the World Communicators Day on 31st October at
Ernakulam Press Club, the Kerala chapter of PRCI, presented the 3rd Thoolika Literary Awards.
Dr M C Dileep Kumar, former Vice Chancellor of Adi Sankara
University, Kalady, was the Chief Guest gave
away the awards to noted novelist and short-story writer E P Sreekumar and Dr
Mary Metilda, one of the top HRD and corporate trainers from the South. She was
the former teacher and Principal of
Maharaja’s College, Ernakulam.
E.P.Sreekumar was awarded the best literature (fiction) for
the collection of stories, “Adhvanavetta”, while Dr. Mary Metilda was bestowed
with the best literature (composition) award for “Jeevitam Padippicha
Vijaya Mantrangal”. The winners were
adjudged by a jury comprising of eminent Journalists cum Authors, Ravi
Kuttikattu, Leela Menon and Story
Writer, Author Dr.K.A.Marydas.
Sreekumar said that though he had received many awards in
the past, he considered the
Thoolika Award as the most prestigious
one because it was presented by a premier organization which provides the foremost platform
for PR and communications professional s with close to 30 chapters pan
India. He held the trophy close to his heart as he concluded his speech
thanking the organizers.
Dr Mary was very
emotional while delivering her thanks-giving speech. She said that she will
definitely share the happiness with her students and advise them to be good
communicators in life because life is all about communication, without which
the world will be like an empty shell. She also said that she accepted the
award with high gratitude and would cherish the same for the rest of her life.
![]() |
| A snapshot of Media coverage |
The jury chairman Ravi
Kuttikkad, a veteran journalist and noted writer, said that it was a great
opportunity for him to be associated with a professional organization like PRCI
and to head the judging committee for
selecting the winners of Thoolika award particularly while celebrating the
World Communications Day.
Mr U S Kutty, chairman, presided over
the meeting, Mr T Vinay Kumar Secretary welcomed the gathering and Mr P K
Natesh, Treasurer offered vote of thanks.
The meeting was attended by more than 50 people including journalists
and well wishers of PRCI.
Tuesday, 24 October 2017
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