N S Ramaswami - ορισμός. Τι είναι το N S Ramaswami
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Τι (ποιος) είναι N S Ramaswami - ορισμός

INDIAN SPORTS JOURNALIST (1918-1987)
N S Ramaswami; N.S. Ramaswami; NS Ramaswami

N. S. Ramaswami         
Nallathagudi Srinivasa Ramaswami (November 1918, Cuddalore - 19 February 1987) was an Indian sports journalist who worked for four decades with The Hindu, Mail and Indian Express, and became an assistant editor at all three newspapers.The brief biography that appears in some of his books (See this) provide the year as 1918, while the obituary in Indian Cricket 1987 gives it as 1908.
S. N. Balakrishnan         
INDIAN ACADEMIC
S N Balakrishnan
S N Balakrishnan was the second Chancellor of Shiv Nadar University and the Chairperson of the Executive Council, the apex statutory body at the University. His brother, Shiv Nadar, is the founder of the university bearing his name.
(S)-coclaurine-N-methyltransferase         
CLASS OF ENZYMES
EC 2.1.1.140; S-adenozil-L-metionin:(S)-coclaurine-N-methyltransferase
In enzymology, a (S)-coclaurine-N-methyltransferase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction

Βικιπαίδεια

N. S. Ramaswami

Nallathagudi Srinivasa Ramaswami (November 1918, Cuddalore - 19 February 1987) was an Indian sports journalist who worked for four decades with The Hindu, Mail and Indian Express, and became an assistant editor at all three newspapers. He wrote four books on cricket — Winter of Content, Indian Cricket, Indian Willow and From Porbandar to Wadekar — but was also well-versed in history, social commentary and temple architecture.

Ramaswami often wrote under the pseudonyms "Cardusian" and "New Ebor", the former in honour of Neville Cardus, that doyen of cricket literature, and the latter Alfred Pullin, Victorian-Edwardian cricket correspondent for the Yorkshire Post, whose pseudonym was "Old Ebor". He was most popularly known, however, by the initials NSR. One of the most subtle and observant writers on the game, Ramaswami's work is celebrated even today. "What he lacked," wrote Suresh Menon in an otherwise laudatory piece, "was what some modern writers consider more important than style or flair — a harsh line in criticism. His writing was suggestive rather than brazen, his criticism based on larger principles rather than on passing trends."

Ramaswami studied at the PS High School in Mylapore, Loyola College in Chennai and took BA Hons in English literature from Madras Christian College. He played in the Madras leagues as a right arm off spinner for YMCA, Royapettah. He suffered a heart attack on 18 February 1987, and died the next day.