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sexual assault or sexual exploitation. But these are minor quibbles in a film that otherwise works
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wonderfully."
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Indiaglitz rated the film 3.75 out of five and said "Arun Prabhu Purushothaman is a welcome find to
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Tamil cinema who has delved deep to tell a unique story and that too using a very modern new age
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style filmmaking. His depth as a writer and grip over the medium can be summed up in the climax
|
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when he puts the sinners and the sinned at peace with each other that is more heart tugging than
|
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the inevitable tragedy." Sify stated it as "one of the best films of this year, it handles a
|
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relevant topic with an engaging screenplay". Behindwoods gave three-and-a-out of five stars saying
|
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|
"Nothing short of a masterpiece, Aruvi is a cinematic journey that every type of audience can
|
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|
relate to, connect to, empathize with and adore".
|
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|
Accolades
Notes
References
External links
Official website
|
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2010s feminist films
2010s political drama films
2010s Tamil-language films
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2016 directorial debut films
2016 drama films
2016 films
2016 LGBT-related films
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|
Films about social issues in India
Films about trans women
Indian feminist films
Indian films
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123_227
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Indian LGBT-related films
Indian political drama films
2010s masala films
|
124_0
|
Ambika Bumb an American biomedical scientist and businessperson. Bumb is a nanomedicine specialist
|
124_1
|
who uses nanotechnology for the detection of treatment of disease. Her discoveries using
|
124_2
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nanodiamonds while working as postdoctoral researcher at the National Cancer Institute and the
|
124_3
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute led to the launch of the biotech Bikanta.
|
124_4
|
Early life
|
124_5
|
Bumb was born to Indian Jain parents who immigrated to the United States for higher education. Her
|
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father was one of the earliest in his family to complete his Doctor of Philosophy degree and her
|
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|
mother the first female in her town to go to college. Her maternal-grandfather was a veterinarian.
|
124_8
|
Bumb graduated as from Southside High School as valedictorian in 2002, where her younger sister and
|
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brother also followed her as valedictorians.
|
124_10
|
Education
|
124_11
|
Bumb graduated in 2005 from Georgia Tech with a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering and
|
124_12
|
a Minor in Economics from Georgia Institute of Technology, while being recognized with the Helen E.
|
124_13
|
Grenga Outstanding Woman Engineer and E. Jo Baker President's Scholar Awards. With an early
|
124_14
|
interest in nanomedicine, she conducted research focused on tracking quantum dots in bone and
|
124_15
|
cartilage while also being an active leader in various campus organizations.
|
124_16
|
In 2008, Bumb completed her doctorate in Medical Engineering in three years from University of
|
124_17
|
Oxford while also on the prestigious Marshall Scholarship and NIH-OxCam Program. Her doctoral work
|
124_18
|
brought together 4 labs from 2 institutes, 4 fields, and 2 countries. She developed a
|
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|
triple-reporting nanoparticle and showed the technology's transferability across different disease
|
124_20
|
types with studies in cancer and multiple sclerosis. The magnetic nanoparticles demonstrated strong
|
124_21
|
potential in cancer diagnostics and therapy. Upon graduation, she continued to go on to two
|
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|
post-doctoral fellowships at the National Cancer Institute and National Heart, Lung and Blood
|
124_23
|
Institute. She has received much recognition for excellence in engineering and was profiled early
|
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|
in her career in Nature as a successful young scientist on the fast-track.
|
124_25
|
Career
|
124_26
|
Her breakthroughs in the areas of nanomedicine and diagnostics have led to multiple patents,
|
124_27
|
publications, and the spin out of the biotech Bikanta that is using nanodiamonds to allow academics
|
124_28
|
and doctors to study and address disease at the cellular level. Nanodiamonds are next generation
|
124_29
|
imaging probes trailblazing cutting-edge research including applications with the recent Nobel
|
124_30
|
Prize in Chemistry for super-resolved fluorescence microscopy and utility in portable cancer
|
124_31
|
detection devices. Bikanta is one of the first biotechs to be funded by Y Combinator, winner of the
|
124_32
|
Silicon Valley Boomer Venture and CapCon Competitions, a California Life Science Institute's FAST
|
124_33
|
Awardee, and named 1 of 4 Best Diagnostics Startups of 2015 by QB3.
|
124_34
|
As Bikanta prepared to move the technology into clinical trials, the Theranos scandal went public
|
124_35
|
and many investors pulled out of the diagnostics space. Bikanta was unable to raise the funding to
|
124_36
|
proceed with the clinical trials.
|
124_37
|
Complementary to her scientific and commercial interests, Bumb has also been involved in national
|
124_38
|
science policy initiatives, particularly related to nanotechnology. After Bikanta, Ambika began
|
124_39
|
working as Health Science and Technology Advisor for the Secretary of State in the office of
|
124_40
|
Crisis Management and Strategy in December 2019, where she played a role in the government response
|
124_41
|
to the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
124_42
|
Bumb was featured as a female role model to empower young girls by Career Girls. She has been
|
124_43
|
appreciated in various interviews, including by Nature at the Naturejobs Career Expo, San Francisco
|
124_44
|
and in an interview by WeFunder.
|
124_45
|
Personal life
Bumb practices Jainism and has been a dancer from an early age.
|
124_46
|
Awards and recognition
Marshall Scholarship
|
124_47
|
The Council of Outstanding Young Engineering Alumni Award - Georgia Institute of Technology
|
124_48
|
Orloff Science Award for Technical Achievement - National Institutes of Health
|
124_49
|
National Institutes of Health-Oxford Cambridge Scholarship in Biomedical Sciences
|
124_50
|
Georgia Institute of Technology President's Scholarship
Aspen Health Forum Fellow
|
124_51
|
Helen E. Grenga Outstanding Woman Engineer Award
|
124_52
|
E. Jo Baker Award for outstanding President's Scholar
|
124_53
|
Omicron Delta Kappa Award for Outstanding Leadership
Women In Engineering Excellence Award
|
124_54
|
Akamai Foundation Award through the Mathematical Association of America
|
124_55
|
Winner of Silicon Valley Boomer Venture Summit
Winner of CapCon Business Competition
|
124_56
|
References
|
124_57
|
Living people
Marshall Scholars
Georgia Tech alumni
Businesspeople in the health care industry
|
124_58
|
Women medical researchers
American women chief executives
American Jains
|
124_59
|
American businesswomen of Indian descent
American women of Indian descent in health professions
|
124_60
|
Alumni of Oriel College, Oxford
Year of birth missing (living people)
American medical researchers
|
124_61
|
21st-century American businesswomen
21st-century American businesspeople
|
124_62
|
21st-century American women scientists
21st-century American biologists
|
125_0
|
James Hazen Hyde (June 6, 1876 — July 26, 1959) was the son of Henry Baldwin Hyde, the founder of
|
125_1
|
The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. James Hazen Hyde was twenty-three in
|
125_2
|
1899 when he inherited the majority shares in the billion-dollar Equitable Life Assurance Society.
|
125_3
|
Five years later, at the pinnacle of social and financial success, efforts to remove him from The
|
125_4
|
Equitable set in motion the first great Wall Street scandal of the 20th century, which resulted in
|
125_5
|
his resignation from The Equitable and relocation to France.
|
125_6
|
Early life
|
125_7
|
James Hazen Hyde was born in New York City on June 6, 1876. He was the only surviving son of Henry
|
125_8
|
Baldwin Hyde and Annie (née Fitch) Hyde. His older sister was Mary who was married to Sidney Dillon
|
125_9
|
Ripley in 1886. After Ripley's death in 1905, she married banker Charles R. Scott in 1912.
|
125_10
|
He graduated from the Cutler School, and received his degree from Harvard University in 1898. Hyde
|
125_11
|
studied French history, language and literature, and was involved in efforts to establish an
|
125_12
|
exchange program that enabled French authors and educators to lecture at universities in the United
|
125_13
|
States, with American professors reciprocating at universities in France. Hyde's efforts included
|
125_14
|
the endowment of a fund to defray professor's expenses, and he received the Legion of Honor
|
125_15
|
(Chevalier) from the government of France.
|
125_16
|
Career
|
125_17
|
Hyde was appointed a vice president of The Equitable after graduating from college. In addition,
|
125_18
|
he served on the boards of directors of more than 40 other companies, including the Wabash Railroad
|
125_19
|
and Western Union.
|
125_20
|
Besides his business activities, Hyde pursued several other hobbies and pastimes. His homes
|
125_21
|
included a large estate on Long Island, where Hyde maintained horses, stables, roads, and trails to
|
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