Jamsetji
Nusserwanji Tata (3 March 1839 – 19 May 1904) was an Indian pioneer industrialist,
who founded the Tata Group, India's biggest conglomerate company. He was born
to a Parsi Zoroastrian family in Navsari then part of the princely state of
Baroda.
He founded what
would later become the Tata Group of companies. Tata is regarded as the
legendary "Father of Indian Industry"
Telephones have changed dramatically since Alexander Graham
Bell spoke the first words into a telephone on March 10, 1876. Overall, they’ve
improved since then, but the road wasn’t always smooth. Here’s a look back at
the most important advances in telephone technology and some of the worst.
Albert Sabin
developed the widely-used, oral, attenuated ("live") poliovirus
vaccine (OPV). A form of the oral attenuated vaccine is used today in the
worldwide effort to eradicate acute poliomyelitis. However, some countries
including the United States, recommend the IPV (inactivated polio vaccine).
On 3 March 2002,
Balayogi died in crash of a Bell 206 helicopter in Kaikalur, Krishna District, Andhra
Pradesh. He was aged 50. G.M.C. Balayogi Athletic Stadium was named in his
memory.
Ragnar Anton
Kittil Frisch (3 March 1895 – 31 January 1973) was a Norwegian economist and
the co-recipient of the first Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1969
(with Jan Tinbergen). He is known for having founded the discipline of
econometrics, and for coining the widely used term pair macroeconomics/microeconomics
in 1933.
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