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It costs Rs 10 lach, an engineering degree. Even when IITs facilitate a brain drain, that the countries are not likely to make some of the famous graduates to try their bit. Dipak Ghosh reports USUALLY, the path followed by an IIT graduate is as follows: a university abroad, on the completion of the course, you are looking for a lucrative offer, and that more searches up to a green card. But the unpalatable truth is that the costs Rs 10 lach for an IITian. It is a high price to pay in a developing country like India, especially in West Bengal today, in one of its worst financial crises. Accordingly, the Indian Institute of Technology, created with the idea that state-of-the-art technology-based engineering training, as well as values and ethics einschärfen in harmony with our national values — in other words, for professionals of concern for national needs - to promote a brain drain, that the country is not likely to provide. The millions of dollars of the issue is whether the former IITians - formed in large part on money from the public treasury of the state - still give something, to the outward and return journeys. Especially given the fact that foreign students in universities, mostly run by private organizations, often to pay a certain percentage of their salary to their Alma Mater. An institute as IIT, Kharagpur, for example, which has a number of famous companies and the masters of heavyweights in the industry - Purnendu Chatterjee (founder of Haldia Petrochemicals), Arjun Malhotra (Chairman and Chief Executive of the list Hardware Compatibility computers); RN Mukerjea (Senior Vice - Chairman of Larsen & Toubro); R Gopalkrishnan (Tata’s Executive President) - certainly deserves better than his own Alumni for success stories. After former director, GS Sanyal, enjoys a status icon in IITians school graduates who go abroad, the technical upgrading of the country’s ambassadors. A loan from the alma mater remains IIT Foundation, a non-profit organization in 5000 graduates, which is headquartered in the United States and Canada. The Foundation has a full business school named Vinod Gupta, given US $ 2 million to set it up. The idea is to dazzle and technology, management, ie enable managers to understand and appreciate both critical technology and management issues of their implications. Arjun Malhotra Kiran and his wife have contributed to the state-of-the-art GS Sanyal School of Telecommunication. The advanced VLSI lab on campus is primarily funded by the Foundation is the maintenance of hardware and software, the salaries of teachers and staff, as well as the visit of the faculty, teaching short sessions a year. A visionary idea of Silicon Valley Subhash Patil, the Golden Jubilee, the network of PCs with Internet and Intra-net for all students of the Auberge 3500, in his room, for the world. The Foundation also announced a grant of Rs 5000 for students in need, even more meritorious character whose name in the Top 100 of the commune of the review of salaries list. But in comparison with the 320,000 men Alumni IIT Kharagpur, now, as Arjun Malhotra, Vinod Gupta, and Subhash Patil are rare. “In IITs, the government has made substantial investments to obtain maximum and a minimum return,” says a member of the Faculty. “The government must take stricter measures for the brain drain.” But Professor GS Sanyal is not ready to accept that the former IITians convenient employment settle abroad, and there is not something to the whole country. “They are the companies that earn foreign exchange and, more importantly, they share the technical know-how with the IITs, in pursuit of a low-cost solution to the basic problems to do with the food, shelter, potable water, health and education. “However, as many of the former IITians really do?