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          New Delhi, Feb 21 (IANS) As the historic Nalanda University is   set to be rebuilt, Vice Chancellor Gopa Sabharwal said Monday that a global   design competition for the building's architecture will be announced in three to   four months. Talking to reporters in Delhi at a press conference, the newly   appointed vice chancellor said that the new university will be built on an area   of 446 acres, 10 km from the site of the ancient university of Nalanda in Bihar.  |  
  
      
	  
	  
	  "The university will be built in Rajgir, which is 10 km from the site of the   historic Nalanda university. A global designing competition will be announced in   coming three or four months for finalising the architecture," Sabharwal said. 
 The Nalanda University Bill was passed by the parliament during the   monsoon session in August 2010 and a notification for its creation was issued in   November.
 
 While the work for creation of infrastructure has already   begun, the construction of the building and other details will start once the   designs are finalised.
 
 "The design must get ready by next year. We will   try to built it as soon as possible but it is difficult to give a time frame,"   she said.
 
 The university, which will be an international   state-of-the-art institution, will have post graduate courses in six   disciplines.
 
 The course include Buddhist studies, philosophy and   comparative religions, historical studies, international relations and peace   studies, business management in relation to public policy and development   studies, languages and literature and ecology and environmental studies.
 
 Talking about the courses, Nalanda mentor group chairman and nobel   laureate Amartya Sen said that the courses like Buddhist philosophy and   religious studies aimed at connecting the modern university to its historic past   when Nalanda was the centre of learning that attracted students from all over   the world.
 
 "Courses like Buddhist studies, comparative religion,   literature and history will connect it to its past. I hope some day we can also   include astronomy in the courses as it was taught in the ancient Nalanda   university," Sen said.
 
 Asked about the absence of science related   courses, Sen said that creation of infrastructure was one of the main reasons   for this.
 
 "You cannot teach science without a lab, so infrastructure was   one of the main reasons why we have stressed on humanities. In the course of   time, science courses will get included," he said.
 
 While the government   of India has created an endowment fund for the creation of the university, the   project has also attracted contributions from many other countries including   Singapore, Australia and China.
 
 "We got $7 million from Singapore, $1   million from China, Australia is funding a chair, while Laos has given $50,000,"   Sabharwal said.
 
 Speaking on the occasion, Foreign Minister of Singapore   George Yeo said that the aim was to create a university to facilitate exchange   of ideas.
 
 "It will be a place where human beings gather and each   contribute to development of others," Yeo said.
 
      
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