New Delhi, July 26 -- When she was a young woman in college, Sulochana Gadgil jumped out of a window of a classroom once to escape from a boring class. Math was her thing, so she decided not to take up engineering but focus on her first love. She eventually completed a master's degree in applied mathematics from Pune university. Degrees from Harvard and MIT followed. Along the way, she fell in love with the dynamics of the monsoon, and applied math to it, focusing on variations in the monsoon. It is to Gadgil that we owe much of our understanding of this variability to - hugely important in a country where nearly half of the cultivated area is rain-fed, with the Southwest Monsoon accounting for the bulk of it. On Thursday night, Professor S...