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Delhi:
Governments come and governments go but the capital's oh so incestuous
society remains unchanged. Atal Bihari Vajpayee's Hindi poems have been
translated into English by Pavan Varma, who wears the many hats of socialite,
writer and diplomat. The publisher is David Davidar, CEO of Penguin India
and recently named by the PMO to the governing society of the Nehru Memorial
Museum and Library. Ahem.
Flunking Out Sir
Bhubaneswar: While ministers waited outside, Orissa's Chief Minister
Naveen Patnaik would begin his days closeted for no less than an hour
with a teacher. The non-Oriya speaking chief minister was trying hard
to master the language of the people he represents. But after a year of
patient waiting, the patience has grown thin, the chief minister has not
learnt much and the tutor has stopped visiting. For the record, Raj Kishore
Mishra, the retired English teacher who tried his hand at teaching Oriya
to the VIP student, is unwell and therefore on leave. But the grapevine
has it that he too has run out of patience-Naveen still reads haltingly
from Oriya in Roman script.
Lift Out
Chandigarh:
Soon after Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal was immobilised by a leg
fracture ahead of the crucial assembly elections in Punjab, his Akali
acoloytes had set in motion an ingenious idea to lift the demoralised
party spirit. It was about a specially-fabricated van fitted with a hydraulic
lift that would prop up a wheelchair-bound Badal from the roof to enable
him to run the party's election campaign. But Badal shot down the idea,
saying such an improvised vehicle may be an eyecatcher but would rob him
and his message of attention. .
He's
Got a Ticket to Ride
Bangalore: The Congress high command, sources say, is not very
keen to give the green signal for a trip to the US to Karnataka Chief
Minister S.M. Krishna because there is confusion over who should be designated
acting chief minister. Both Home Minister Mallikharjun Kharge and PWD
Minister Dharam Singh want to take his place. Although there are no visible
signs of dissidence yet, Krishna has decided to take no chances. So his
trip is on hold until things settle down some on the home front.
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