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Doctors without frontiers. People against borders. Borders dividing families. The lines on earth incite, excite and exhort many. But this was rather unique. A cricket match result gets an MLA of a nationalist party so excited that he rushes to the border, hundreds in tow, to shout abuses across the electrified fence! But then such is the stuff our politics is made of. Imagine a Nannu-style MLA in Gaza strip!

 
 
     

 

 

 

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"Newspapers always excite curiosity. No one ever lays one down without a feeling of disappointment."
Charles Lamb, 1833


"Frankly, despite my horror of the press, I’d love to rise from the grave every ten years or so and go buy a few newspapers."
Luis Buñuel,
Spanish filmmaker



"I often wonder what future historians will say about us. One sentence will suffice to describe modern man: he fornicated and he read newspapers."
Albert Camus,
French novelist, dramatist, philosopher, 1956

Is this Cricket? BJP MLA Plays Key Role in fracas at Border

S P Singh

If a clash between India and Pakistan, even if on a cricket pitch, attracts astronomical numbers of eyeballs, how can a local politico in a mofussil-sized town on the international border resist the temptation of squeezing out some hard to come by media publicity? 

After ugly scenes of across-the-border stone-pelting between Indians and Pakistanis at Hussainiwala border last Sunday, the role of Ferozepur BJP MLA

Sukhpal Singh Nannu has come under a shadow as he had reportedly ferried hundreds of his supporters to the border who initially indulged in provocative sloganeering. 

Deeply involved in the heat of electioneering for the local Municipal Committee scheduled to go to elections on March 9, Nannu apparently sensed a good photo op in the match. 

On Saturday, thanks to some pooled effort, Ferozepur citizens got a bonanza of watching the match on a huge screen at the V S Palace outside Kasoori Gate. Nannu was also among the audience, as were a number of his supporters. 

Moments after India won, not only was a decision taken to take out a big procession to the Hussaniwala border but also the local media was invited. 

While sources said nearly a 1,000 odd mob had gathered there to watch the retreat ceremony on Sunday, Nannu said he had taken only around 200 people. 

"After all, we are patriots, and we had gone there to congratulate our brothers in the armed forces who are defending us against Pakistan," Nannu said. The BJP patriots had also taken along a quintal of laddoos to be distributed to BSF jawans. 

Nannu said his entire group had gone in a motorcycle caravan, but claimed that the trouble had started from Pakistani side. Sources however said many of Nannu's supporters had initially raised provocative slogans and even hurled invectives at Pakistani side but things went out of hand when they threw laddoos towards Pakistan side. 

Nannu however claimed some Pakistanis had provoked the Indian crowd by lifting up their kurtas in a vulgar fashion. 

The highly charged mob then seemingly went out of control, forcing a mild lathi charge which left some injured. "Given the circumstances, and the provocation created by Nannu's supporters, things could have gone out of hand. A border is a highly sensitive zone where people from two sides come physically very close to each other and the celebration of aggression at the retreat must not be coupled with provocation," said a senior official who was a witness to the ugly episode of Sunday. He also noted that after much chappal throwing, no one returned barefoot from the border. 

 

"To whom did all the chappals belonged?" he said. 

Deputy Commissioner Raminder Singh however told The Indian Express that no one was injured in lathi charge. "There was chappal and stone throwing. Some people, that too very few, could have sustained some minor injuries in the stampede," the DC, who was an eye witness to the incident, said. 

World Cup border After BSF, the DC too is now keeping a watch on the IB, thanks to the World Cup heat. Sunday's hooliganism has forced the administration to daily post an executive magistrate during the Retreat ceremony at the Hussainiwala border. 

"The arrangement will continue till the conclusion of the World Cup. Besides, I am now getting a daily update on the number of people visiting the border post. Larger crowds will be now stopped 200 yards short of the border to prevent any recurrence of the incident," Raminder Singh told The Indian Express.

March 5, 2001

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A London newspaper asked a noted British novelist and an equally distinguished American poet to record their choices of the ten most beautiful words in the English language. The British selection was: carnation, azure, peril, moon, forlorn, heart, silence, shadow, April and apricot. The American choice was: dawn, hush, lullaby, murmuring, tranquil, mist, luminous, chimes, golden and melody.

 

Before Story magazine, founded in 1931 by journalist and editor Whit Burnett and his first wife, Martha Foley, moved to America, it was edited in the island of Palma, Majorca (off the coast of Spain) and printed on the local press. The typesetter was a worthy and painstaking fellow, but unfortunately his font included no "w"s. Issues of Story brought out during that period have little holes scattered all through the page where the "w"s should have been. In the spirit of good, clean fun, Ms Foley once wrote a short story that did not contain a single "w". Edward O'Brien reprinted it in his anthology of the best stories of the year.

 

Phil Baker, master of ceremonies of the popular radio show called Take It or Leave It, received a letter – possibly from his press agent – which read, “Dear Phil: Here’s a real $64 question for you. Will you lend me $64?”

 
 
 

 

 

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People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news. But, if words were invented to conceal thought, newspapers are a great improvement of a bad invention.  Click on any below to find out:


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