The Road to Love and a Cheating Disorder

It happens only in India 

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It happens only in India 

Common Good

In a rather aggressive ‘self-help’ manoeuvre Sheetal Kumar from Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir, pulled off quite the trespass. Frustrated at the town’s acute water crisis, Kumar laid claim to a government-installed community hand pump by constructing a house around it. This pump now lies inside the Kumar household, occupying prime real estate in the kitchen. Gumption aside, Kumar deed is illegal and the Jal Shakti department has asked the local police to lodge an FIR and initiate action against this brazen encroachment of public property.

Source: indiatimes.com

Rocky Road to Love

Among the several variables that could possibly derail your path to wedded bliss, who knew that rocky roads leading to your home could serve as the prime deterrent! But, we live and learn: A 26-year-old schoolteacher Bindu from H. Rampura, Karnataka, wrote to chief minister Basavaraj Bommai bemoaning bad roads as the reason for the paucity of marriage offers to residents. Bindu wrote, “Many of us don’t get offers of marriage because outsiders think that children won’t be able to get an education here due to lack of proper roads.” Bindu’s predicament has drawn a swift assurance from the chief minister’s office. Hopefully, H. Rampura will soon have wedding bells toll for those willing and ready.

Source: indiatoday.in

A Cheating disorder

Recently, Rajasthan police discovered a ‘hi-tech’ cheating racket spanning the state. To matters more morally dubious the exam people were caught cheating on is the Rajasthan Eligibility Examination for Teachers (REET). Sandals were fitted with bluetooth and mobile devices, and sold for a tidy sum of over `2 lakh. These ‘upgraded’ slippers allowed the teacher hopefuls to receive answers from outside the exam hall. This, despite the 12-hour in...

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