Sunday, June 11, 2017

Man who overcame British, snakes of communal poison was more than ‘chatur baniya’, says Rajmohan Gandhi

Man who overcame British, snakes of communal poison was more than ‘chatur baniya’, says Rajmohan Gandhi

NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES:
Most papers have a picture of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Chinese President Xi Jinping at the SCO summit in Kazakhastan. "Sharif, Xi listen as Modi talks tough on terror" writes the DNA. 'India, Pak become SCO members' says the Statesman.
British Prime Minister Theresa May's snap poll backfiring after a hung parliament is aptly titled 'May, maybe not' by the Hindustan Times. 'Mays's April gamble backfires in June' is how the Pioneer puts it.
The Supreme Court ruling out Aadhaar for tax returns is the lead in the Business Standard. 'Court upholds validity of Income Tax Act on PAN link' writes the Tribune.
Niti Aayog recommending 100 per cent of Air India's privatisation figures on the front page of the Economic Times. The paper adds that Air India, at present is sitting on a debt of 55 thousand crore rupees.
'One more MP farmer dies, stir goes Pan India' says the DNA, of the unrest in Mandsaur. 'Shivraj to fast for peace' informs the Asian Age. 'Video showing Congress MLA inciting mob to burn down police station surfaces' writes the Pioneer.
Violence in Darjeeling is covered adequately by the press. 'Darjeeling raises Kolkata's temperature - Mamata lets loose special auditors to find fault in Gorkhaland Authority' is how the Pioneer puts it.
A box item on the front page of the Hindustan Times says 'It was her! Metro pickpockets are mostly women'. The paper also lists the vulnerable metro stations.
And finally, "Welder's son gets call to New York ballet school' writes the Times of India on its front page. It gives details of 15 year old Amiruddin Shah, who is all set to put India on the global ballet map as one of the first professional Indian male dancers.

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