Naxal flag will soon fly in delhi
Anyone who has grown up in Delhi knows it's horrible.
When you move from a different country, it takes a while to make friends. I found myself being lonely a lot at first. In New Delhi, I had all my family. But Portland is one of those cities you can immerse yourself in and feel comfortable. People are so friendly.
I was inspired by the Hole in the Wall project, where a computer with an internet connection was put in a Delhi slum. When the slum was revisited after a month, the children of that slum had learned how to use the worldwide web.
I asked my soul: What is Delhi? She replied: The world is the body and Delhi its life!
I am neither a Bengali nor am I from Delhi's St Stephen's. I am an Allahabad boy.
My husband lived in Lucknow. My father lived in Delhi, of course. So I shuttled between Delhi and Lucknow and. . . naturally, if my husband needed me on days when I was in Delhi, I ran back to Lucknow. But if it was my father who needed me, on the days when I was in Lucknow. And. . . yes, my husband got angry. And he quarreled. We quarreled. We quarreled a lot. It's true.
The mere mention of the Farakka Express, which jerks its way eastward each day from Delhi to Calcutta, is enough to throw even a seasoned traveller into fits of apoplexy. At a desert encampment on Namibia's Skeleton Coast, a hard-bitten adventurer had downed a peg of local fire-water then told me the tale. Farakka was a ghost train, he said, haunted by ghouls, Thuggees, and thieves. Only a passenger with a death wish would go anywhere near it.
I have seen vast, perhaps unbelievable, changes during the journey that has brought me from the flicker of a lamp in a small Bengal village to the chandeliers of Delhi.
I left Delhi, in 1971, shortly after Collective Choice and Social Welfare was published in 1970.
I love the food, the girls, the sky and everything that is Delhi. I have very fond memories of the Moolchand flyover.
We want to change the identity of Delhi from Generator Capital to Power Generation Capital.
It was only in the early 1990s - during my student years as an aspiring scientist at Delhi University - that I discovered the world of cinema.
If I had campaigned for it, Arvind Kejriwal would have become the chief minister of Delhi.
I would love to live in India or in the South of France, but Roger Vivier doesn't have offices yet in New Delhi or Jaipur.
My experience is that Delhi behaves the way the leadership defines.
Partition was a total catastrophe for Delhi,’ she said. ‘Those who were left behind are in misery. Those who were uprooted are in misery. The Peace of Delhi is gone. Now it is all gone.
Delhi came as a shock. There were so many people, and oh, the traffic.
In 'Delhi Belly,' I was bald; in other movies I always carried a different look.
Relations between India and America should not be seen within the limits of just Delhi and Washington. It's a much larger sphere. The good thing is that the mood of both Delhi and Washington is in harmony with this understanding. Both sides have played a role in this.