Mumbai: BMC is India s first civic body to launch Heritage Walk
By
Quaid Najmi ( IANS) |
Published on
Sat, Jan 30 2021 19:48 IST |
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BMC Mayor Kishori Pednekar welcomed the first batch of 15 tourists who arrived for the Heritage Walk inside the iconic BMC Headquarters.(Photo: IANS/QuaidNajmi) Image Source: IANS News
BMC Mayor Kishori Pednekar welcomed the first batch of 15 tourists who arrived for the Heritage Walk inside the iconic BMC Headquarters.(Photo: IANS/QuaidNajmi) Image Source: IANS News
BMC Mayor Kishori Pednekar welcomed the first batch of 15 tourists who arrived for the Heritage Walk inside the iconic BMC Headquarters.(Photo: IANS/QuaidNajmi) Image Source: IANS News
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Farah Diba Israfil
Graduating from St Xaviers College to my Masters in English from Calcutta University to my B.ed from Loreto College to teaching English, life has always been a frenzy with a pandora s box of emotions tucked away in the closed chambers of my heart because entertaining them required some pause in the otherwise busy lives and that was an impossible task even if I were granted a boon of several extra hours during the day. . Came COVID and memories have tumbled out of trunks of regret, happiness, pain and subsequent healing. To remember the past and recreate the reality that once existed with words is a privilege I have these days. This uncanny pause has its benefits too.
Mithibai College
MUMBAI: Five rounds of admissions later, more than 10,000 first-year junior college (FYJC) aspirants are still without a seat. In the second special merit list announced on Tuesday evening, out of a total of 32,268 applicants, 21,835 were allotted seats in junior colleges across the Mumbai Metropolitan Region.
While several popular colleges had no vacancies in the arts and science streams in this round, those with a few seats saw cut-offs marginally increase compared with the previous round. For instance, St Xavier s College, Fort, Ruia College, Matunga, and Mithibai College, Vile Parle, were among the sought-after institutes that had no vacancies for the general category for arts. At Jai Hind College and K C College, there were only two and four seats in the arts stream, respectively, hence cut-offs were higher than the previous round. Similarly, St Xavier s, Mithibai and Ruparel College were among some which saw an increase in cut-offs in the science stream.