NIT Srinagar all set to implement official language thenorthlines.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thenorthlines.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SRINAGAR: Following directions from the Centre, the National Institute of Technology (NIT), Srinagar, is all set to adopt Hindi (Raj Basha) as its official language (OL). Towards this end, a language inspection by Suniti Sharma, director of official language department, ministry of human resource development, was conducted on the NIT campus recently.
During their interaction, NIT-Srinagar director Rakesh Sehgal and registrar SK Bukhari apprised Sharma of the progress in adoption of Hindi language on the campus for official transactions.
Sharma also interacted with heads of departments and faculty members, including in-charge of the NIT’s Hindi Cell, to take stock of work being done for OL implementation.
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Former Trinamool Congress (TMC) MP and former Railway Minister Dinesh Trivedi, who had quit the party on the floor of the Rajya Sabha on 12 February, has joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the presence of party president JP Nadda and Union Minister Piyush Goyal on Saturday, 6 March.
His former party, Trinamool Congress, reacted sharply to his move, calling him ‘ungrateful’ and accusing him of ‘backstabbing’ the party when it needed his services.
Calling it a “golden moment”, Trivedi said that he had been waiting to join the party. He also added that he will be active in the election process irrespective of whether he contests the elections.
NIT Rourkela Observes 72nd Republic Day & Inaugurates Its Diamond Jubilee Year
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January 26th, 2021 NIT Rourkela celebrated the occasion of
Republic Day with great pride and fervour. The institute also celebrated the inaugural ceremony of its Diamond Jubilee year on the same day. The event was bestowed by the presence of some esteemed personalities who joined through
virtual platforms due to the impediments posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
It has been 72 years since the day on which India s constitution came into being making it a
democratic, sovereign and republic nation. The world viewed the prospect of independent India as improbable. At the stroke of the midnight hour, columnists were penning down India’s uncertain future that a country so poor, so uneducated, so unprepared and so startlingly diverse would not sustain. Still, it did, and it would be an understatement to say that our country has made immense progress, overcoming various hurdles.