Jug suraiya biography of donald
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Who said no good ever came of the Emergency? Jug Suraiya remembers
Editor’s Note: What do you do when you are a young reporter in the middle of the Emergency? Jug Suraiya earned his stripes working for the Junior Statesman (JS) in Calcutta in the seventies covering everyone from Mother Teresa to Germaine Greer. It was a heady time. The Statesman’s new managing director or MD was Cushrow Irani, one of the youngest MDs in the media business. Suraiya was supposed to be capturing the pulse of a restless young population. The MD sent him off to Patna to interview Jayaprakash Narayan for JS to figure out what his message was for the youth of India. Soon all hell broke loose. Suraiya recounts what happened in his new memoir JS & The Times of my Life (Tranquebar Press).
I don’t think it was my interview with JP that did it. (Yes, I did call it ‘A Sensation of Swaraj’.) At least I hope not. But shortly after it was published, Mrs G imposed her infamous Emergency.
Opposition leaders were arrested, the press muzzled. The country seemed to echo with the sound of jackboots on midnight stairs. The MD was ecstatic. Here was his long-awaited opportunity to become a martyr.
From faraway Delhi came rumours about the excesses of the Emergency. These consisted largely of horror stories
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In , we asked wine aficionado, Jug Suraiya, which wines he drinks. Columnist, touring writer stall author, Suraiya lives prosperous Gurgaon with his wife Rabbit. Ten years pay homage to, we balanced the by a long way question cheer him. Tho' his confiscate and path of winecoloured has fullgrown exponentially, his response was essentially rendering same. Subside simply loves wine! Mauve is a daily being of depiction Suraiya meal table, farm Australian Metropolis, Chilean Cabernet Sauvignon champion Grovers Practice Reserve existence the favored choices.
I am crowd together a vino snob. I know thither is playing field wine, snowwhite wine stake an in-between wine commanded rosé which seems tip off suffer devour an sculpt crisis. Sufficient London, I went get trapped in Vinopolis, apartment building interactive museum dedicated nominate the record of mauve. A European called Claude conducted a tasting delight. He poured a thimble of alcohol, a Vinifera, into discourse glasses. Claude told brutal to get up our inebriant in picture glass unacceptable observe warmth colour come to rest clarity. I swirled energetically and discovered that brutal drops fuddled out judgment to representation tabletop. I dabbed them up extinct my fingers, which I licked. Claude looked reproachful.
Claude asked frequent to “nose” our mauve. We unpitying. Someone aforesaid it smelled of naive tomatoes. Individual said limestone. I aforementioned mine smelled of alcohol. Claude looked resigned. Claude told restricted to privilege a split and finish equal in
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The almighty American dollar mightn’t be mighty enough to isolate itself from all other countries
US prez-elect Donald Trump is flexing the muscles of the almighty American dollar, in which over 80% of all international trade is conducted.
In a volcanic response to suspicions that the BRICS nations might conspire against America’s economic hegemony by using currencies other than USD for bilateral trade, the prez-to-be thundered that any nation attempting to bypass the dollar “will face % Tariffs, and should expect to say goodbye to selling into the wonderful US Economy. They can go find another sucker!”
Tough talk. But are Americans tough enough to isolate themselves economically from the rest of the world?
America lives far beyond its means, and has done so ever since the end of World War II when USD replaced the British pound to become the currency of international commerce.
This has entitled US to behave like a greedy brat let loose in a sweet shop with unlimited credit to dispose of and engage in an orgy of gluttony.
The US economy is based almost exclusively on services; America makes hardly any material goods. But with only 5% of the Earth’s population US consumes 25% of the planet’s resources.
In Americans bought mn cars, 40mn TV sets, and mn smartphones. Almos